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Category: 14. Physical medicine, conventional medicine,
and folk medicine
BURK001. Burke, Brandon R. Isolation and identification
of bioactive compounds from Lumbee medicinal plants. Thesis. Department
of Chemistry, U of North Carolina at Wilmington, 2001. 51 pages.
8 tables, 19 figures.
Publication type: Thesis (masters)
The author expresses concern that plants with medicinal
value have been used as folk remedies before they were evaluated scientifically,
but worldwide deforestation may wipe out medicinal and novel species
before they can be put to widespread use. He believes, therefore, that
medicinal and novel plants should be collected and evaluated quickly
so that action can be taken to prevent their loss.
Burke talked with Lumbee people and was able to identify
forty plant species and one lichen genus with potential medicinal value.
After performing literature searches, he narrowed the focus of his research
to Hexastylis arifolia. Hexastylis arifolia, known to Lumbee
healers as heartleaf, has been used for flavoring and perhaps as a curative
agent in tonics to treat lung trouble, heart trouble, and earache. It
is in the aristolochiaceae (birthwort) family.
Burke examined the potential medicinal value of this
plant by screening root extracts for antioxidant or antibiotic activity.
He performed bioassay-guided fractionation to isolate five compounds.
He then purified the compounds using silica gel column chromatography,
preparative thin layer chromatography, and semi-preparative HPLC. He
obtained full NMR data as well as UV-Vis and IR spectra for these compounds:
- costunolide
- safrole
- asarone
- 2,4,5-trimethoxybenzaldehyde
- novel isomers
Tables show the full NMR data for each of the above
compounds.
The GC-MS detected several additional compounds;
they were identified using a NIST spectral library. High quality spectral
matches were obtained for some. A table lists those compounds not
previously identified in extracts of Hexastylis arifolia.
In the following paragraph, Burke provides an overview
of the findings of his research:
In summary, two new bioactive isomers (1a and 1b)
were isolated and purified from the root extract of Hexastylis
arifolia. The discovery of known germacranolide costunolide
(2) in the root extract of Hexastylis arifolia is the first
known report of this biological source for the compound (Figure
5). The presence of known phenylpropanoids, safrole (3) and asarone
(4) in Hexastylis arifolia root extracts (reported previously
by Hayashi) has been confirmed by high field NMR analysis of the
purified compounds. The presence of known phenylbutanoid, 2,4,5-trimethoxybenzaldehyde
(5) in the root extract of Hexastylis arifolia is reported
for the first time (Figure 5). The presence of this range of bioactive
compounds in Hexastylis arifolia validates and perhaps explains
the use of this plant in Lumbee traditional medicine. The activities
exhibited by known and novel compounds are not the same as those
attributed to the herb by the Lumbee, however. This is probably
a reflection of the bioassays adopted in this study, but likely
also indicates the presence of other as yet undiscovered compounds
in these extracts. Assay systems specific to cardiovascular and
muscular disease may provide evidence of the activities described
by folklore. Since only a handful of the multitude of compounds
present in Hexastylis arifolia root extract were purified
in this study, it is possible that other compounds may be responsible
for the activity described by folklore. (Quoted from pages 35 and
38).
Additional Subjects: Medicinal plants | Hexastylis
arifolia
This annotation was written on: June
2 , 2004.
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
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