Molecules (Jun 2021)

Anti-<i>Helicobacter pylori</i> Activity of <i>Artemisia ludoviciana</i> subsp. <i>mexicana</i> and Two of Its Bioactive Components, Estafiatin and Eupatilin

  • Juan Francisco Palacios-Espinosa,
  • Pablo Noé Núñez-Aragón,
  • Erika Gomez-Chang,
  • Edelmira Linares,
  • Robert Bye,
  • Irma Romero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26123654
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 12
p. 3654

Abstract

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Artemisia ludoviciana subsp. mexicana has been traditionally used for the treatment of digestive ailments such as gastritis, whose main etiological agent is Helicobacter pylori. In a previous screening study, the aqueous extract exhibited a good in vitro anti-H. pylori activity. With the aim of determining the efficacy of this species as a treatment for H. pylori related diseases and finding bioactive compounds, its aqueous extract was subjected to solvent partitioning and the fractions obtained were tested for their in vitro anti-H. pylori effect, as well as for their in vivo gastroprotective and anti-inflammatory activities. The aqueous extract showed a MIC = 250 µg/mL. No acute toxicity was induced in mice. A gastroprotection of 69.8 ± 3.8%, as well as anti-inflammatory effects of 47.6 ± 12.4% and 38.8 ± 10.2% (by oral and topical administration, respectively), were attained. Estafiatin and eupatilin were isolated and exhibited anti-H. pylori activity with MBCs of 15.6 and 31.2 µg/mL, respectively. The finding that A. ludoviciana aqueous extract has significant anti-H. pylori, gastroprotective and anti-inflammatory activities is a relevant contribution to the ethnopharmacological knowledge of this species. This work is the first report about the in vivo gastroprotective activity of A. ludoviciana and the anti-H. pylori activity of eupatilin and estafiatin.

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