The Vietnam-Laos International Cooperative Biodiversity Group (ICBG) based at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) catalyzed a country-wide network of medicinal plant preserves (MPP) and medicinal biodiversity preserves (MBP) now established in ten provinces of the Lao People's Democratic Republic (Lao PDR), which are relied upon as protected sources of ethnomedicines for local villagers and traditional healers. In collaboration with the Lao PDR's Institute of Traditional Medicine (ITM), our ongoing P01 Program Project (Ohio State University) examined the anticancer bioprospecting potential for two of the most exhaustively inventoried of these sites: the Bolikhamxay MPP and the Xiengkhouang MBP. Guided by prior voucher specimens sourced from these reserves, with an overwhelming emphasis on plants employed in traditional medicine, 201 distinct samples from 96 species were collected along with proper herbarium documentation. Aliquots of these plant samples were extracted in azeotropic ethanol and evaporated to dryness for initial biological evaluation. In six samples from six different species (2.99% of the collected samples and 6.25% of taxa), it was observed that extracts exhibited notable cytotoxicity against HT-29 colon adenocarcinoma cells. The wisdom behind the utilization of HT-29 cells in this preliminary biological screen is discussed. Furthermore, comparison of screening results based on longstanding considerations and ideological underpinnings of ethnobotanical vs. "random" biodiversity-based collection approaches is detailed herein. The results of this interdisciplinary study support the hypothesis that, by privileging the initial sample set in terms of human safety and pharmacological activity, ethnobotanically driven collection for biological screening efforts can produce leads unprecedented by the strict traditional usages of plants.
A cardiac glycoside epoxide, (−)-cryptanoside
A (1), was isolated from the stems of Cryptolepis
dubia collected in Laos, for which the complete structure
was confirmed
by analysis of its spectroscopic and single-crystal X-ray diffraction
data, using copper radiation at a low temperature. This cardiac glycoside
epoxide exhibited potent cytotoxicity against several human cancer
cell lines tested, including HT-29 colon, MDA-MB-231 breast, OVCAR3
and OVCAR5 ovarian cancer, and MDA-MB-435 melanoma cells, with the
IC50 values found to be in the range 0.1–0.5 μM,
which is comparable with that observed for digoxin. However, it exhibited
less potent activity (IC50 1.1 μM) against FT194
benign/nonmalignant human fallopian tube secretory epithelial cells
when compared with digoxin (IC50 0.16 μM), indicating
its more selective activity toward human cancer versus benign/nonmalignant
cells. (−)-Cryptanoside A (1) also inhibited Na+/K+-ATPase activity and increased the expression
of Akt and the p65 subunit of NF-κB but did not show any effects
on the expression of PI3K. A molecular docking profile showed that
(−)-cryptanoside A (1) binds to Na+/K+-ATPase, and thus 1 may directly target
Na+/K+-ATPase to mediate its cancer cell cytotoxicity.
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