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Alkaloid presence and brine shrimp (Artemia salina) bioassay of medicinal species of eastern Nicaragua
Abstract:We used an alkaloid test and a brine shrimp bioassay to assess the bioactivity of the medicinal plants used by eastern Nicaraguan healers in traditional medicine. Ethnomedicinal uses were obtained from interviews of traditional healers. Aqueous extracts derived from 30 species of angiosperms were assayed for the presence of alkaloids and toxicity. Species tested are distributed in 30 genera and 21 families. Of the 30 species tested for alkaloids with Dragendorff’s reagent, 29 contained alkaloids. Toxicological analysis was conducted using the brine shrimp lethal assay (BSLA). Biological activity using BSLA was recorded as the median lethal concentration (LC50) that kills 50% of the larvae within 24?h of contact with the aqueous plant extracts. The LC50 of the shrimp was less than 2500 µg/mL for 3 (10%) species, 2500-5000 µg/mL for 9 (30%), 5001-7500 µg/mL for 7 (23%), 7501-10000 µg/mL for 3 (10%), and greater than 10000 µg/mL for 8 (27%) of the species. The members of the orders Santales and Rubiales in general contained species with greater toxicity than any other group. Struthanthus cassythoides (Struthanthus cassythoides Millsp.(Loranthaceae)). (LC50 1574 µg/mL) and Alibertia edulis (Rich.) A. Rich. (Rubiaceae) (LC50 1741 µg/mL) were the most toxic.
Keywords:Alkaloids  biological screening  cytotoxic activity  ethnomedicinal plants
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