Journal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine (Jan 2022)

Anti-plasmodial, Cytotoxic and Antioxidant Activities of Selected Ghanaian Medicinal Plants

  • Regina Appiah-Opong PhD,
  • Kojo Agyemang MPhil,
  • Eunice Dotse MPhil,
  • Philip Atchoglo MPhil,
  • Kofi Baffour-Awuah Owusu,
  • Abigail Aning,
  • Maxwell Sakyiamah PhD,
  • Richard Adegle BSc,
  • Frederick Ayertey MPhil,
  • Alfred Ampomah Appiah PhD,
  • Alexander K. Nyarko PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2515690X211073709
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27

Abstract

Read online

Malaria affects about half of the world's population. The sub-Saharan African region is the most affected. Plant natural products have been a major source of antimalarial drugs; the first (quinine) and present (artemisinin) antimalarials are of natural product origin. Some secondary metabolites demonstrate adjuvant antioxidant effects and selective activity. The focus of this study was to investigate the anti-plasmodial activity, cytotoxicities and antioxidant properties of eight (8) Ghanaian medicinal plants. The anti-plasmodial activity was determined using the SYBR green assay and the tetrazolium-based colorimetric assay (MTT) was employed to assess cytotoxicity of extracts to human RBCs and HL-60 cells. Antioxidant potential of plant extracts was evaluated using Folin-Ciocalteu and superoxide dismutase assays. Phytochemical contstituents of the plant extracts were also assessed. All the extracts demonstrated anti-plasmodial activities at concentrations 50% antioxidant effect (SOD). The extracts were not cytotoxicity towards RBCs at the concentration tested (200 μg/ml) but were weakly cytotoxic to HL-60 cell. Selectivity indices of most of the extracts were greater than 10. Our results suggest that most of the plant extracts have strong anti-plasmodial activity and antioxidant activity which warrants further investigations.