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Antileishmanial Evaluation of the Leaf Latex of Aloe macrocarpa, Aloin A/B, and Its Semisynthetic Derivatives against Two Leishmania Species

The currently available antileishmanial drugs are either toxic or too expensive for routine use in developing countries where the disease is most common. Local people in the Somalia region of Ethiopia use the leaves of Aloe macrocarpa Todaro for the treatment of malaria, jaundice, and skin diseases....

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Autores principales: Tewabe, Yitagesu, Kefarge, Belete, Belay, Habtamu, Bisrat, Daniel, Hailu, Asrat, Asres, Kaleab
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6409032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30915146
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/4736181
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author Tewabe, Yitagesu
Kefarge, Belete
Belay, Habtamu
Bisrat, Daniel
Hailu, Asrat
Asres, Kaleab
author_facet Tewabe, Yitagesu
Kefarge, Belete
Belay, Habtamu
Bisrat, Daniel
Hailu, Asrat
Asres, Kaleab
author_sort Tewabe, Yitagesu
collection PubMed
description The currently available antileishmanial drugs are either toxic or too expensive for routine use in developing countries where the disease is most common. Local people in the Somalia region of Ethiopia use the leaves of Aloe macrocarpa Todaro for the treatment of malaria, jaundice, and skin diseases. In our ongoing search for new, efficient, and safe antileishmanial drugs, we investigated the leaf latex of Aloe macrocarpa and its acid-hydrolyzed product aloin A/B (1), as well as the semisynthesized derivatives of aloin A/B, namely, aloe-emodin (2) and rhein (3) against promastigotes and axenically cultured amastigotes of Leishmania aethiopica and L. donovani clinical isolates. Activity study was carried out based on the fluorescence characteristic of resazurin added to drug-treated cultures. Oxidative hydrolysis of aloin A/B by ferric chloride and concentrated hydrochloric acid afforded aloe-emodin (2), which was further oxidized using sodium nitrite and concentrated sulfuric acid to furnish rhein (3). Cytotoxicity study of test substances was performed against human monocytic cell line THP-1 using Alamar Blue and cell viability was measured fluorometrically. The test compounds showed lower activity (IC(50) = 6.7 to 12.1 μM for promastigotes and IC(50) = 3.6 to 10.2 μM for axenic amastigotes) than the reference drug amphotericin B (IC(50) = 1.3 to 2.7 μM). However, amphotericin B (LC(50) = 11.1 μM) was much more toxic than the test compounds (LC(50) = 369.2 – 611.6 μM) towards human monocytic cell line (THP-1) despite its efficiency. As demonstrated in the current study, high selectivity indices (SIs) of the test compounds represent a remarkable advantage over the reference drug and highlight their potential use as templates for further development of safe leishmanicidal drugs.
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spelling pubmed-64090322019-03-26 Antileishmanial Evaluation of the Leaf Latex of Aloe macrocarpa, Aloin A/B, and Its Semisynthetic Derivatives against Two Leishmania Species Tewabe, Yitagesu Kefarge, Belete Belay, Habtamu Bisrat, Daniel Hailu, Asrat Asres, Kaleab Evid Based Complement Alternat Med Research Article The currently available antileishmanial drugs are either toxic or too expensive for routine use in developing countries where the disease is most common. Local people in the Somalia region of Ethiopia use the leaves of Aloe macrocarpa Todaro for the treatment of malaria, jaundice, and skin diseases. In our ongoing search for new, efficient, and safe antileishmanial drugs, we investigated the leaf latex of Aloe macrocarpa and its acid-hydrolyzed product aloin A/B (1), as well as the semisynthesized derivatives of aloin A/B, namely, aloe-emodin (2) and rhein (3) against promastigotes and axenically cultured amastigotes of Leishmania aethiopica and L. donovani clinical isolates. Activity study was carried out based on the fluorescence characteristic of resazurin added to drug-treated cultures. Oxidative hydrolysis of aloin A/B by ferric chloride and concentrated hydrochloric acid afforded aloe-emodin (2), which was further oxidized using sodium nitrite and concentrated sulfuric acid to furnish rhein (3). Cytotoxicity study of test substances was performed against human monocytic cell line THP-1 using Alamar Blue and cell viability was measured fluorometrically. The test compounds showed lower activity (IC(50) = 6.7 to 12.1 μM for promastigotes and IC(50) = 3.6 to 10.2 μM for axenic amastigotes) than the reference drug amphotericin B (IC(50) = 1.3 to 2.7 μM). However, amphotericin B (LC(50) = 11.1 μM) was much more toxic than the test compounds (LC(50) = 369.2 – 611.6 μM) towards human monocytic cell line (THP-1) despite its efficiency. As demonstrated in the current study, high selectivity indices (SIs) of the test compounds represent a remarkable advantage over the reference drug and highlight their potential use as templates for further development of safe leishmanicidal drugs. Hindawi 2019-02-24 /pmc/articles/PMC6409032/ /pubmed/30915146 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/4736181 Text en Copyright © 2019 Yitagesu Tewabe et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tewabe, Yitagesu
Kefarge, Belete
Belay, Habtamu
Bisrat, Daniel
Hailu, Asrat
Asres, Kaleab
Antileishmanial Evaluation of the Leaf Latex of Aloe macrocarpa, Aloin A/B, and Its Semisynthetic Derivatives against Two Leishmania Species
title Antileishmanial Evaluation of the Leaf Latex of Aloe macrocarpa, Aloin A/B, and Its Semisynthetic Derivatives against Two Leishmania Species
title_full Antileishmanial Evaluation of the Leaf Latex of Aloe macrocarpa, Aloin A/B, and Its Semisynthetic Derivatives against Two Leishmania Species
title_fullStr Antileishmanial Evaluation of the Leaf Latex of Aloe macrocarpa, Aloin A/B, and Its Semisynthetic Derivatives against Two Leishmania Species
title_full_unstemmed Antileishmanial Evaluation of the Leaf Latex of Aloe macrocarpa, Aloin A/B, and Its Semisynthetic Derivatives against Two Leishmania Species
title_short Antileishmanial Evaluation of the Leaf Latex of Aloe macrocarpa, Aloin A/B, and Its Semisynthetic Derivatives against Two Leishmania Species
title_sort antileishmanial evaluation of the leaf latex of aloe macrocarpa, aloin a/b, and its semisynthetic derivatives against two leishmania species
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6409032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30915146
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/4736181
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