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In vitro and in vivo antifungal activity, liver profile test, and mutagenic activity of five plants used in traditional Mexican medicine

Abstract

Berberis hartwegii Benth., Berberidaceae, Hamelia patens Jacq., Rubiaceae, Dendropanax arboreus (L.) Decne & Planch., Araliaceae, Erythrina herbacea L., Fabaceae, and Zanthoxylum caribaeum Lam., Rutaceae, acetone extracts were selected on the basis of their use in traditional Mexican medicine to treat scabies or skin diseases. Anti-dermatophyte activity in vitro was evaluated using the agar dilution assay, and the therapeutic efficacy of B. hartwegii and Z. caribaeum were tested against experimental tinea pedis. The infected animals were treated intragastrically daily for seven days with 2.5 and 5 mg/kg of acetone extracts. The acetone extract of H. patens exhibited 100% growth inhibition against T. mentagrophytes and E. floccosum at 100.0 and 50.0 µg/ml, respectively, and B. hartwegiiinhibited growth of M. canis and T. mentagrophytes at 100.0 µg/ml. Effective treatments with 2.5 mg/kg of Z. caribaeum and B. hartwegii extract were comparable with 1 mg/kg of clotrimazole in mice. Liver profile tests and histological analyses did not exhibit any signs of toxicity and the Ames test indicated that both extracts were safe when evaluated in strains TA98, TA100 and TA102. Our results suggest the potential for the future development of new antifungal drugs from B. hartwegii or Z. caribaeum.

Antifungal activity; Berberis hartwegii ; Hamelia patens ; Zanthoxylum caribaeum


Introduction

Skin, hair and nail fungal infections are common and widespread. These infections are caused by three groups of fungi: dermatophytes, yeasts and molds (Schwartz, 2004Schwartz, R.A., 2004. Superficial fungal infections. Lancet 364, 1173-1182.). Dermatophytes are the primary cause of these infections, particularly Trichophyton rubrum (Moreno and Arenas, 2010Moreno, G., Arenas, R., 2010. Other fungi causing onychomycosis. Clin. Dermatol. 28, 160-163.). Dermatophytes can invade several keratinized tissues and use the keratin as a carbon, nitrogen and sulfur source. In humans and other animals, these fungi can produce an infection known as dermatophytosis (Vermout et al., 2008Vermout, S., Tabart, J., Baldo, A., Mathy, A., Losson, B., Mignon, B., 2008. Pathogenesis of dermatophytosis. Mycopathologia 166, 267-275.; Weitzman and Summerbell, 1995Weitzman, I., Summerbell, R.C., 1995. The dermatophytes. Clin. Microbiol. Rev. 8, 240-259.).

Superficial mycoses are not life-threatening but are a serious problem for the quality of life because these infections can cause serious discomfort and cosmetic deformities (Koga et al., 2012Koga, H., Nanjoh, Y., Kaneda, H., Yamaguchi, H., Tsuboi, R., 2012. Short-term therapy with luliconazole, a novel topical antifungal imidazole, in guinea pig models of tinea corporis and tinea pedis. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 56, 3138-3143.). These diseases are observed worldwide and affect 20–25% of the world's population (Havlickova et al., 2008Havlickova, B., Czaika, V.A., Friedrich, M., 2008. Epidemiological trends in skin mycoses worldwide. Mycoses 51 (Suppl 4), 2-15.). The incidences of these infections have not changed within the last three decades (Borman et al., 2007Borman, A.M., Campbell, C.K., Fraser, M., Johnson, E.M., 2007. Analysis of the dermatophyte species isolated in the British Isles between 1980 and 2005 and review of worldwide dermatophyte trends over the last three decades. Med. Mycol. 45, 131-141.; Havlickova et al., 2008Havlickova, B., Czaika, V.A., Friedrich, M., 2008. Epidemiological trends in skin mycoses worldwide. Mycoses 51 (Suppl 4), 2-15.), although many antifungal drugs with potent action against this species have been introduced into the market (Brennan and Leyden, 1997Brennan, B., Leyden, J.J., 1997. Overview of topical therapy for common superficial fungal infections and the role of new topical agents. J. Am. Acad. Dermatol. 36,S3-S8.; Kumar and Kimball, 2009Kumar, S., Kimball, A.B., 2009. New antifungal therapies for the treatment of onychomycosis. Expert Opin. Invest. Drugs 18, 727-734.). Current treatment is based on the use of topical antifungal agents, or systemic treatments in the case of extended or recurrent infections (Bell-Syer et al., 2012Bell-Syer, S.E., Khan, S.M., Torgerson, D.J., 2012. Oral treatments for fungal infections of the skin of the foot. Cochrane Database Syst. Rev. 10, CD003584.; Dik et al., 2003Dik, A.J., van der Gaag, D.J., van Slooten, M.A., 2003. Efficacy of salts against fungal diseases in glasshouse crops. Commun. Agric. Appl. Biol. Sci. 68, 475-485.). The drugs that are most commonly used against these diseases include amphotericin B, ketoconazole, fluconazole, terbinafine and clotrimazole (Khan and Ahmad, 2011Khan, M.S., Ahmad, I., 2011. Antifungal activity of essential oils and their synergy with fluconazole against drug-resistant strains of Aspergillus fumigatus and Trichophyton rubrum. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 90,1083-1094.). These drugs are sometimes inefficient and often present nephrotoxicity and hepatotoxicity (Andriole, 1999Andriole, V.T., 1999. The 1998 Garrod lecture. Current and future antifungal therapy: new targets for antifungal agents. J. Antimicrob. Chemother. 44, 151-162.; Somchit et al., 2004Somchit, N., Norshahida, A.R., Hasiah, A.H., Zuraini, A., Sulaiman, M.R., Noordin, M.M., 2004. Hepatotoxicity induced by antifungal drugs itraconazole and fluconazole in rats: a comparative in vivostudy. Hum. Exp. Toxicol. 23, 519-525.; Zapata-Garrido et al., 2003Zapata-Garrido, A.J., Romo, A.C., Padilla, F.B., 2003. Terbinafine hepatotoxicity. A case report and review of literature. Ann. Hepatol. 2, 47-51.). In addition, the dermatophyte resistance to antifungal drugs has resulted in the need for novel antimycotic agents with a broad spectrum and fewer side effects (Duraipandiyan et al., 2012Duraipandiyan, V., Al-Harbi, N.A., Ignacimuthu, S., Muthukumar, C., 2012. Antimicrobial activity of sesquiterpene lactones isolated from traditional medicinal plant Costus speciosus (Koen ex. Retz.) Sm. BMC Complement. Altern. Med. 12,13.; Girois et al., 2006Girois, S.B., Chapuis, F., Decullier, E., Revol, B.G., 2006. Adverse effects of antifungal therapies in invasive fungal infections: review and meta-analysis. Eur. J. Clin. Microbiol. Infect. Dis. 25,138-149.; Khan and Ahmad, 2011Khan, M.S., Ahmad, I., 2011. Antifungal activity of essential oils and their synergy with fluconazole against drug-resistant strains of Aspergillus fumigatus and Trichophyton rubrum. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 90,1083-1094.). Thus, a more potent therapeutic drug that is capable of shortening treatment duration and improving patient adherence rate would be beneficial (Koga et al., 2012Koga, H., Nanjoh, Y., Kaneda, H., Yamaguchi, H., Tsuboi, R., 2012. Short-term therapy with luliconazole, a novel topical antifungal imidazole, in guinea pig models of tinea corporis and tinea pedis. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 56, 3138-3143.).

Medicinal plants are a source of bioactive compounds used to treat many diseases. Many plants possess antimicrobial agents and exhibit antifungal activity (Lemos et al., 2005Lemos, J.A., Passos, X.S., Fernandes, O.F.L., Paula, J.R., Ferri, P.H., Souza, L.K.H., Lemos, A.A., Silva, M.R.R., 2005. Antifungal activity from Ocimum gratissimum L. towards Cryptococcus neoformans. Mem. lnst. Oswaldo Cruz 100, 55-58.). Several in vitro and in vivo studies using plant products traditionally used in ethnomedicine have demonstrated promising antifungal activity without any side effects (Bajpai et al., 2009Bajpai, V.K., Yoon, J.I., Kang, S.C., 2009. Antifungal potential of essential oil and various organic extracts of Nandina domesticaThunb. against skin infectious fungal pathogens. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 83,1127-1133.; Park et al., 2007Park, M.J., Gwak, K.S., Yang, I., Choi, W.S., Jo, H.J., Chang, J.W., Jeung, E.B., Choi, I.G., 2007. Antifungal activities of the essential oils in Syzygium aromaticum (L.) Merr. Et Perry and Leptospermum petersonii Bailey and their constituents against various dermatophytes J. Microbiol. 45, 460-465.; Sokovic and Griensven, 2006Sokovic, M., Griensven, L.L.D., 2006. Antimicrobial activity of essential oils and their components against the three major pathogens of the cultivated button mushroom, Agaricus bisporus. Eur. J. Plant Pathol. 116, 211-224.).

The aim of this study was to evaluate Mexican plants for activity against dermatophyte strains, particularly T. rubrum. Plants were selected on the basis of their use in traditional medicine to treat scabies or diseases with related symptoms, such as skin diseases. Acetone extracts from five plant species were evaluated for antifungal activity using the agar dilution assay and “experimental tinea pedis” model in BALB/c mice. In addition, experimental toxicology studies, including liver profile tests and the Ames test, were performed to determine the risk to benefit ratio and the mutagenic activity of the extracts.

Materials and methods

Plant material

We select five medicinal plants used in traditional Mexican medicine. Berberis hartwegii Benth., Berberidaceae, Hamelia patens Jacq., Rubiaceae, Dendropanax arboreus (L) Decne & Planch., Araliaceae, Erythrina herbacea L., Leguminosae, and Zanthoxylum caribaeum Lam., Rutaceae, were collected by Cynthia Ordaz-Pichardo Ph.D. in 2010 in Gómez Farías, Tamaulipas state, Mexico. Plant identifications were performed by M.C. Patricia Jácquez-Ríos at the “IZTA Herbarium” at the Iztacala campus of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). A specimen of each plant was deposited in the herbarium with voucher numbers: B. hartwegii (1759), D. arboreus (1652), E. herbacea (1650), H. patens (1649) and Z. caribaeum (1651). Plants were air-dried and powdered.

Extract preparations

Acetone extracts from the leaves of B. hartwegii and H. patens, barks of D. arboreus and Z. caribaeum, and roots from E. herbacea were produced by direct maceration of dry and powdered plant material (25 g) for five days at room temperature in 250 ml of acetone five times. The extracts were filtered and evaporated under low pressure to dryness at 40 °C. The collected extracts were stored at −20 °C until further use.

Dermatophytes species

Dermatophytes (Epidermophyton floccosum, Microsporum canis, Trichophyton mentagrophytes, Trichophyton rubrum and Trichophyton tonsurans) are well-characterized clinical isolates from the strain collection of the Hospital Juárez de Mexico and were donated by Q.F.B. Misael González Ibarra, the chief of the Laboratory of Immunology and Medical Mycology.

Inoculum preparation for biological assay

All of the strains were cultured in Sabouraud dextrose broth (Bioxon) at 28 °C until the maximal numbers of conidia were formed (15–20 days). The conidia were recovered by centrifugation at 2795 × g for 20 min at 4 °C. The pellet was suspended in sterilized distilled water and was adjusted to 105 conidia (in vitro) or 106 conidia (in vivo) per ml for use as the inoculum. The conidia were quantified using a Neubauer quantification chamber under a microscope.

Agar dilution assay

The assay was carried out according to the method of Hufford with some modifications (Hufford et al., 1975Hufford, C.D., Funderburk, M.J., Morgan, J.M., Robertson, L.W., 1975. Two antimicrobial alkaloids from heartwood of Liriodendron tulipifera L. J. Pharm. Sci. 64, 789-792.). Agar plates were prepared by adding 10 ml of Sabouraud dextrose agar in Petri dishes (9 cm in diameter). Next, 100, 50 or 25 µg of extract were added in 100 µL of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and control agar plates with 1% of DMSO and 100 µg of clotrimazole were included. The plates were incubated for 10 min at room temperature and were subsequently inoculated with each of the test fungi in triplicate. The plates were incubated at 28 °C for 12 days. These results were expressed as the percentage of inhibition of hyphal elongation compared to the negative controls.

Determination of therapeutic efficacy against experimental tinea pedis in BALB/c mice

Male BALB/c eight-week-old mice weighing 25 ± 5 g were used and ten mice were assigned to each group. The mice were placed in stainless steel cages, which were maintained at 25 °C in a 12 h dark–light cycle and provided with food and water ad libitum. All of the experiments were performed according to the Mexican Official Norm for Animal Care Handing (NOM-062, 1999NOM-062, 1999. Norma Oficial Mexicana NOM-062-ZOO-1999: Especificaciones técnicas para la producción, cuidado y uso de los animales de laboratorio. Diario Oficial De La Federación México.).

Procedures for infection

The assay was carried out according to the method of González-Ávila (González-Ávila, 2002González-Ávila, M., 2002. Estudio sobre los mecanismos de las actividades fungicida y antitóxica de Rhoeo discolor, y establecimiento de un modelo in vivo de micosis Biología Celular. Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del Instituto Politécnico Nacional, México D.F., pp. 75.). One side of a paper disk (6 mm in diameter, Antibiotic Assay Paper, Whatman #1) was covered with a piece of aluminum foil, and the other side was free to carry the inoculum suspension. The discs were inoculated with 106 conidia of T. rubrum and were fixed to the soles of the feet of animal with adhesive elastic tape. The discs were removed on days 7, 14 and 21, and each sole was examined for clinical signs of dermatophytosis. The right leg of each animal was infected, and the left leg served as the uninfected control.

Macroscopic observation

The skin lesions caused by T. rubrum were observed macroscopically on days 7, 14 and 21 and were assessed using the following score system: 0, no signs or normal; 1, a small number of pink erythematous papules and less than 25% of desquamation at the site; 2, moderate intense pink erythema spread over the entire site accompanied by 25–50% desquamation an inflammatory response; 3, patches of intense red erythema with 50–80% desquamation and crusting; and 4, severe carmine red erythema with 80–100% desquamation and severe crusting. The average score for each group was calculated to determine the average lesion score.

Treatment

From day 14 post-infection, the mice were treated intragastrically (IG) daily for seven days with 100 µL DMSO:H2O 1:3 serving as a vehicle. All groups were kept under constant observation to detect any changes in behavior or changes in water and food intake.

The animals were divided into five groups: group A was the non-treated infected control, group B was the positive control (treated with 1 mg/kg of clotrimazole IG), groups C and D were the infected groups treated with 2.5 and 5 mg/kg of acetone extract of B. hartwegii or Z. caribaeum, respectively, and group E consisted of non-infected animals treated with 10 mg/kg of extract to determine the potential toxic effects of extracts.

After treatment, the mice were anesthetized with 60 mg/kg of intraperitoneal sodium pentobarbital and sacrificed by cardiac puncture to collect 2–3 ml of blood. Serum from non-heparinized blood was carefully collected for a liver profile test. The mice were euthanized according to the official Mexican standard for the humane killing of animals (NOM-033, 1995NOM-033, 1995. Norma Oficial Mexicana NOM-033-ZOO-1995: Sacrificio humanitario de los animales silvestres y domésticos. Diario Oficial De La Federación México.). All animals were euthanized, and the vital organs were macroscopically analyzed.

Histological analyses

Representative fragments of the kidney, lungs and liver (to observe the toxic effects of extracts) from three mice were fixed in a 10% solution of formalin and enclosed in paraffin. Paraffin blocks were prepared after completing tissue processing in different grades of alcohol and xylenes. Sections (5 µm) were prepared from paraffin blocks using a microtome, and the sections were stained with hematoxylin–eosin (H&E).

Mutagenicity assay

A Salmonella mutagenicity test using the incorporation method was performed as previously described (Maron and Ames, 1983Maron, D.M., Ames, B.N., 1983. Revised methods for the Salmonella mutagenicity test. Mutat Res. 113,173-215.), using the Salmonella typhimuriumstrains TA98, TA100 and TA102 and the S9 fraction obtained from the liver of a male Wistar rat induced with Aroclor 1254 (New England Nuclear, North Haven, Conn) as the metabolic activation system. S. typhimuriumstrains were cultured for 16 h at 37 °C in a shaking water bath set at 90 rpm. In a sterile tube containing 2 ml of soft agar (at 45 °C), the bacterial cultures (100 µL) were exposed to final extract concentrations of 0.78, 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25.0, 50.0, 100 and 200.0 µg/ml, or to 10 µl of DMSO as a negative control. Subsequently, the suspension mixture was placed in a Petri dish containing Vogel–Bonner minimal medium. After incubation for 48 h at 37 °C, the revertant colonies (His+) were quantified. The mutagenesis positive controls used for each strain were picrolonic acid, methyl-N-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, mitomycin C, 2-amino-anthracene and cyclophosphamide, as previously described (Maron and Ames, 1983Maron, D.M., Ames, B.N., 1983. Revised methods for the Salmonella mutagenicity test. Mutat Res. 113,173-215.).

Statistical analysis

GraphPad Prism 5.0 (GraphPad Software, Inc.) was used for statistical analysis. The average lesion score on the last day of macroscopic observation was analyzed using one-way ANOVA nonparametric test and Dunnett post hocanalysis. The differences of the means of the groups were compared with the non-treated group and were considered significant when p < 0.05.

The mutagenicity was evaluated using a two-way ANOVA test and Bonferroni post hoc analysis. The differences of the means of the groups were compared with the corresponding positive control and were considered to be significant when p < 0.05.

Results

The acetone extracts from B. hartwegii, D. arboreus, E. herbacea, H. patens and Z. caribaeum (yields of 4.1, 2.5, 2.7, 3.7 and 2.1% respectively) were evaluated for activity against E. floccosum, M. canis, T. mentagrophytes, T. rubrum and T. tonsurans (Table 1). The acetone extract of H. patens exhibited 100% growth inhibition against T. mentagrophytes and E. floccosum at 100.0 and 50.0 µg/ml, respectively, and B. hartwegiiinhibited growth of M. canis and T. mentagrophytesat 100.0 µg/ml. None of the extracts inhibited 100% growth of T. tonsurans, but all of the extracts exhibited good activity, with 85–95% growth inhibition at 100.0 µg/ml. The 1% DMSO did not affect the growth of the fungi.

Table 1
In vitro activity against E. floccosum, M. canis, T. mentagrophytes, T. rubrum and T. tonsurans (percentage of growth inhibition).

The macroscopic observation results in the tinea pedis model are shown in Fig. 1. At day 7 post-infection, all of the groups exhibited a small number of pink erythematous papules and less than 25% of desquamation. At day 14 post-infection, the disease progressed uniformly in all groups, with patches of intense red erythema and 50–80% of scales and crusting. At day 21 post-infection (7 days of treatment), the mice treated with B. hartwegii (2.5 mg/kg) or Z. caribaeum (2.5 and 5 mg/kg) showed improvement in the soles (Fig. 2), with a level of damage similar to day 7 post-infection, while the mice treated with B. hartwegii (5 mg/kg) showed an improvement of 100% with no signs of disease. Compared to the non-treated group, there was a statistically significant improvement in the lesions treated with B. hartwegii and Z. caribaeum acetone extracts.

Fig. 1.
The macroscopic improvement of skin lesions in experimental tinea pedis in Balb/c mice treated with 2.5 and 5 mg/kg of B. hartwegii or Z. caribaeum acetone extracts. Intragastric treatment was started on day 14 post-inoculation (↓) and was continued once daily for seven consecutive days. *p< 0.05 versus the non-treated group (One-wayANOVA nonparametric test and Dunnett post hoc analysis).
Fig. 2
Experimental tinea pedis. The soles of animals treated for 7 days (day 21 post-infection). A, the uninfected, non-treated control; B, The infected, non-treated control showed severe carmine red erythema with 80–100% desquamation and severe crusting; C, D, F and G, The infected groups, treated with clotrimazole 1 mg/kg, B. hartwegii 2.5 mg/kg or Z. caribaeum 2.5 and 5 mg/kg, respectively, showed a small number of pink erythematous papules and less than 25% of desquamation at the site; and E, Thetreated group showed no signs of toxicity.

The non-infected animals treated with 10 mg/kg of B. hartwegii or Z. caribaeum did not exhibit signs of toxicity, such as piloerection, alteration in locomotor activity or mortality. The internal organs did not exhibit any gross morphological lesions.

The results of the liver profile test showed that the values of serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase (56.1 ± 9.9 UI/l), serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (160.2 ± 64.1 UI/l), total bilirubin (0.74 ± 0.25 mg/dl), direct bilirubin (0.67 ± 0.28 mg/dl), and indirect bilirubin (0.90 ± 0.56) did not present any significant difference between the treated groups and control group, indicating an absence of liver damage caused by treatment.

Kidney sections from animals treated with acetone extracts of B. hartwegii or Z. caribaeum (10 mg/kg for seven days) showed a normal renal cortex with a normal appearance of the glomerulus, tubules and renal papilla. The lung sections displayed normal alveolar geometry, and the alveolar septum appeared normal. The liver sections showed normal hepatic architecture, normal hepatocytes, a normal portal triad and a normal central vein.

Mutagenicity studies by the incorporation method showed that the acetone extracts of B. hartwegii, D. arboreus, E. herbacea, H. patens and Z. caribaeum at concentrations between 0.78 and 200 µg/ml (only 0.78, 12.5, 25.0, 50.0 and 200.0 µg/ml are showed) with or without a metabolic system (S9 mixture) did not produce frame-shift mutations in S. typhimurium His strain TA98. The acetone extracts did not induce mutations by base-pair substitutions in strain TA100 and did not produce mutations due to oxidative damage in strain TA102 (Table 2).

Table 2
Mutagenicity of acetone extracts on S. typhimurium using the Ames test (plate incorporation assay), in presence or absence of metabolic activation.

Discussion

The anti-dermatophyte in vitro activities of several herbal extracts have been examined in previous reports (Machado et al., 2009Machado, K.E., Cechinel Filho, V., Cruz, R.C., Meyre-Silva, C., Cruz, A.B., 2009. Antifungal activity of Eugenia umbellifloraagainst dermatophytes. Nat. Prod. Commun. 4,1181-1184.; Ponnusamy et al., 2010Ponnusamy, K., Petchiammal, C., Mohankumar, R., Hopper, W., 2010. In vitro antifungal activity of indirubin isolated from a South Indian ethnomedicinal plant Wrightia tinctoria R. Br. J. Ethnopharmacol. 132, 349-354.; Sule et al., 2012Sule, A., Ahmed, Q.U., Latip, J., Samah, O.A., Omar, M.N., Umar, A., Dogarai, B.B., 2012. Antifungal activity of Andrographis paniculata extracts and active principles against skin pathogenic fungal strains in vitro. Pharm. Biol. 50, 850-856.). However, the extracts displayed much weaker activity than the commonly used synthetic anti-dermatophyte drugs, and only a small number of these extracts have been evaluated in experimental models, which limits the use of these extracts as potential therapeutic agents (Evron et al., 1990Evron, R., Guizie, M., Zehavi, U., Polacheck, I., 1990. Activity of compound G2 isolated from alfalfa roots in experimental dermatophyte infection. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 34,1600-1601.; Mikaeili et al., 2012Mikaeili, A., Modaresi, M., Karimi, I., Ghavimi, H., Fathi, M., Jalilian, N., 2012. Antifungal activities of Astragalus verusOlivier. against Trichophyton verrucosum on in vitro and in vivo guinea pig model of dermatophytosis. Mycoses 55, 318-325.).

In our experiments, we found that B. hartwegii and H. patens extracts have the most optimal therapeutic potential because these extracts exhibit comparable or even higher efficiencies than the reference drugs against E. floccosum, M. canis and T. mentagrophytes.

Other plant extracts used in traditional medicine have shown similar activities; for example, the hydroalcoholic extract of Berberis aristata has activity against ten species of yeasts and molds, including T. rubrum (MIC of 2.5 µg/ml), Candida albicans(MIC 1.25 µg/ml), Cryptococcus albidus (MIC 1.25 µg/ml), Blastoschizomyces capitatus (MIC 22 µg/ml), Fusarium moniliforme (MIC 12 µg/ml), and Fusarium semitectum (MIC 15 µg/ml), and against five species of Aspergillus with MIC values between 0.3 and 10 µg/ml (Sharma et al., 2008Sharma, R.S., Mishra, V., Singh, R., Seth, N., Babu, C.R., 2008. Antifungal activity of some Himalayan medicinal plants and cultivated ornamental species. Fitoterapia 79, 589-591.; Singh et al., 2007Singh, M., Srivastava, S., Rawat, A.K., 2007. Antimicrobial activities of Indian Berberis species. Fitoterapia 78, 574-576.). The hydroalcoholic extracts of species, such as Berberis asiatica, have reported activity against C. albicans and Aspergillus flavus (MIC = 1.25 and 0.62 µg/ml, respectively); Berberis chitira against Aspergillus nidulans, C. albidus and A. flavus (MIC = 1.25 µg/ml); and Berberis lycium against Aspergillus terreusand Aspergillus spinulosus (MIC = 0.31 and 0.62 µg/ml, respectively) (Singh et al., 2007Singh, M., Srivastava, S., Rawat, A.K., 2007. Antimicrobial activities of Indian Berberis species. Fitoterapia 78, 574-576.).

This study is the first report describing the in vitro antifungal activity of H. patens and is the first to report this activity in a species of the genus Hamelia. However, other biological activities have been previously reported, including the antibacterial activity of the methanolic extract from the leaves of H. patens against E. coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa with MIC = 2.5 mg/ml (Camporese et al., 2003Camporese, A., Balick, M.J., Arvigo, R., Esposito, R.G., Morsellino, N., De Simone, F., Tubaro, A., 2003. Screening of anti-bacterial activity of medicinal plants from Belize (Central America). J. Ethnopharmacol. 87, 103-107.). The cytotoxic activities of this specie have been reported against human epithelioid cervix carcinoma cells (HeLa), CI50 = 13.3 µg/ml; human prostate cancer cells (PC-3), CI50 = 41 µg/ml; breast cancer human cells (MCF7 and MDA-MB-231), CI50 = 63 and 45 µg/ml; breast cancer mouse cells (4T-1), CI50 = 31 µg/ml; colon carcinoma cells (HT-29), CI50 = 34 µg/ml; and mouse leukemic monocyte macrophage cells (RAW-267), CI50 = 9 µg/ml (Mena-Rejon et al., 2009Mena-Rejon, G., Caamal-Fuentes, E., Cantillo-Ciau, Z., Cedillo-Rivera, R., Flores-Guido, J., Moo-Puc, R., 2009. In vitro cytotoxic activity of nine plants used in Mayan traditional medicine. J. Ethnopharmacol. 121,462-465.; Taylor et al., 2013Taylor, P., Arsenak, M., Abad, M.J., Fernandez, A., Milano, B., Gonto, R., Ruiz, M.C., Fraile, S., Taylor, S., Estrada, O., Michelangeli, F., 2013. Screening of Venezuelan medicinal plant extracts for cytostatic and cytotoxic activity against tumor cell lines. Phytother. Res. 27, 530-539.). H. patens displayed anti-inflammatory activity against Croton oil-induced ear edema (Sosa et al., 2002Sosa, S., Balick, M.J., Arvigo, R., Esposito, R.G., Pizza, C., Altinier, G., Tubaro, A., 2002. Screening of the topical anti-inflammatory activity of some Central American plants. J. Ethnopharmacol. 81, 211-215.) and increased the breaking strength in a double incision wound healing bioassay model (Gomez-Beloz et al., 2003Gomez-Beloz, A., Rucinski, J.C., Balick, M.J., Tipton, C., 2003. Double incision wound healing bioassay using Hamelia patensfrom El Salvador. J. Ethnopharmacol. 88, 169-173.). A variety of alkaloids that are potentially responsible for these biological activities have been described, and the most abundant alkaloids are isopteropodine, rumberine, palmirine, maroquine, (−)-hameline, aricine, pteropodine, uncarine F and speciophylline (Paniagua-Vega et al., 2012Paniagua-Vega, D., Cerda-Garcia-Rojas, C.M., Ponce-Noyola, T., Ramos-Valdivia, A.C., 2012. A new monoterpenoid oxindole alkaloid from Hamelia patens micropropagated plantlets. Nat. Prod. Commun. 7,1441-1444.; Reyes-Chilpa et al., 2004Reyes-Chilpa, R., Rivera, J., Oropeza, M., Mendoza, P., Amekraz, B., Jankowski, C., Campos, M., 2004. Methanol extracts of Hamelia patens containing oxindole alkaloids relax KCl-induced contraction in rat myometrium. Biol. Pharm. Bull. 27, 1617-1620.). Many alkaloids have antifungal properties (Cimanga et al., 1998Cimanga, K., De Bruyne, T., Pieters, L., Totte, J., Tona, L., Kambu, K., Vanden Berghe, D., Vlietinck, A.J., 1998. Antibacterial and antifungal activities of neocryptolepine, biscryptolepine and cryptoquindoline, alkaloids isolated from Cryptolepis sanguinolenta. Phytomedicine 5, 209-214.; Hu et al., 2014Hu, J., Shi, X.D., Chen, J.G., Mao, X., Zhu, L., Yu, L., Shi, J.Y., 2014. Alkaloids from Toddalia asiatica and their cytotoxic, antimicrobial and antifungal activities. Food Chem. 148, 437-444.; Zhou et al., 2003Zhou, C.X., Liu, J.Y., Ye, W.C., Liu, C.H., Tan, R.X., 2003. Neoverataline A and B, two antifungal alkaloids with a novel carbon skeleton from Veratrum taliense. Tetrahedron 59, 5743-5747.), and alkaloids can constitute up to 90% of the metabolites in H. patens extracts; thus, we propose that this type of compound is also responsible for the observed antifungal activity.

To determine the activity against T. rubrum in the experimental model, we chose to study the species B. hartwegii because this plant showed good activity against the five dermatophytes evaluated, and we examined Z. caribaeum due to the wide use of this plant in traditional medicine for the treatment of skin diseases. Moreover, both species were selected due to the high availability of these plants.

B. hartwegii and Z. caribaeum acetone extracts administered at different concentrations improved the skin lesions of experimental tinea pedis. Doses of 2.5 mg/kg of Z. caribaeum and B. hartwegii extracts had comparable efficacy to 1 mg of clotrimazole. Furthermore, treatment with B. hartwegii (5 mg/kg) extract completely healed the mycological infection after 7 days of treatment; thus, this natural extract exhibited better activity than the reference drug.

Currently, there have been no reports of any study on the species B. hartwegii; however, other species of the same genus, such as B. aristata, B. asiatica, Berberis criteria, B. lycium, Berberis thunbergii, Berberis heterophylla and Berberis aetnensis, have demonstrated activity against a large number of pathogenic strains of the genera Aspergillus and Candida (Freile et al., 2003Freile, M.L., Giannini, F., Pucci, G., Sturniolo, A., Rodero, L., Pucci, O., Balzareti, V., Enriz, R.D., 2003. Antimicrobial activity of aqueous extracts and of berberine isolated from Berberis heterophylla.Fitoterapia 74, 702-705.; Iauk et al., 2007Iauk, L., Costanzo, R., Caccamo, F., Rapisarda, A., Musumeci, R., Milazzo, I., Blandino, G., 2007. Activity of Berberis aetnensisroot extracts on Candida strains. Fitoterapia 78,159-161.; Li et al., 2007Li, A.R., Zhu, Y., Li, X.N., Tian, X.J., 2007. Antimicrobial activity of four species of Berberidaceae. Fitoterapia 78, 379-381.; Sharma et al., 2008Sharma, R.S., Mishra, V., Singh, R., Seth, N., Babu, C.R., 2008. Antifungal activity of some Himalayan medicinal plants and cultivated ornamental species. Fitoterapia 79, 589-591.; Singh et al., 2007Singh, M., Srivastava, S., Rawat, A.K., 2007. Antimicrobial activities of Indian Berberis species. Fitoterapia 78, 574-576.). Berberine, the compound responsible for this antifungal activity (Freile et al., 2003Freile, M.L., Giannini, F., Pucci, G., Sturniolo, A., Rodero, L., Pucci, O., Balzareti, V., Enriz, R.D., 2003. Antimicrobial activity of aqueous extracts and of berberine isolated from Berberis heterophylla.Fitoterapia 74, 702-705.; Soffar et al., 2001Soffar, S.A., Metwali, D.M., Abdel-Aziz, S.S., el-Wakil, H.S., Saad, G.A., 2001. Evaluation of the effect of a plant alkaloid (berberine derived from Berberis aristata) on Trichomonas vaginalis in vitro. J. Egypt. Soc. Parasitol. 31, 893-904, +891 p., plate.; Zhang et al., 2013aZhang, L., Chang, J.J., Zhang, S.L., Damu, G.L., Geng, R.X., Zhou, C.H., 2013a. Synthesis and bioactive evaluation of novel hybrids of metronidazole and berberine as new type of antimicrobial agents and their transportation behavior by human serum albumin. Bioorg. Med. Chem. 21, 4158-4169.), has a synergistic effect with ketokonazole (Zhou et al., 2012Zhou, Y., He, P., Liu, A., Zhang, L., Liu, Y., Dai, R., 2012. Drug-drug interactions between ketoconazole and berberine in rats: pharmacokinetic effects benefit pharmacodynamic synergism. Phytother. Res. 26, 772-777.), miconazole (Wei et al., 2011Wei, G.X., Xu, X., Wu, C.D., 2011. In vitrosynergism between berberine and miconazole against planktonic and biofilm Candida cultures. Arch. Oral Biol. 56, 565-572.), fluconazole (Iwazaki et al., 2010Iwazaki, R.S., Endo, E.H., Ueda-Nakamura, T., Nakamura, C.V., Garcia, L.B., Filho, B.P., 2010. In vitro antifungal activity of the berberine and its synergism with fluconazole. Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek 97, 201-205.; Quan et al., 2006Quan, H., Cao, Y.Y., Xu, Z., Zhao, J.X., Gao, P.H., Qin, X.F., Jiang, Y.Y., 2006. Potent in vitro synergism of fluconazole and berberine chloride against clinical isolates of Candida albicans resistant to fluconazole. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 50, 1096-1099.) and amphotericin B (Han and Lee, 2005Han, Y., Lee, J.H., 2005. Berberine synergy with amphotericin B against disseminated candidiasis in mice. Biol. Pharm. Bull. 28, 541-544.). This synergistic activity is due to the up-regulation of CDR1 mRNA and the transport function of Cdr1p induced by fluphenazine (Zhu et al., 2014Zhu, S.L., Yan, L., Zhang, Y.X., Jiang, Z.H., Gao, P.H., Qiu, Y., Wang, L., Zhao, M.Z., Ni, T.J.H., Cai, Z., Tian, S.J., Zang, C.X., Zhang, D.Z., Jiang, Y.Y., 2014. Berberine inhibits fluphenazine-induced up-regulation of CDR1 in Candida albicans. Biol. Pharm. Bull. 37, 268-273.). Recent studies have found that berberine azoles exhibited good antimicrobial activity against Candida mycoderma (Zhang et al., 2013cZhang, S.L., Chang, J.J., Damu, G.L.V., Geng, R.X., Zhou, C.H., 2013c. Berberine azoles as antimicrobial agents: synthesis, biological evaluation and their interactions with human serum albumin. MedChemComm 4, 839-846.), andberberine triazoles has good activity against C. mycoderma and C. albicans. This activity was comparable or better than the reference drugs berberine, norfloxacin and fluconazole (Zhang et al., 2013bZhang, S.L., Chang, J.J., Damu, G.L.V., Fang, B., Zhou, X.D., Geng, R.X., Zhou, C.H., 2013b. Novel berberine triazoles: synthesis, antimicrobial evaluation and competitive interactions with metal ions to Human Serum Albumin. Bioorg. Med. Chem. 23, 1008-1012.). Thus, the antifungal activity observed in B. hartwegii could be due to the presence of berberine.

There have been no reports on the antifungal activity of Z. caribaeum, but there have been reports on the activity of the genus Zanthoxylum. The methanolic extract of Zanthoxylum alatum exhibited potent antifungal activity against Alternaria alternata, Alternaria brassicae, and Curvularia lunata(Guleria et al., 2013Guleria, S., Tiku, A.K., Koul, A., Gupta, S., Singh, G., Razdan, V.K., 2013. Antioxidant and antimicrobial properties of the essential oil and extracts of Zanthoxylum alatum grown in North-Western Himalaya. ScientificWorldJournal 2013, 790580.), and Zanthoxylum capense exhibited antifungal activity against Aspergillus fumigatus (Adamu et al., 2012Adamu, M., Naidoo, V., Eloff, J.N., 2012. Some southern African plant species used to treat helminth infections in ethnoveterinary medicine have excellent antifungal activities. BMC Complement. Altern. Med. 12, 213.). Extracts from the leaf, fruit, stem, bark and root of Zanthoxylum americanum demonstrated antifungal activity against C. albicans, Cryptococcus neoformans and A. fumigatus in a disk diffusion assay (600 µg/disk) (Bafi-Yeboa et al., 2005Bafi-Yeboa, N.F., Arnason, J.T., Baker, J., Smith, M.L., 2005. Antifungal constituents of northern prickly ash Zanthoxylum americanum Mill. Phytomedicine 12,370-377.). In other cases, alkaloids have been demonstrated to be responsible for the antifungal activity of Zanthoxylum plants; for example, three alkaloids with antifungal activity have been isolated from Zanthoxylum nitidum(dictamnine, gamma-fagarine, and 5-methoxydictamnine) (Yang and Chen, 2008Yang, G., Chen, D., 2008. Alkaloids from the roots of Zanthoxylum nitidum and their antiviral and antifungal effects. Chem. Biodivers. 5, 1718-1722.), and eight active alkaloids have been isolated from Zanthoxylum rhetsa and Zanthoxylum chiloperone (Krohn et al., 2011Krohn, K., Cludius-Brandt, S., Schulz, B., Sreelekha, M., Shafi, P.M., 2011. Isolation, structure elucidation, and biological activity of a new alkaloid from Zanthoxylum rhetsa. Nat. Prod. Commun. 6, 1595-1596.; Soriano-Agaton et al., 2005Soriano-Agaton, F., Lagoutte, D., Poupon, E., Roblot, F., Fournet, A., Gantier, J.C., Hocquemiller, R., 2005. Extraction, hemisynthesis, and synthesis of canthin-6-one analogues. Evaluation of their antifungal activities. J. Nat. Prod. 68, 1581-1587.). Alkaloidal extract of Z. chiloperone var. angustifolium has activity against C. albicans, A. fumigatus and T. mentagrophytes, being responsible for the biological activity two alkaloids (canthin-6-one and 5-methoxycanthin-6-one). The canthin-6-one has a broad antifungal spectrum against twelve species (MICs between 12.8 and 56.1 µM/l) (Thouvenel et al., 2003Thouvenel, C., Gantier, J.C., Duret, P., Fourneau, C., Hocquemiller, R., Ferreira, M.E., Rojas de Arias, A., Fournet, A., 2003. Antifungal compounds from Zanthoxylum chiloperone var. angustifolium. Phytother. Res. 17, 678-680.). Thus, alkaloids must be responsible for the biological activity observed in Z. caribaeum.

Medicinal plants and their derivatives have been used as alternatives in allopathic medicine in many countries. Despite the widespread use of medicinal plants, few scientific studies have been performed to examine the safety and efficacy of traditional remedies or pure compounds (Silva et al., 2011Silva, M.G., Aragao, T.P., Vasconcelos, C.F., Ferreira, P.A., Andrade, B.A., Costa, I.M., Costa-Silva, J.H., Wanderley, A.G., Lafayette, S.S., 2011. Acute and subacute toxicity of Cassia occidentalis L. stem and leaf in Wistar rats. J. Ethnopharmacol. 136, 341-346.). Several drugs for dermatophytosis, such as ketokonazole, itraconazole and terbinafine treatment, can cause hepatotoxicity (Andriole, 1999Andriole, V.T., 1999. The 1998 Garrod lecture. Current and future antifungal therapy: new targets for antifungal agents. J. Antimicrob. Chemother. 44, 151-162.; Somchit et al., 2004Somchit, N., Norshahida, A.R., Hasiah, A.H., Zuraini, A., Sulaiman, M.R., Noordin, M.M., 2004. Hepatotoxicity induced by antifungal drugs itraconazole and fluconazole in rats: a comparative in vivostudy. Hum. Exp. Toxicol. 23, 519-525.; Zapata-Garrido et al., 2003Zapata-Garrido, A.J., Romo, A.C., Padilla, F.B., 2003. Terbinafine hepatotoxicity. A case report and review of literature. Ann. Hepatol. 2, 47-51.); thus, it is important to evaluate the potential toxic effects of extracts and natural compounds.

The results of the liver profile test did not demonstrate any significant differences between the groups treated with B. hartwegii or Z. caribaeum and the control group, indicating an absence of liver damage caused by treatment. Liver histological sections showed normal hepatic architecture, normal hepatocytes, normal portal triad and normal central vein. These observations, as well as the serum levels of bilirubin and transaminases, established the absence of hepatocellular damage induced by the extracts. Histological analysis and biochemical parameters are essential for evaluating the toxicological risk of substances with biological activity because any changes in one of these parameters in animal studies can provide a high predictive value of potential damage in humans (Carvalho et al., 2011Carvalho, A.L., Annoni, R., Silva, P.R., Borelli, P., Fock, R.A., Trevisan, M.T., Mauad, T., 2011. Acute, subacute toxicity and mutagenic effects of anacardic acids from cashew (Anacardium occidentale Linn.) in mice. J. Ethnopharmacol. 135, 730-736.; Olson et al., 2000Olson, H., Betton, G., Robinson, D., Thomas, K., Monro, A., Kolaja, G., Lilly, P., Sanders, J., Sipes, G., Bracken, W., Dorato, M., Van Deun, K., Smith, P., Berger, B., Heller, A., 2000. Concordance of the toxicity of pharmaceuticals in humans and in animals. Regul. Toxicol. Pharmacol. 32, 56-67.; Silva et al., 2011Silva, M.G., Aragao, T.P., Vasconcelos, C.F., Ferreira, P.A., Andrade, B.A., Costa, I.M., Costa-Silva, J.H., Wanderley, A.G., Lafayette, S.S., 2011. Acute and subacute toxicity of Cassia occidentalis L. stem and leaf in Wistar rats. J. Ethnopharmacol. 136, 341-346.).

Mutagenic compounds are potentially hazardous to humans. Substances that are mutagenic for bacteria are likely to be carcinogenic in animals. Thus, all substances must be analyzed to establish the risk-benefit ratio. A useful procedure to detect mutagenic substances is the standard plate incorporation test (Ames et al., 1973Ames, B.N., Durston, W.E., Yamasaki, E., Lee, F.D., 1973. Carcinogens are mutagens: a simple test system combining liver homogenates for activation and bacteria for detection. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 70, 2281-2285.). Certain substances are not mutagenic by themselves; thus, the Ames test includes a metabolic system (mixture of liver enzymes S9).

None of the tested strains (TA98, TA100 and TA102) revealed mutagenic potential. All of the results were significantly lower than those of the corresponding positive control (Two-way ANOVA test and Bonferroni post hoc analysis). Moreover, the number of revertant colonies per plate containing the tested substance must be at least more than twice the number of spontaneous revertants (Maron and Ames, 1983Maron, D.M., Ames, B.N., 1983. Revised methods for the Salmonella mutagenicity test. Mutat Res. 113,173-215.) for a substance to be considered mutagenic, which was never observed in the tests with the acetone extracts of B. hartwegii, D. arboreus, E. herbacea, H. patens and Z. caribaeum. In addition, no dose-dependent effects were demonstrated.

In summary, B. hartwegii and Z. caribaeum might be useful agents against Trichophyton infections because these extracts exhibited good activity in in vitro and in vivo evaluations with no signs of genotoxicity or hepatotoxicity.

Our findings justify the use of B. hartwegii and Z. caribaeum in Mexican traditional medicine for the treatment of fungal skin infections. These results in combination with the absence of hepatotoxic or mutagenic effects indicated that these two species have significant potential for the development of new anti-dermatophyte drugs.

Acknowledgment

This research was financially supported by project FOMIX of COTACyT TAMPS-2005-C08-13.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    Jan-Feb 2015

History

  • Received
    11 June 2014
  • Accepted
    10 Dec 2014
Sociedade Brasileira de Farmacognosia Universidade Federal do Paraná, Laboratório de Farmacognosia, Rua Pref. Lothario Meissner, 632 - Jd. Botânico, 80210-170, Curitiba, PR, Brasil, Tel/FAX (41) 3360-4062 - Curitiba - PR - Brazil
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