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Title: | Screening of antioxidants from medicinal plants for cardioprotective effect against doxorubicin toxicity |
Authors: | Wattanapitayakul S.K. Chularojmontri L. Herunsalee A. Charuchongkolwongse S. Niumsakul S. Bauer J.A. |
Keywords: | acetylcysteine ascorbic acid crystal violet Curcuma longa extract doxorubicin Emblica officinalis extract Morus alba extract Piper rostratum extract plant extract superoxide trolox C unclassified drug animal cell antioxidant activity article cardiotoxicity controlled study cytotoxicity test drug effect drug mechanism drug screening heart protection IC 50 medicinal plant morus alba myoblast nonhuman oxidative stress Piper rostratum priority journal rat Animals Antibiotics, Antineoplastic Antioxidants Cardiotonic Agents Dose-Response Relationship, Drug Doxorubicin Drug Evaluation, Preclinical Ferric Compounds Hela Cells Humans Myocytes, Cardiac Oxidation-Reduction Plants, Medicinal Rats Animalia Curcuma longa Emblica Morus alba Phyllanthus emblica Viola (angiosperm) |
Issue Date: | 2005 |
Abstract: | Doxorubicin is an important and effective anticancer drug widely used for the treatment of various types of cancer but its clinical use is limited by dose-dependent cardiotoxicity. Elevated tissue levels of cellular superoxide anion/ oxidative stress are a mechanism by which doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity. Selected medicinal plant extracts were tested for their antioxidant capacity and cardioprotective effect against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity. The cardiac myoblasts H9c2 were incubated with the antioxidants ascorbic acid, trolox, N-acetylcysteine or selected medicinal plant extracts including; 1) ethanolic extracts from Curcuma longa L-EtOH Phyllanthus emblica L-EtOH, and Piper rostratum Roxb-EtOH; and 2) water extracts from Curcuma longa L-H2O and Morus alba L-H2O. The cardioprotective effects of these extracts were evaluated by crystal violet cytotoxicity assay. IC50s of doxorubicin were compared in the presence or absence of ascorbic acids, trolox, N-acetylcysteine or plant extracts. Morus alba L-H2O showed the highest antioxidant properties evaluated by ferric reducing/antioxidant power assay. Ascorbic acid and N-acetylcysteine had modest effects on the protection of doxorubicin-induced cytotoxicity while trolox showed insignificant protective effect. All plant extracts protected cardiac toxicity at different degrees except that Curcuma longa L-EtOH had no protective effect. Phyllanthus emblica-EtOH (100 μg/ml) showed the highest cardioprotective effect (∼12-fold doxorubicin IC50 increase). The data demonstrate that antioxidants from natural sources may be useful in the protection of cardiotoxicity in patients who receive doxorubicin. |
URI: | https://ir.swu.ac.th/jspui/handle/123456789/15130 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-13844318812&doi=10.1111%2fj.1742-7843.2005.pto960112.x&partnerID=40&md5=b562d0e9cccb21eb0ccb0d2799c5b59d |
ISSN: | 17427835 |
Appears in Collections: | Scopus 1983-2021 |
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