1. Evaluation of the Therapeutic Potential of Traditionally-Used Natural Plant Extracts to Inhibit Proliferation of a HeLa Cell Cancer Line and Replication of Human Respiratory Syncytial Virus (hRSV).
- Author
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Brill, Ellie N., Link, Natalie G., Jackson, Morgan R., Alvi, Alea F., Moehlenkamp, Jacob N., Beard, Morgan B., Simons, Adam R., Carson, Linden C., Li, Ray, Judd, Breckin T., Brasseale, Max N., Berkman, Emily P., Park, Riley K., Cordova-Hernandez, Sedna, Hoff, Rebecca Y., Yager, Caroline E., Modelski, Meredith C., Nenadovich, Milica, Sisodia, Dhruvi, and Reames, Clayton J.
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NATIVE Americans , *RESPIRATORY syncytial virus infections , *CANCER cell proliferation , *EMERGING infectious diseases , *RESPIRATORY syncytial virus , *FURFURAL - Abstract
Simple Summary: Natural plant products have been used medicinally for thousands of years by Native Americans in the United States to treat a wide array of ailments. However, there remains a need to investigate the therapeutic potential or effectiveness of these traditional approaches as little remains known. In this study, we evaluated the therapeutic potential of aqueous extracts prepared from four plants traditionally used in Indiana, USA, to inhibit cancer cell proliferation and infection with human respiratory syncytial virus (hRSV), a major respiratory pathogen of infants and the elderly. Traditional approaches employing natural plant products to treat a wide array of ailments have been documented and described for thousands of years. However, there remains limited scientific study of the therapeutic potential or effectiveness of ethnobotanical applications. Increases in the incidence of cancer and emerging infectious diseases demonstrate a growing need for advances in the development of therapeutic options. In this study, we evaluate the therapeutic potential of aqueous extracts prepared from four plants, purple aster (Symphyotrichum novae-angliae (L.) Nemsom), common sage (Salvia lyrata (L.)), northern spicebush (Lindera benzoin (L.) Blume), and lamb's ear (Stachys byzantina (K.) Koch)) traditionally used in Native American medicine in Indiana, USA. Using a combination of cytotoxicity assays, immunofluorescence microscopy, and antiviral assays, we found that sage and spicebush extracts exhibit cytotoxic and antiproliferative effects on HeLa cell proliferation and that sage, spicebush, and aster extracts were capable of significantly inhibiting human respiratory syncytial virus (hRSV), a major respiratory pathogen of infants and the elderly. Chemical analysis of the four extracts identified four major compounds which were subsequently evaluated to identify the responsible constituents in the extracts. While none of the identified compounds were shown to induce significant impacts on HeLa cell proliferation, two of the compounds, (1S)-(-)-Borneol and 5-(hydroxymethyl)-furfural, identified in sage and spicebush, respectively, were shown to have antiviral activities. Our data suggest that several of the extracts tested exhibited either anti-proliferative or antiviral activity supporting future further analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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