“…Its leaves have long been used in "dai" ethno-pharmacy for the treatment of whooping cough (post infectious cough), chronic bronchitis, asthma, and other respiratory tract infections in Yunnan Province, PR China (Compiling Group of Yunnan Traditional Chinese Medicine, 1977). Phytochemical constituents of different parts of the plant were investigated intensively by our group (Cai et al, 2010(Cai et al, , 2008a(Cai et al, , 2008b(Cai et al, , 2007Chen et al, 2016;Du et al, 2007aDu et al, , 2007bFeng et al, 2009Feng et al, , 2008Liu et al, 2015;Pan et al, 2016;Qin et al, 2015aQin et al, , 2015bXu et al, 2009;Yang et al, 2015aYang et al, , 2015bYang et al, , 2014aYang et al, , 2014bZhang et al, 2014;Zhou et al, 2005). Meanwhile, the chemical profiling and metabolites of alkaloidal extract of A. scholaris were reported (Cao et al, 2015), in which scholaricine, 19-epischolaricine, vallesamine, and picrinine were the major indole alkaloids of its leaf ( Fig.…”