Book Volume 3
Pharmacological Potential of Bioactive Phloroglucinol Compounds of the Plant Kingdom
Page: 1-31 (31)
Author: Yvan Anderson Tchangoue Ngandjui*, Niranjan Das, Subhash C. Mandal and Simeon Fogue Kouam
DOI: 10.2174/9789815238129124030003
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Historically, natural products, which are substances generated by living
organisms found in nature, have made an important contribution to pharmacotherapy,
especially those from plant sources. Phloroglucinols are significant bioactive
polyphenolic compounds that are found in plants, marine and microbial sources. Their
chemical structures include an aromatic phenyl ring with three hydroxyl groups and are
usually made of two or more rings linked together through methylene bridges. They
exist widely in several plant families and are known for their significant biological
potentials, such as antibacterial, antifungal, anti-inflammatory, antileishmanial,
antiplasmodial, antiproliferative and cytotoxicity activities. This book chapter provides
an overview of phloroglucinol compounds in the world, their location in the plant, and
their pharmacological applications.
Raging the War against Rheumatoid Arthritis with Plant-Derived Products: Skepticism to Clinical Development
Page: 32-63 (32)
Author: Sangeeta Hazarika, Pobitra Borah* and Pran Kishore Deb
DOI: 10.2174/9789815238129124030004
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic, debilitating autoimmune disease
manifested by progressive articular and extra-articular disabilities. Pieces of evidence
hint that tremendous research efforts have increased the likelihood of attaining a better
treatment goal. However, the associated risks, drug failures, and high costs of the
available drugs or regimens still limit their widespread use. Even though natural
products are rarely considered for lead identification, which is counterintuitive to
traditional drug development, natural products occupy a large chemical space, unlike
synthetic screening methods. Although skepticism towards the use of natural products
continues, the growing attention of researchers towards the diverse flora has led a
plethora of molecules and therapies to reach clinical trial settings. This chapter sheds
light on the challenges in the development of plant-derived compounds or therapies for
the management of RA. It discusses the plant-derived products (including diet-based
therapies) undergoing clinical development for the treatment of RA.
Recent Updates in Natural Product Research and Novel Approaches to Drug Delivery Using Phytomolecules
Page: 64-91 (28)
Author: Junmoni Nath, Chayanika Bordoloi, Alakesh Bharali, Bhanu P. Sahu and Damiki Laloo*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815238129124030005
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Herbal medicines are gaining popularity in the modern world for their ability
to treat a wide range of ailments while having fewer side effects and greater therapeutic
properties. However, there are many limitations when it comes to delivering active
phytomolecules to the target site, including solubility of ingredients, susceptibility to
degradation in the presence of gastric and colonic acidity, diminished metabolic
efficacy attributable to gut microflora, inadequate absorption across the intestinal
epithelium, suboptimal active efflux mechanisms, and susceptibility to first-pass
metabolism. As a result, medication concentrations in the blood are below therapeutic
levels, resulting in reduced or no therapeutic impact. With the rising popularity and
potential therapies of herbal medicines over the last several decades, there has been a
lot of attention paid to the new drug delivery method of active phytomolecules. Novel
herbal drug carriers treat certain diseases by precisely targeting the diseased zone
within a patient's body and delivering the medication there. Novel drug delivery
systems have the benefit of administering herbal medicines at a preset rate and at the
site of action, reducing adverse effects and increasing drug bioavailability. Controlling
drug distribution in new drug delivery technology is accomplished by integrating the
drug into a carrier system or altering the drug's structure at the molecular level. The
integration of herbal drugs into the delivery system facilitates improvements in
solubility, stability enhancement, toxicity mitigation, potentiation of pharmacological
activity, optimized distribution among tissue macrophages, sustained release kinetics,
and protection against physical and chemical degradation, thereby aligning with key
principles in pharmaceutical formulation. The purpose of this chapter is to offer an overview of several forms of novel drug delivery systems that incorporate active
components, as well as their potential therapeutic and clinical benefit.
Molecular Basis of Therapeutic Action of Flavonoids
Page: 92-147 (56)
Author: Vimalavathini R., Sittarthan V. and Kavimani S.*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815238129124030006
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Herbs have been an integral part of human life for ages. Modern allopathic
drugs had an upper hand over traditional medicine in the past century due to their
mounting inefficacy, resistance, cost, and adverse effects that have led to the reclaim of
herbs once again. Herbs holistically confer biological activity due to the presence of
phytochemicals, which are classified broadly as carbohydrates, lipids, terpenoids,
alkaloids, polyphenols, and essential and volatile oils. In this, polyphenols are a vast
group further comprising flavonoids, phenolic acid, stilbenoids, tannins, lignans,
xanthones, quinones, coumarins, phenylpropanoids, and benzofurans. Of this,
flavonoids are hydroxylated phenolic substances with basic C6-C3-C6 rings
substitution, which gives rise to a series of compounds namely, flavonols, flavanones,
flavones, anthocyanidins, flavanonols, chalcones, isoflavones, and flavanols. They are
abundantly found in vegetables and fruits and exhibit antioxidant, free-radical
scavenging activity, anti-cancer, cardioprotective, anti-diabetic, anti-inflammatory,
anti-allergic, and anti-microbial action. The advent of modern molecular techniques
and computational methodologies has thrown light on the molecular mechanism of
action of these flavonoids, which was otherwise obscure. Hence this chapter aims to
review the types, sources, chemistry, and molecular mechanisms of action of the
various phytomolecules of flavonoid groups.
Research Outcomes of Natural Products in Diabetes Mellitus
Page: 148-198 (51)
Author: Subrat Kumar Bhattamisra* and Mayuren Candasamy
DOI: 10.2174/9789815238129124030007
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Diabetes mellitus, is a chronic condition with dysregulated glucose levels
and has been affecting a larger global population. The disease, if not controlled, can
lead to several microvascular and macrovascular complications that will impede the
patients' physical and mental well-being in addition to its economic burden. Many
diabetic patients are unaware of the complications and hesitate to take medicines in the
early phase of the disease condition. Furthermore, many patients have limited access to
conventional antidiabetic drugs, which drives the search for newer agents or relying on
alternative/complementary medicines. Ancient systems such as Ayurveda, traditional
African and Chinese medicine, Japanese Kampo medicine, and other systems of
medicine have identified many herbal/plants, and mineral-based agents for treating
diabetes. Many such plants probably more than 800 and their extracts have been
scientifically proven or tested using various experimental models of diabetes in
animals. Despite several In vitro and In vivo studies reporting the effects of extracts of
plants on blood glucose, only a few trials have been performed to validate their efficacy
in treating humans with diabetes. An apparent mismatch in outcomes was observed
while translating the effectiveness of these plants from an experimental animal study to
a human study. These inconsistencies among animal and human studies were
remarkable in some cases. There are several aspects responsible for these variations,
such as variation in plant parts/extracts, dose, duration in different studies, the
difference between animal models and human disease, and initiation of drug treatment
in animal model, which is generally before the induction of diabetes or immediately
after the induction of diabetes. This chapter focuses on the animal studies and human
clinical trials conducted on plant-based extracts and other natural products and the
outcomes in controlling or managing diabetes mellitus.
Exploration of Plant Phytomolecules’ Potential for Antiviral Activity
Page: 199-211 (13)
Author: Rupesh Kumar Pandey, Sokindra Kumar, Lubhan Singh, Manish Pathak, Ganesh Prasad Mishra, Priyanka Pandey, Gunjan Kalyani, Shiv Shankar Shukla and Ravindra Kumar Pandey*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815238129124030008
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Viral infections are increasing continuously, and we do not have proper
treatment. Currently, the COVID-19 pandemic is an emerging threat globally. If we
look into the Indian perspective against COVID-19, plant-based medicine available in
ancient literature has been used, like Charaka Samhita and current ayurvedic
pharmacopeia. Many viral diseases will come in the future, for which, there is a need to
establish concept-based treatment with scientifically-proven pharmacological action.
The plant's primary and secondary metabolites are responsible for pharmacological
activities. Many plants have shown their efficacy in viral infections through their
phytochemicals. In this chapter, we have conceptualized the same and identified the
plants with their metabolites, which can be a direction for future research on viral
disease. Currently available allopathic treatments have efficacy but toxicities too.
For a better understanding of the diseases, the pathophysiology of the same is one of
the components, as it gives a complete idea about how the viruses affect us. In the
Indian traditional drug system, many folk medicines are available that need to establish
the correlation with the targeted sites for a disease, which can give us the direction for
future viral infections. The urgency is also to standardize these drugs for proper use
among the global population. For identification, isolation of primary and secondary
metabolites can help in treatment and drug targeting. The beauty of traditional
medicine is that it is affordable because of its availability in different regions across the
globe.
Preclinical Pharmacology of Some Important Indian Medicinal Herbs in Animal Models and Their Mode of Action
Page: 212-227 (16)
Author: Manajit Bora, Manish Kumar Gautam*, Sejuti Ray Chowdhury, Sharad D. Pawar, Raja Chakraborty, Biswajit Dash, Nilip Kanti Deb, Sandip Mondal and Aniya Teli
DOI: 10.2174/9789815238129124030009
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Herbs have been used as medicines since the beginning of time and are a
rich source of many curative substances. In recent years, there has been a paradigm
shift towards medicinal plant research due to the costlier modern drugs available in the
market, and potential side effects and resistance developed by many conventional
therapeutic agents. Pharmacological screening of medicinal plants using various
scientific methods like in vitro, in vivo as well as in silico methods involving different
experimental models provides emerging preclinical research exploring their mechanism
of action. India is a large repository of many species of medicinal plants. According to
a recent WHO estimate, a large amount of plant species, almost 21,000, have the
capacity to be used as medicines. Medicinal plants such as Aloe barbadensis Mill.,
Ocimum tenuiflorum L., Curcuma longa L., Azadirachta indica A. Juss, Piper nigrum
L., Cinnamomum verum J. Presl., Trifolium pratense L., Zingiber officinale Rosc,
Carthamus tinctorius L., Piper nigrum, Allium sativum L and Andrographis paniculata
(Burm.f.) Nees., Withania somnifera L. (Dunal), Cissus quadrangularis L., Plumbago
zeylanica L., etc. reported to have therapeutic effects against severe common health
ailments. Phytoconstituents present in medicinal herbs like alkaloids, tannins, saponins, ferric chloride, phenolics, emodins, and volatile oils showed potential therapeutic
activity by interacting with the main targets in cells, such as receptor proteins,
biomembranes, or nucleic acid. Biochemical outcomes of experimental studies showed
that medicinal plants exert many pharmacological activities. The current review
concentrates on the pharmacological activity of some important medicinal plants in
various experimental animal models.
Citrus and its Fight against Cancer
Page: 228-254 (27)
Author: Arnab Sarkar, Abhik Paul, Avik Maji, Shrabanti Sarkar, Puspita Roy, Tanmoy Banerjee and Tanmoy Guria*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815238129124030010
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Traditional medicine has made extensive use of natural products, due to their
extensive therapeutic applications. There is an increasing demand and acceptance of
the use of medicinal plants due to their efficacy. For about 60,000 years ago, plants
have been used as drugs according to several works of literature. It is evident that the
Citrus genus, belonging to the Rutaceae family, possesses a range of pharmacological
activities, including anticancer, antidiabetic, antihyperlipidemic, antimicrobial,
hepatoprotective activity, and cardiovascular activity. Polysaccharides present in
pomelo (C. maxima) peels act on S180 (murine sarcoma cells) Tumour-Bearing Mice
by improving splenic lymphocyte proliferation ability and inhibiting the activity of NK
cells, and leaf extract act on prostate carcinoma DU145 Cells by suppressing
constitutive STAT-3 activation. At the same time, alcoholic extract of Citrus aurantium
bloom showed an appreciable effect against breast cancer and human colon
adenocarcinoma cells with IC50 152.34 ± 0.75 μg/mL, 49.74 ± 0.75 μg/mL, and 96.23 ±
0.75 μg/mL respectively. The emulsion prepared from the volatile oil of C. sinensis
reduced viability in colon cancer cell lines and simultaneously upregulated BAX/BCL2 along with the suppression of vascular endothelial growth factor. Bergamottin and 5-
geranyloxy-7-methoxycoumarin obtained from Citrus bergamia downregulated the
proliferation of neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cells, inducing apoptosis and positively
regulated cell population in the sub-G0/G1 phase. The elevated BAX, downregulated
BCL-2, released cytochrome C (cyt. c) in the cytoplasm, and cleaved PARP in breast
cancer cells suggest that phytochemical constituents in lemon seed extracts might be a
useful source of antioxidants and induce cell death via the mitochondrial apoptosis
pathway. Bergamottin, a furanocoumarin obtained from peels of Citrus hystrix fruits,
showed promising activity against pancreatic carcinoma cells by inhibiting survival
proteins in the AKT/mTOR pathway. The detailed information on different species of the Citrus genus in the field of antineoplastic pharmacology might add value to the
scientific evaluation for exploring more medicinal applications of these plants.
Andrographolide and its Neuroprotective Potential in Ameliorating Parkinson’s Disease
Page: 255-270 (16)
Author: Khaji Firdous Banu, Rage Rekha, Sasikala Chinnappan, Swarnalatha Gundlapalli, Ravishankar Ram Mani, Srilakshmi Bada Venkatappa Gari, Vinod Kumar Bangarapu, Triveni Singirisetty, Nagaladinne Nizamuddin and Vinod Kumar Nelson*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815238129124030011
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Huntington’s
and Prion-related diseases are age-related progressive disorders. Among
neurodegenerative diseases, Parkinson’s disease is the second most common disease
after Alzheimer’s. Every year, millions of people were affected by Parkinson’s disease.
The formation of α-synuclein protein aggregation associated with degeneration of
dopaminergic neurons is the main pathological hallmark of PD. Patients suffering from
this disease live in an impairing condition and impose huge financial as well as
psychological burdens on society. However, there is no definite treatment till now that
can be used to treat Parkinson’s disease patients. The current treatment approaches only
provide symptomatic relief but can not reverse the disease condition. Hence, there is a
need to identify novel, definitive and minimal toxicity-exhibiting treatments for PD.
Natural products, specifically medicinal plants, due to their never-matched chemical
diversity, always act as a better source for drug discovery. Here, in this chapter, we
have selected andrographolide, a plant-derived secondary metabolite of labdane
triterpenoid extracted from Andrographis paniculate, a traditional herb.
Andrographolide shows its neuroprotective potential in PD via exhibiting multiple
mechanisms like decreasing neuroinflammation induced by microglial activation. Activating HSF1 and NRF2-mediated autophagy mechanisms in clearing α-synuclein
protein aggregation and regenerating the degenerated dopaminergic neurons,
ameliorate the PD symptoms. In this possible way, andrographolide provides a better
chance to develop a novel therapeutic tool for treating Parkinson’s disease in the near
future.
Current Pharmacological Perspectives of Herbal Antidiabetic Drug Formulations
Page: 271-283 (13)
Author: Loushambam Samananda Singh*, Peter De Roux Sumer, Bimal Debbarma, Phaibiang Lapasam and Innocent Sutnga
DOI: 10.2174/9789815238129124030012
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
People of all ages are affected by the chronic complications of diabetes
mellitus. Numerous synthetic medications have been developed to treat diabetes, which
has become more common across the globe. These medications, while effective as
antihyperglycemic medicines, come with a number of side effects. They are expensive
and out of reach for the vast majority of people who live in underdeveloped nations.
Due to their accessibility and harmless nature, medicinal plants have already been
traditionally utilized to cure a variety of illnesses throughout history. Phytochemicals
found in medicinal plants provide a number of health advantages. Healthcare
professionals are looking into plant-based medicines as a potential supply of
antidiabetic pharmaceuticals because of their high efficacy and lack of adverse effects
as diabetes prevalence rises. The active phytoconstituents are being identified and
thoroughly studied in order to gain a better understanding of the mechanism of action
of therapeutic plants. Here, we focus on the perspectives of pharmacologically active
phytomolecule formulations produced from medicinal plants that demonstrate
antidiabetic action and the role they now play in managing and treating diabetes in the
present scenario. These natural molecules might be suitable for developing new
approaches to treatment or potent treatment options for diabetes.
Subject Index
Page: 284-289 (6)
Author: Raja Chakraborty* and Saikat Sen
DOI: 10.2174/9789815238129124030013
Introduction
Therapeutic Insights into Herbal Medicine through the Use of Phytomolecules offers a comprehensive exploration of the pharmacological potential of plant-derived compounds. The book provides an in-depth look at the therapeutic applications of phytomolecules in various health conditions. It begins with an analysis of bioactive phloroglucinol compounds and progresses to cover plant-based approaches for managing rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, cancer, neurological disorders, and antiviral activity. The volume also covers the molecular mechanisms of flavonoids, the preclinical pharmacology of Indian medicinal herbs, and the neuroprotective role of andrographolide in Parkinson's disease. Designed to inform and inspire, this book is ideal for researchers, clinicians, and students interested in the therapeutic potential of natural products.