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Antimalarial and anticancer activities of selected South African Salvia species and isolated compounds from S. radula

Extracts of seventeen Salvia species used in traditional medicine in South Africa were subjected to biological testing. The potential ability to
inhibit the in vitro growth/proliferation of Plasmodium falciparum (FCR-3 strain) and the cytotoxic effects on three human cancer cells [breast
adenocarcinoma (MCF-7), colon adenocarcinoma (HT-29) and glioblastoma (SF-268)] and a human kidney epithelial cell line were investigated.
The extracts displayed antimalarial activity with IC50 values ranging from 3.91 to 26.01 μg/ml and S. radula displaying the most favorable
activity. Two compounds were subsequently isolated from the active fraction of S. radula and identified as betulafolientriol oxide and salvigenin.
The two compounds displayed similar or lower antimalarial activity (IC50 values: 4.95 and 24.60 μg/ml, respectively) compared to the crude solvent extract. The concentration required to inhibit 50% of cancer cells ranged between 9.69 μg/ml and 43.65 μg/ml, and between 8.72 μg/ml and 59.12 μg/ml against the MCF-7 and SF-268 cell lines, respectively. The IC50 values determined for the HT-29 cell line ranged from 17.05 to 57.00 μg/ml, with S. lanceolata being the most active. The samples also displayed some degree of toxicity when tested against the human kidney epithelial cells, with IC50 values ranging from 12.12 to 53.34 μg/ml. The in vitro antimalarial and anticancer activities support the historic and
present use of Salvia species in traditional medicine.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:tut/oai:encore.tut.ac.za:d1000518
Date26 November 2007
CreatorsKamatou, GPP, Van Zyl, RL, Davids, H, Van Heerden, FR, Lourens, ACU, Viljoen, AM
PublisherElsevier
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText
FormatPDF
RightsElsevier
RelationSouth African Journal of Botany

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