RESUMO:Cissus verticillata L. (Vitaceae) tem sido empregada popularmente como antidiabética. Nessa espécie foi também detectada atividade fungitóxica. O objetivo do presente trabalho foi realizar a identifi cação dos compostos fungitóxicos em extratos de folhas. O extrato etanólico foi submetido a fracionamento com solventes de diferentes polaridades (hexano, clorofórmio, acetato de etila e butanol) e seu efeito antifúngico foi analisado frente a Cladosporium sphaerospermum. Os extratos em clorofórmio e acetato de etila mostraram atividade, e foram fracionados por cromatografi a em coluna e cromatografi a preparativa em placas de sílica, respectivamente. Três terpenóides foram isolados do extrato em clorofórmio; um deles foi identifi cado, por análise em CG-EM, como um sesquiterpeno, o biciclogermacreno. O composto ativo do extrato em acetato de etila foi identifi cado, por análises em CLAE, como o estilbeno resveratrol.Unitermos: Cissus verticillata, Vitaceae, atividade fungitóxica, sesquiterpeno, estilbeno.ABSTRACTS: "Bicyclogermacrene, resveratrol and fungitoxic activity on leaves extracts of Cissus verticillata L. Nicolson & Jarvis (Vitaceae)". Cissus verticillata L. (Vitaceae) is popularly employed as hypoglicemic and it shows fungitoxic activity. This work aims at identifi cation of fungitoxic compounds on extracts of leaves. The ethanol extract was partitioned using solvents of different polarities (hexane, chloroform, ethyl acetate and butanol) and its fungitoxic activity was analysed upon Cladosporium sphaerospermum. The chloroform and ethyl acetate extracts showed activity and they were fractionated by column chromatography and preparative TLC, respectively. Three terpenoids were isolated from the chloroform extract, one of them identifi ed by GLC-MS analysis as sesquiterpene bicyclogermacrene. The active compound of the ethyl acetate extract was identifi ed by HPLC analyses as stilbene resveratrol.
I. Atlantic Rain Forest -Ecological Station Juréia-Itatins)Crude extracts from 88 plant species occurring in São Paulo State (Brazil), collected in an Atlantic Forest region, have been screened for antimicrobial and DNA-damaging activities. Of the 114 extracts assayed for antibacterial activity, only the extracts from leaves and stems of Aspidosperma ramiflorum (Apocynaceae) showed a slight activity against Escherichia coli. In the antifungal assay with Candida albicans, no active extract was observed, while in the bioautography assay with Cladosporium sphaerospermum and C. cladosporioides 12% were active. However, only the extract of Psychotria mapoureoides (Rubiaceae) stems showed a strong inhibition of both fungi. The DNA-damaging assay with mutant strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae resulted in 17.5 % of active extracts. The majority (55 %) of the active extracts showed selectivity for the DNA-repair mechanism of topoisomerase II and only 20 % showed a selective response for the mechanism of topoisomerase I.
Bioactivity-guided fractionation of the alkaloidal fractions of the CH2Cl2 extract from branches of Porcelia macrocarpa using mutant yeast strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and fungi Cladosporium cladosporioides and C. sphaerospermum led to the isolation of bioactive alkaloids: two tetrahydrobenzylisoquinolines (1 and 2), two aporphines (3 and 4), one proaporphine (5), one oxoaporphine (6), four azantraquinones (7-10) and four azafluorenones (11-14). The alkaloids cleistopholine (7) and 6-methoxycleistopholine (8) showed the highest fungitoxic activity while the mixture of 6- and 7-methoxyonychine (12+13) and 6,7-dimethoxyonychine (14) showed a weak DNA-damaging potential.
ABSTRACT:Crude extracts from 17 plant species collected from an Atlantic Forest region in the State of São Paulo (Brazil) have been screened for antifungal, DNA-damaging and acetylcholinesterase inhibiting activities. Of the 34 extracts obtained from leaves and stems of plants assayed for antifungal activity with Cladosporium sphaerospermum and C. cladosporioides 26.5% were active. However, only the extract of leaves of Cabralea canjerana showed a strong inhibition of both fungi. The DNA-damaging assay with mutant strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae resulted in 11.7 % of the extracts being active whereas 100% of them showed selectivity for the DNA-repair mechanism of topoisomerase II. Of the 17 species analysed, 12 showed anticholinesterasic activity in TLC assay. However, only extracts from Tetrastylidium grandifolium (stems) and Sloanea guianensis (leaves and stems) inhibited acetylcholinesterase activity more than 50% in quantitative assay.
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