In vitro antitumoral activity of compounds isolated from Artemisia gorgonum Webb

Alice Martins, Rukmini Mignon, Marina Bastos, Daniela Batista, Nuno R. Neng, José M.F. Nogueira, Catarina Vizetto-Duarte, Luísa Custódio, João Varela, Amélia P. Rauter

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

23 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Artemisia gorgonum (Asteraceae) is an endemic plant to the Cape Verde islands and plays an important role in traditional medicine. The chloroform extract of the plant aerial parts afforded six sesquiterpene lactones, two methoxylated flavonoids, two lignans, and one tetracyclic triterpene, which were isolated by chromatographic methods and their structure established by physical and spectroscopic techniques. The cytotoxic activity of the three major constituents, namely, arborescin, artemetin, and sesamin, was evaluated on neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y), hepatocarcinoma (HepG2), and nontumoral bone marrow stromal (S17) cell lines. The application of different concentrations of the compounds significantly decreased tumor cells viability at different extents, especially at the highest concentrations tested. Arborescin is the most promising compound as it was able to reduce tumoral cell viability with an IC50significantly lower (229-233 μM; p < 0.01) than that of S17 cells (445 μM). Arborescin and artemetin were less toxic to nontumoral cells than the antitumoral drug tested, etoposide. Our results indicate that arborescin has a significant cytotoxic activity in vitro, more pronounced on the cancer cell lines, confirming A. gorgonum as a source of potential antitumoral molecules.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1329-1334
Number of pages6
JournalPhytotherapy Research
Volume28
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2014
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Antitumor activity
  • Arborescin
  • Artemetin
  • Artemisia gorgonum
  • Sesamin

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