Publisher DOI: 10.36922/mi.8367
Title: Potential antiviral and immunomodulatory activity of Amazonian medicinal plant compounds
Language: English
Authors: da Silva Napoleão, Sarah Maria 
Bernardes, João Paulo Romualdo Alarcão 
Tenório, Bernardo Guerra 
Moreno Cardenas, Calisto 
Dallago, Bruno Stéfano Lima 
Çiçek, Serhat Sezai  
Bezerra, Roberto Messias 
Segovia, Jorge Federico Orellana 
Gomes da Mata Kanzaki, Elida Cleyse 
Kanzaki, Isamu 
Keywords: Simian immunodefiency virus; human leukocytes; Ouratea hexasperma; Licania macrophylla
Issue Date: 25-Mar-2025
Publisher: AccScience Publishing
Journal or Series Name: Microbes & immunity 
Volume: 2
Issue: 2
Startpage: 64
Endpage: 75
Is new version of: 10.1101/2024.11.27.625749
20.500.12738/18667
Abstract: 
Novel antiretroviral drugs are constantly needed for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients to confront the continuously emerging resistance to the commonly prescribed combination of anti-HIV synthetic agents and their side effects. Amazonian medicinal plants, Licania macrophylla (LM) (Chrysobalanaceae) and Ouratea hexasperma (OH) (Ochnaceae), were assayed for antiretroviral and immunomodulatory activity, by utilizing an established human leukocyte cell line and the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV). Interleukin (IL)-4, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, and interferon-gamma were quantified after leukocyte culture was stimulated with ethanolic plant extracts and subsequently challenged with lentivirus infection. Mitotic activity induced by OH extract was significantly more pronounced than that of LM extract. Cytokine modulation was observed in SIV-infected cells under independent treatment with OH and LM extracts. Betulinic acid, niruriflavone, (-)-epigallocatechin, (-)-gallocatechin, and 4’-O-methyl-epigallocatechin were isolated from LM. In summary, the tested extracts hold application potential in the therapy of HIV/AIDS pathology by regulating cellular proliferative activity and cytokine levels, as the isolated compounds from these plants have been reported to exhibit antiviral activity.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12738/18666
ISSN: 3029-2883
Review status: This version was peer reviewed (peer review)
Institute: Fakultät Life Sciences (ehemalig, aufgelöst 10.2025) 
Department Biotechnologie (ehemalig, aufgelöst 10.2025) 
Type: Article
Additional note: Napoleão SMS, Alarcão Bernardes JPR, Tenório BG, et al. Potential antiviral and immunomodulatory activity of Amazonian medicinal plant compounds. Microbes & Immunity. doi: 10.36922/mi.8367
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