Hyaluronidase, phospholipase A2 and protease inhibitory activity of plants used in traditional treatment of snakebite-induced tissue necrosis in Mali, DR Congo and South Africa

Marianne Molander Schmidt, Line Hagner Nielsen, Søren Vinter Søgaard, Dan Stærk, Nina Rønsted, Drissa Diallo, Chifundera Kusamba Zacharie, Johannes van Staden, Anna Jäger

    30 Citationer (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Ethnopharmacological relevance: Snakebite envenomation, every year, causes estimated 510,000 mortalities and results in more than 515,000 amputations in sub-Saharan Africa alone. Antiserum is not easily accessible in these regions or doctors are simply not available, thus more than 80% of all patients seek traditional practitioners as first-choice. Therefore it is important to investigate whether the plants used in traditional medicine systems contain compounds against the necrosis-inducing enzymes of snake venom.

    Materials and methods: Extracts from traditionally used plants from DR Congo, Mali and South Africa were tested in hyaluronidase, phospholipase A2 and protease enzyme bioassays using Bitis arietans and Naja nigricollis as enzyme source.

    Results: A total of 226 extracts from 94 different plant species from the three countries, Mali, Democratic Republic of Congo and South Africa were tested in phospholipase A2, proteases and hyaluronidase enzyme assays. Forty plant species showed more than 90% inhibition in one or more assay. Fabaceae, Anacardiaceae and Malvaceae were the families with the highest number of active species, and the active compounds were distributed in different plant parts depending on plant species. Polyphenols were removed in the search for specific enzyme inhibitors against hyaluronidase, phospholipase A2 or proteases from extracts with IC50 values below 100 ig!ml. Water extracts of Pupalia lappacea, Combretum molle, Strychnos innocua and Grewia mollis and ethanol extract of Lannea acida and Bauhinia thonningii still showed IC50 values below 100 igml in either the hyaluronidase or protease bioassay after removal of polyphenols.

    Conclusion: As four of the active plants are widely distributed in the areas where the snake species Bitis arietans and Naja nigricollis occur a potential inhibitor of the necrotic enzymes is accessible for many people in sub-Saharan Africa.

    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TidsskriftJournal of Ethnopharmacology
    Vol/bind157
    Sider (fra-til)171-180
    Antal sider10
    ISSN0378-8741
    DOI
    StatusUdgivet - 18 nov. 2014

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