Cytotoxic activity of secondary metabolites derived from Artemisia annua L. towards cancer cells in comparison to its designated active constituent artemisinin
Artemisia annua L. (sweet wormwood, qinhao) has traditionally been used in Chinese medicine. The isolation of artemisinin from Artemisia annua and its worldwide accepted application in malaria therapy is one of the showcase success stories of phytomedicine during the past decades. Artemisinin-type c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Phytomedicine (Stuttgart) 2011-08, Vol.18 (11), p.959-969 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Artemisia annua L. (sweet wormwood,
qinhao) has traditionally been used in Chinese medicine. The isolation of artemisinin from
Artemisia annua and its worldwide accepted application in malaria therapy is one of the showcase success stories of phytomedicine during the past decades. Artemisinin-type compounds are also active towards other protozoal or viral diseases as well as cancer cells
in vitro and
in vivo. Nowadays,
Artemisia annua tea is used as a self-reliant treatment in developing countries. The unsupervised use of
Artemisia annua tea has been criticized to foster the development of artemisinin resistance in malaria and cancer due to insufficient artemisinin amounts in the plant as compared to standardized tablets with isolated artemisinin or semisynthetic artemisinin derivatives. However, artemisinin is not the only bioactive compound in
Artemisia annua. In the present investigation, we analyzed different
Artemisia annua extracts. Dichloromethane extracts were more cytotoxic (range of IC
50: 1.8–14.4
μg/ml) than methanol extracts towards
Trypanosoma b. brucei (TC221 cells). The range of IC
50 values for HeLa cancer cells was 54.1–275.5
μg/ml for dichloromethane extracts and 276.3–1540.8
μg/ml for methanol extracts. Cancer and trypanosomal cells did not reveal cross-resistance among other compounds of
Artemisia annua, namely the artemisinin-related artemisitene and arteanuine B as well as the unrelated compounds, scopoletin and 1,8-cineole. This indicates that cells resistant to one compound retained sensitivity to another one. These results were also supported by microarray-based mRNA expression profiling showing that molecular determinants of sensitivity and resistance were different between artemisinin and the other phytochemicals investigated. |
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ISSN: | 0944-7113 1618-095X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.phymed.2011.06.008 |