Context
An ethnobotany-based approach in the selection of raw plant materials to study was implemented.
Objective
To acquire raw plant materials using ethnobotanical field interviews as starting point to discover new bioactive compounds from medicinal plants of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic.
Methods
Using semi-structured field interviews with healers in the Lao PDR, plant samples were collected, extracted, and bio-assayed to detect bioactivity against cancer, HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria. Plant species demonstrating activity were recollected and the extracts subjected to a bioassay-guided isolation protocol to isolate and identify the active compounds.
Results
Field interviews with 118 healers in 15 of 17 provinces of Lao PDR yielded 753 collections (573 species) with 955 plant samples. Of these 955, 50 extracts demonstrated activity in the anticancer, 10 in the anti-HIV, 30 in the anti-TB, and 52 in the antimalarial assay. Recollection of actives followed by bioassay-guided isolation processes yielded a series of new and known in vitro-active anticancer and antimalarial compounds from 5 species.
Discussion
Laos has a rich biodiversity, harboring an estimated 8000–11,000 species of plants. In a country highly dependent on traditional medicine for its primary health care, this rich plant diversity serves as a major source of their medication.
Conclusions
Ethnobotanical survey has demonstrated the richness of plant-based traditional medicine of Lao PDR, taxonomically and therapeutically. Biological assays of extracts of half of the 955 samples followed by in-depth studies of a number of actives have yielded a series of new bioactive compounds against the diseases of cancer and malaria.
Ethnopharmacological relevance
There is widespread use of traditional herbal remedies in the Lao PDR
(Laos). It is common practice to treat many diseases with local plants. This
research project documented and analysed some of these traditional remedies
used to treat symptoms of tuberculosis (TB).
Materials and methods
This research was executed by interviewing healers about plants used
traditionally to treat the symptoms of TB. Samples of some of the plants
were collected, and extracts of 77 species were submitted to various
in vitro assays in order to determine the amount of
growth inhibition of virulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis
H37Rv (Mtb), as opposed to other microbes and mammalian
Vero cells.
Results
Interviews took place with 58 contemporary healers in 5 different
provinces about plants currently used, giving a list of 341 plants.
Bioassay-guided fractionation was performed on Marsypopetalum
modestum (Pierre) B. Xue & R.M.K. Saunders
(Annonaceae), leading to the isolation of dipyrithione, an
anti-mycobacterial compound isolated for the first time from the genus
Marsypopetalum through this research.
Conclusions
This research has helped to increase awareness of Laos’ rich
diversity of medicinal plants and will hopefully provide incentive to
preserve the undeveloped forested areas that remain, which still hold a
wealth of medical information for future discoveries.
Tuberculosis has existed in Southeast Asia for thousands of years. Many traditional treatments involve herbal remedies. Over time, these traditional treatments have had the chance to become refined based on efficacy and safety. It was therefore hypothesized that plants that were used in the past and are still used today to treat symptoms associated with tuberculosis are more likely to contain anti-tubercular compounds than plants that have not been used continuously. To try to deduce which plants were used in Laos in the past, a collection of palm leaf manuscripts was studied and a list of plants used to treat symptoms associated with tuberculosis was compiled. Interviews were then conducted with contemporary healers to see if the same plants are still being used today. Plants that were found in the manuscripts and/or are presently used by healers were collected, extracted and were evaluated in an anti-tubercular assay. This paper presents the methods used to identify and collect plants used to treat symptoms indicative of tuberculosis, and the results of anti-TB assays to test for activity.
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