The
Yucatan Peninsula possesses a unique climate, geology, landscape,
and biota that includes a distinct flora of over 2300 species; of
these, close to 800 plants are used in what is known as Mayan traditional
medicine, and about 170 are listed as native or endemic. Even though
the flora of the Yucatan peninsula has been widely studied by naturalists
and biologists, to date, phytochemical and pharmacological knowledge
of most of the plants, including the medicinal plants, is limited.
Presently, phytochemical studies carried out on plants from the Yucatecan
flora have resulted in the identification of a wide variety of natural
products that include flavonoids, terpenoids, polyketides, and phenolics
with cytotoxic, antiprotozoal, antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, analgesic,
antioxidant, and antifungal activities. This review describes the
main findings in over 20 years (1992 to 2018) of exploring the natural
product diversity of the Yucatecan flora.
This study assessed the in vitro anthelmintic (AH) activity of methanol and acetone:water leaf extracts from Annona squamosa, A. muricata and A. reticulata against Haemonchus contortus eggs. The egg hatch test was used to determine the effective concentrations required to inhibit 50% of eggs hatching (EC50). The role of polyphenols on AH activity was measured through bioassays with and without polyvinylpolypyrrolidone (PVPP). Methanolic extracts mainly caused the death of eggs at the morula stage (ovicidal activity). Meanwhile, acetone:water extracts caused egg-hatching failure of developed larvae (larvae failing eclosion (LFE) activity). The lowest EC50 values against H. contortus eggs were observed for the methanolic extracts from A. reticulata and A. muricata (274.2 and 382.9 µg/ml, respectively). From the six extracts evaluated, the methanolic extracts of A. muricata, A. reticulata and A. squamosa showed the highest ovicidal activity, resulting in 98.9%, 92.8% and 95.1% egg mortality, respectively. When the methanolic extract of A. squamosa was incubated with PVPP, its AH activity increased. Similarly, when acetone:water extracts of A. muriata and A. reticulata were incubated with PVPP, their LFE activity increased. Alkaloids were only evident in methanolic extracts, irrespective of PVPP incubation. The presence of acetogenins was not observed. In conclusion, methanolic extracts obtained from leaves of A. muricata, A. reticulata and A. squamosa showed ovicidal activity affecting the morula of H. contortus eggs, with minor LFE activity. Meanwhile, acetone:water extracts showed mostly LFE activity, with a lower proportion of ovicidal activity.
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