Cytotoxic and Antioxidant Effects of Antimalarial Herbal Mixtures
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International Journal of Microbiology
Abstract
Many developing countries depend on herbal mixtures as the first line and cost-effective therapy for malaria. (ese mixtures with
such curative tendencies may also be a source of toxicity to host cells. On the other hand, these mixtures may have anticancer
potential activity characterized by cytotoxicity to cancer cells. (e aim of the study was to determine the cytotoxic and antioxidant
effects of five different antimalarial herbal mixtures. Five antimalarial herbal mixtures commonly used in Ghana (coded as STF,
SMH, SMM, SGM, and STT) were purchased and freeze-dried. (e dried samples were tested on human acute T-cell leukemia
(Jurkat) and breast adenocarcinoma (MCF-7) cell lines. Cytotoxicity was assessed using the tetrazolium-based colorimetric
(MTT) assay while antioxidant activity was determined using DPPH free-radical scavenging assay. Among the mixtures, SMM
and SGM exhibited the strongest cytotoxicity towards Jurkat cells (IC50 values 59.17 μg/ml and 49.57 μg/ml, respectively), whereas
STTshowed the weakest cytotoxicity (IC50 = 244.94 μg/ml). Cytotoxic effect ofSMMwas also strongest towards MCF-7 cells whilst
the least cytotoxic sample was SGM (IC50 > 1000 μg/ml). SMM had the highest antioxidant percentage (EC50 =1.05 mg/ml). (e
increasing order of antioxidant percentage among the five herbal mixtures is SMM>SMH> STT > STF > SGM. (e herbal
mixtures may be potential sources of toxic agents to host cells. (erefore, further toxicity studies must be performed to safeguard
health of the public. Interestingly, cytotoxicities exhibited by SMM and SGM suggest the presence of anticancer constituents in
them which warrant further studies.
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Research Article
