taxonomic approach to the study of medicinal plants and animal-derived drugs

Chapter 5 A taxonomic approach to the study of medicinal plants and animal-derived drugs



For classification purposes the plant and animal kingdoms are each divided into a number of phyla and in addition to the phyla, the classification includes groupings of gradually diminishing size, namely divisions, classes, orders, suborders and families. According to the system used, these groupings may, or may not, indicate phylogenetic relationships.


In this chapter the principal plant families of pharmaceutical interest are arranged according to the botanical scheme of Engler (q.v.). The chapter is divided into six parts: Thallophytes; Bryophytes and Pteridophytes; Gymnosperms; Angiosperms (Dicotyledons); Angiosperms (Monocotyledons); Animal Products. At the beginning of each large taxon of plants a table is given to clarify the orders and families involved. Following the listed genera for each family, notes on the uses and constituents of specific plants not included in Part 5 are given. According to the botanical system of classification considered, schemes vary, as do the numbers of families, genera and species cited within an order.




BACTERIA AND ALGAE



BACTERIOPHYTA


The bacteria are unicellular organisms, the great majority of which range in size from 0.75 to 8 mu;m. They reproduce by binary fission. Most species of bacteria contain no chlorophyll, although there is one group whose members contain a chlorophyll-like pigment and photosynthesize. Recent research has revealed much more of the details of cellular structure and it has been possible to distinguish in certain species, in no small detail, the various components of the cell. For example, in Escherichia coli the cell wall consists of a four-layer structure, the inner one being rigid, the three outer ones non-rigid. Within the three-layer wall structure lies a protoplast membrane enclosing the cytoplasm. The protoplast membrane acts as a permeability barrier to all but very large molecules and contains enzymes concerned with respiration and the active transport of metabolities.


Bacteria exist in a number of characteristic shapes, namely:






Other important morphological features which are of value in classifying bacteria are: (1) The possession of flagella, thread-like processes whose number and position are often of diagnostic importance. (2) The formation of capsules consisting of polysaccharide material which is of great importance in relation to the immunological properties of the organism. (3) The possession of endospores, which are highly refractive bodies formed by certain species under what appear to be adverse environmental conditions. The position of the spore in relation to the rest of the cell is of diagnostic importance. (4) Pigmentation; many bacteria are capable of elaborating complex colouring matters.


Bacteria are able to carry out a very wide range of chemical reactions, some of which are used for identification and differentiation, in addition to forming the basis of many important industrial processes. Bacterial action is used, for example, in the production of vinegar, acetone, butyl alcohol, lactic acid and L-sorbose. Notable examples of reactions which are useful for characterizing bacteria are the ability to ferment carbohydrates with the formation of acidic and gaseous products; the ability to digest protein, as shown by gelatin liquefaction; the production of hydrogen sulphide from organic sulphur compounds.


Bacteria are most important in medicine and pharmacy in the following respects: as disease-producing organisms (about 10% of bacteria are probably pathogenic); for producing antibiotics (Chapter 30); for effecting biochemical conversions; as agents in the deterioration of crude drugs and medicaments (Chapter 15); the production of transformed root cultures and transgenic medicinal plants by Agrobacterium spp. (Chapters 11 and 12); in genetic engineering involving recombinant DNA (e.g. the production of human insulin). Bacteria also play a vital role in nature—for example, in the nitrogen cycle atmospheric nitrogen is fixed by Azotobacter or, symbiotically, by various species of Rhizobium. Nitrosomonas is able to oxidize ammonia to nitrite, while Nitrobacter can oxidize nitrite to nitrate. Bacteria are important in sewage purification, in the retting of fibres such as jute and flax, and in the ripening of cheese.









FUNGI


The fungi are saprophytic or parasitic members of the Thallophyta, entirely devoid of chlorophyll. The plant body is made up of filaments or hyphae, which together constitute the mycelium. The hyphae may be aseptate and coenocytic, but are often septate, the individual segments being uni-, bi- or multinucleate. In the formation of fruiting bodies the hyphae may become woven into dense masses of pseudoparenchyma (e.g. the sclerotium of ergot).


The protoplast of fungal cells consists of granular or reticulate cytoplasm, which in older cells is often vacuolated. The nucleus may show a delicate reticulum and one or more nucleoli or its contents may be condensed into a chromatin body. The cell wall in many Archimycetes and some Phycomycetes (Oomycetes) and in the yeasts consists mainly of cellulose, but in other fungi cellulose is replaced by the nitrogenous substance chitin.


Sexual and asexual reproduction occur. The characteristic spores of the sporophyte generation are known as oospores (produced endogenously) or basidiospores (produced exogenously). In the Fungi Imperfecti the sporophyte generation is missing. The fungi also produce spores having no significance in the alternation of the generations; they are borne on the gametophyte (Phycomycetes and Ascomycetes) or on the sporophyte (rusts and some Autobasidiomycetes). These accessory spores often take the form of conidia, non-motile spores, borne externally on conidiophores.


The Archimycetes are the simplest fungi, in which the mycelium is absent or rudimentary. A member of this group causes wart disease in potatoes. The following groups and families are of pharmaceutical interest.











































Class Order Families
Phycomycetes Mucorales Mucoraceae
Ascomycetes Protoascales Saccharomycetaceae
Plectascales Aspergillaceae
Sphaeriales Hypocreaceae
Clavicipitales Clavicipitaceae
Basidiomycetes Polyporinales Polyporaceae
Agaricales Tricholometaceae
Amanitaceae
Agaricaceae
Phallinales Phallinaceae
Fungi Imperfecti Moniliales Dematiaceae











LICHENS


A lichen is a symbiotic association of an alga and a fungal partner. Some, particularly in arctic regions, are used as food. The desert species Lecanora esculenta is regarded as the biblical manna. The ‘oak moss’ used as a fixative in perfumery is the lichen Evernia prunastri. Many lichens contain derivatives of orcinol, orcellic acid and lecanoric acid; these compounds are termed depsides and are phenolic acids formed by the interaction of the carboxyl group of one molecule with the hydroxyl group of another. A class of these acids termed depsidones (e.g. norstictic and psoromic acids) complex with metals and are probably responsible for the ability of lichens to flourish on mineral-rich soils including mine tailings and to accumulate large quantities of metals, such as copper, zinc etc.


Lichen dyes were formerly much used in the textile industry. Litmus, produced from certain lichens (e.g. Lecanora, Roccella spp.) by fermentation, is used as an indicator.


Iceland moss, Cetraria islandica, has been used for disguising the taste of nauseous medicines and with other species (e.g. Cladonia spp.) for the treatment of cough. It contains the very bitter depsidone, cetraric acid. Many lichens have antibiotic properties as illustrated by usnic acid, found in Cladonia and Usnea spp. (see E. R. Correché et al. 1998, Fitoterapia, 69, 493; V. Marcano et al., J. Ethnopharmacology, 1999, 66, 343); 29 species of Icelandic lichens have recently been investigated for their cancer chemopreventive and cytotoxic activity (K. Ingólfsdóttir et al., Pharm. Biol., 2000, 38, 313).


It is possible to isolate and grow the algae from lichens as suspension cultures (see P. Härmälä et al., Fitoterapia, 1992, 63, 217).


The accompanying list indicates some of the families and genera of recent interest.






































Order Family Genera
Roccellales Roccellaceae Roccella (31 spp.)
Lecanorales Pertusariaceae Pertusaria (608 spp.)
Lecanoraceae Lecanora (1100 spp.)
Parmeliaceae Parmelia (800 spp.)
Cetraria (62 spp.)
Usneaceae Usnea (500 spp.)
Evernia (8 spp.)
Alectoria (48 spp.)
Caloplacales Caloplacaceae Caloplaca (480 spp.)
Teloschistaceae Xanthoria (21 spp.)



BRYOPHYTA


The phylum is divided into two classes, Hepaticae (liverworts) and Musci (mosses). Both show alternation of generations. The more conspicuous gametophyte generation is a leaf-like thallus in the liverworts and a leafy plant with a stem in the mosses. On the latter is borne the sporophyte generation with sporangium.


Of the many bryophyte orders, families and genera, a few which have been subjects of recent research are listed below.





























Class Order Genera
Hepaticae Jungermaniinales Bazzania, Solenostoma,
Gymnomitrion,
Diplophyllum
Jubulineales Lunularia
Musci Sphagnales Sphagnum (336 spp.)
Dicranales Dicranum (52 spp.)
Funariales Funaria (117 spp.)

Peat, long used as a domestic fuel, consists of partly decayed mosses and other plants. In some areas (e.g. parts of Ireland) deposits of bog moss (largely species of Sphagnum) are many feet thick, and after the surface has been skimmed off, soil may be excavated in a very pure form. Sphagnum moss, consisting of a mixture of various species of Sphagnum, can be collected in many parts of Britain. It may be used (enclosed in muslin bags) as an absorbent dressing or compressed into sheets, making absorbent mattresses. Large quantities were used in this way in World War I.


The pharmacologically active terpenoids (sesquiterpenes, diterpenes) and aromatic compounds of the bryophytes have been well studied. (For a review see Y. Asakawa, Proc. Phytochem. Soc. Eur., 1990, 29, 369. This volume (eds. H. D. Zinsmeister and R. Mues), published by Clarendon Press, Oxford, also includes a further 28 review articles covering the chemistry and chemical taxonomy of the Bryophytes.)



PTERIDOPHYTA


The Pteridophyta includes the Filices (ferns), Articulatae (horsetails) and Lycopsida (club mosses). They show an alternation of generations, the sporophyte being the larger. A few are of medical importance.


Of the many families, subfamilies and genera the following may be noted.



Male fern rhizome (q.v.) derived from Dryopteris filix-mas is one of many ferns containing phloroglucinol derivatives. The insect-moulding hormones or pterosins are widely distributed in ferns and attract considerable research.


Various species of Adiantum (the maiden hair ferns) are recorded as used in traditional medicine in Europe, Saudi Arabia, Africa and the Indian subcontinent. They contain hopane triterpenoids, a group of squalane-derived compounds more commonly associated with bacterial membranes. G. Brahmachari and D. Chatterjee record the isolation of a new one-such constituent from A. lunulactum (syn. A. philippense) (Fitoterapia, 2002, 73, 363).


The dried sterile stems of the horsetail, Equisetum arvense are used in herbal medicine and are listed in the BHP (1996) and the BP/EP. There are apparently two chemotypes of the species with different flavonoid compositions. Horsetails give a high mineral ash containing considerable amounts of silica. Correct identification of the herb is important because the related species E. palustre is poisonous.


The spores of lycopodium (Lycopodium clavatum) are used in quantitative microscopy (q.v.) and to a limited extent in medicated snuffs, dusting powders and lubricants. As a dusting powder for rubber gloves it has been known to give rise to dermatitis and mild caution has been expressed regarding its use as a lubricant non-stick agent for condoms relative to a possible cause of granulomas. The lycopodium alkaloids have been extensively studied (for a review see W. A. Ayer and L. S. Trifonov, Alkaloids, 1994, 45, 233). Huperzia serrata (a club moss), now assigned to Lycopodium, contains the unusual alkaloid huperzine A and has been long-used in Chinese medicine for the treatment Alzheimer’s and related conditions (see also Chapter 8).


Bracken (Pteridium aquilinum) has been a recent cause of concern owing to its carcinogenic properties and known bovine poisoning. The use of the young shoots for culinary purposes is discouraged and avoidance of bracken spores in the atmosphere suggested. The toxic constituent is ptaquiloside, an unstable glycoside of an illudane-type norsesquiterpene. Other similar compounds are widely distributed in the genus Pteridium.



GYMNOSPERMS


The division Gymnospermae contains many fossil members. Of the 11 orders in the Engler classification, it is only necessary to mention five orders and 10 families:






























Orders Families
Cycadales Cycadaceae
Ginkgoales Ginkgoaceae
Coniferae Pinaceae, Taxodiaceae,
Cupressaceae,
Araucariaceae,
Podocarpaceae,
Cephalotaxaceae
Taxales Taxaceae
Gnetales Ephedraceae

The gymnosperms are one of the two great divisions of the seed-bearing plants or spermaphyta. They differ from the angiosperms in having ovules which are not enclosed in an ovary. A perianth is absent except in the Gnetales. The seeds usually contain one mature embryo with from two to 15 cotyledons embedded in endosperm. The wood is composed largely of tracheids, vessels being absent.





CONIFERAE (OR CONIFERALES)











ANGIOSPERMS: DICOTYLEDONS


The angiosperms or flowering plants include more than 250 000 species of herbs, shrubs and trees. The sporophylls (stamens and carpels) are usually arranged with other leaves (the perianth) to form a ‘flower’. The ovules are enclosed in a chamber (the ovary) formed from the carpels, and a stigma is provided for the reception and germination of the pollen. The embryo plant contained in the seed has one or two seed leaves or cotyledons. The wood almost invariably contains true vessels. The phylum is divided into monocotyledons and dicotyledons.


The dicotyledons are herbs, shrubs or trees, the seeds of which have two cotyledons. The leaves are usually reticulately veined and the typical stem structure is a ring of open vascular bundles. Unlike the monocotyledons, which typically have their floral parts in threes, dicotyledonous flowers are usually pentamerous or tetramerous. The flowers may be unisexual (e.g. Salicaceae), but are more usually bisexual. The perianth may or may not be differentiated into sepals and petals, and the latter may be free from one another or fused.


The classification adopted in the following pages is that of Engler, who divides the dicotyledons into two groups, the Archichlamydeae and Sympetalae. The Archichlamydeae are further divided into 37 orders and about 226 families and the Sympetalae into 11 orders and about 63 families.


The names of the orders terminate in ‘-ales’, suborders in ‘-neae’, families usually in ‘-aceae’ (Compositae, Gramineae and Labiatae are exceptions), and sometimes into subfamilies ending in ‘-oideae’.


The Archichlamydeae contain those families that in early editions were grouped under Monochlamydeae and Dialypetalae. The flowers have either no perianth or a perianth that is differentiated into sepals and petals, the latter being free. Engler’s classification of the Dicotyledons is given in a somewhat abbreviated form below.





























































































































Order Family
Subclass Archichlamydeae
Juglandales Myricaceae, Juglandaceae
Salicales Salicaceae
Fagales Betulaceae, Fagaceae
Urticales Ulmaceae, Moraceae (including Cannabinaceae) and Urticaceae
Proteales Proteaceae
Santalales Olacaceae, Santalaceae, Loranthaceae
Polygonales Polygonaceae
Centrospermae Phytolaccaceae, Caryophyllaceae, Chenopodiaceae
Cactales Cactaceae
Magnoliales Magnoliaceae, Winteraceae, Annonaceae, Eupomatiaceae, Myristicaceae, Canellaceae, Schisandraceae, Illiciaceae, Monimiaceae, Calycanthaceae, Lauraceae, Hernandiaceae
Ranunculales Ranunculaceae, Berberidaceae, Menispermaceae, Nymphaeaceae
Piperales Piperaceae
Aristolochiales Aristolochiaceae
Guttiferales Paeoniaceae, Dipterocarpaceae, Theaceae, Guttiferae
Sarraceniales Sarraceniaceae, Nepenthaceae, Droseraceae
Papaverales Papaveraceae (including Fumariaceae), Capparaceae, Cruciferae
Rosales Hamamelidaceae, Crassulaceae, Saxifragaceae, Rosaceae, Leguminosae, Krameriaceae
Geraniales Geraniaceae, Zygophyllaceae, Linaceae, Erythroxylaceae, Euphorbiaceae
Rutales Rutaceae, Simaroubaceae, Burseraceae, Meliaceae, Malpighiaceae, Polygalaceae
Sapindales Anacardiaceae, Aceraceae, Sapindaceae, Hippocastanaceae
Celastrales Aquifoliaceae, Celastraceae, Buxaceae
Rhamnales Rhamnaceae, Vitaceae
Malvales Elaeocarpaceae, Tiliaceae, Malvaceae, Bombacaceae, Sterculiaceae
Thymelaeales Thymelaeaceae, Elaeagnaceae
Violales Flacourtiaceae, Violaceae, Turneraceae, Passifloraceae, Cistaceae, Bixaceae, Tamaricaceae, Caricaceae
Cucurbitales Cucurbitaceae
Myrtiflorae Lythraceae, Myrtaceae, Punicaceae, Rhizophoraceae, Combretaceae, Onagraceae
Umbelliflorae Alangiaceae, Cornaceae, Garryaceae, Araliaceae, Umbelliferae
Subclass Sympetalae
Ericales Ericaceae
Primulales Myrsinaceae, Primulaceae
Plumbaginales Plumbaginaceae
Ebenales Sapotaceae, Ebenaceae, Styracaceae
Oleales Oleaceae
Gentianales Loganiaceae, Gentianaceae, Menyanthaceae, Apocynaceae, Asclepiadaceae, Rubiaceae
Tubiflorae Polemoniaceae, Convolvulaceae, Boraginaceae, Verbenaceae, Labiatae, Solanaceae, Buddlejaceae, Scrophulariaceae, Bignoniaceae, Acanthaceae, Pedaliaceae, Gesneriaceae, Myoporaceae
Plantaginales Plantaginaceae
Dipsacales Caprifoliaceae, Valerianaceae, Dipsacaceae
Campanulales Campanulaceae (including Lobeliaceae), Compositae


SUBCLASS ARCHICHLAMYDEAE





FAGALES



Betulaceae and Fagaceae


These families consist of monoecious trees and shrubs. Their classification together is confirmed by similarities in constituents.


The Betulaceae has two genera, Alnus (35 spp.) and Betula (60 spp.). Constituents include many phenolic substances such as myricetin, delphinidin and ellagic acid; also terpenoids such as lupeol and betulin. The wood of Betula alba is used for charcoal.


The Fagaceae has eight genera and about 900 species. Fagus (10 spp.) includes the beech, F. sylvatica, the nuts of which are expressed to yield oil; Castanea (12 spp.) includes the sweet chestnut, C. sativa, which yields timber and a bark used for tanning. The edible nut serves as a component of a gluten-free diet in cases of coeliac disease and in paediatrics for the treatment of gastroenteritis. For the isolation of a pyrrole alkaloid from the seeds, see A. Hiermann et al., Fitoterapia, 2002, 73, 22. Quercus (450 spp.) provides valuable timber. Different Quercus spp. contain shikimic acid (a cyclitol), methyl salicylate and terpenoids. The cupules and unripe acorns of Q. aegelops (valonia) are used in tanning. Q. ilex and Q. robur yield tanning barks and Q. tinctoria, a yellow dye. Q. suber affords the commonly used cork, in an industry worth (1987) some £120 million p.a. to Portugal’s economy; because there was no planned re-afforestation the industry now faces a decline. An extract of Q. stenophylla has been marketed for the acceleration of the elimination of renal and urethral calculi. Turkish galls (q.v.), an important source of tannic acid, are vegetable growths formed on the young twigs of the dyer’s oak, Q. infectoria, as a result of the activity of a gall-wasp. Similar galls are produced on the English oak, Q. robur.



URTICALES



Ulmaceae, Moraceae, Cannabinaceae, Urticaceae


The Cannabinaceae, originally included in the Moraceae, is now regarded as a separate family.










CENTROSPERMAE



Phytolaccaceae, Caryophyllaceae, Chenopodiaceae


The order contains 13 families which show a passage from the monochlamydeous type of flower (e.g. Phytolaccaceae and Chenopodiaceae) to the dichlamydeous type of flower (e.g. Caryophyllaceae). Most families of the order, except the Caryophyllaceae, produce characteristic betacyanin and betaxanthin pigments, which indicate affinity with the Cactales (the next order, below).


The Phytolaccaceae is a family of 12 genera and 100 species; herbs, shrubs and trees, found particularly in tropical America and South Africa. Phytolacca (35 spp.) includes Phytolacca americana (Poke root), the leaves and roots of which have been found as an adulterant of belladonna: its berries contain a dyestuff. The roots which contain saponins are included in the BHP (1996) for the treatment of rheumatic diseases; however, arising from its toxicity the drug is not strongly recommended and excessive use should be avoided. The toxicity is primarily due to mitogenic proteins (lectins) and triterpene saponins. Other species have been shown to have molluscicidal activity.


The Caryophyllaceae has 70 genera and about 1750 species, mostly herbs, and is wide-spread. Genera include Saponaria, Stellaria, Arenaria, Spergularia, Herniaria, Silene, Lychnis, Gypsophila (125 spp.) and Dianthus (300 spp.). Many of these plants are rich in saponins. The root of Saponaria officinalis has been included in many pharmacopoeias. It contains about 5% of saponins and is widely used as a domestic detergent.


The Chenopodiaceae contains 102 genera and 1400 species; most grow naturally in soils containing much salt (halophytes). Genera include Beta (6 spp.), Chenopodium (100–150 spp.), Salicornia, Atriplex and Anabasis. From the wild Beta vulgaris (sea-beet) have been derived garden beetroot, sugar-beet and the mangold-wurzel. Chenopodium anthelminticum yields the anthelmintic Mexican tea or ‘wormseed’ and its oil of chenopodium (q.v.).




MAGNOLIALES



Magnoliaceae, Winteraceae, Annonaceae, Myristicaceae, Canellaceae, Schisandraceae, Illiciaceae, Monimiaceae, Lauraceae and Hernandiaceae


This order contains 22 families.













RANUNCULALES:



Ranunculaceae, Berberidaceae, Menispermaceae and Nymphaeaceae


Of the seven families in this order the above four are of medicinal interest. The families show a considerable variety of plant constituents and alkaloids are very common. In the four named families the alkaloids are often based on benzylisoquinoline, bisbenzylisoquinoline or aporphine.


1 The Ranunculaceae comprises 59 genera and about 1900 species. The plants are mostly perennial herbs with a rhizome or rootstock. They are well represented in Britain. Many members are poisonous. The flowers are bisexual, regular (e.g. Ranunculus) or zygomorphic (e.g. Aconitum). The perianth is simple or differentiated into calyx and corolla. The stamens are numerous and free. The carpels are usually numerous in the regular flowers or fewer in the zygomorphic ones. The fruit is an etaerio of achenes or follicles, or a berry. Genera include Helleborus (20 spp.), Aconitum (300 spp.), Thalictrum (150 spp.), Clematis (250 spp.), Actaea (10 spp.), Ranunculus (400 spp.), Anemone (150 spp.), Delphinium (250 spp.), Adonis (20 spp.) and Hepatica (10 spp.). The family has diverse chemical constituents and is of considerable phytochemical and chemotaxonomic interest. For example, the chromosomes, basedon size and shape, fall into two distinct groups, the Ranunculus type (R-type) and the Thalictrum type (T-type). The glycoside ranunculin has been found only in plants of the R-type. This glycoside hydrolyses to protoanemonin, which is vesicant and accounts for this property in many species. Isoquinoline-derived alkaloids occur in Thalictrum, Aquilegia and Hydrastis; diterpene-derived alkaloids in Delphinium and Aconitum. Saponins, mainly triterpenoid, occur in Ranunculus, Trollius, Clematis, Anemone and Thalictrum, cyanogenetic glycosides in Ranunculus and Clematis; cardenolides in Adonis, bufodienolides in Helleborus. Black hellebore rhizome, from Helleborus niger, contains very powerful cardiac glycosides but is now little used in medicine. Various aconite roots, containing highly toxic alkaloids (q.v.) have also lost much of their former popularity. Black Cohosh BHP 1996 is the dried rhizome of Cimicifuga racemosa; it contains triterpenoid glycosides structurally related to cycloartenol, also isoflavones including formononetin. The drug contains substances with endocrine activity and is used in herbal medicine to treat menopausal and other female disorders, and also various rheumatic conditions. A number of other species e.g. C. simplex, are used in Chinese medicine (see, for example, A. Kussano et al., Chem. Pharm. Bull., 1999, 47, 1175). The European C. foetida (bugbane) is a traditional vermin preventative.


3 The Menispermaceae is a family of 65 genera and 350 species; mainly tropical twining shrubs, herbs or trees. The plants usually have palmately lobed leaves and dioecious flowers. Anomalous stem structure is frequently found and abnormal secondary growth often takes place in the roots (e.g. of Chondodendron tomentosum), successive cambia being produced to give concentric rings of wood. The broad primary medullary rays found in the stem of Coscinium are a family characteristic. The fruit is a drupe the dorsal side of which develops more rapidly than the ventral, as in the fish berry Anamirta cocculus. These contain the highly toxic substance picrotoxin. For drugs see ‘Calumba’ and ‘Curare’.

The genera include Chondodendron (8 spp.), Tiliacora (25 spp.), Triclisia (25 spp.), Anamirta (1 sp.), Coscinium (8 spp.), Tinospora (40 spp.), Jateorhiza (2 spp.), Abuta (35 spp.), Cocculus (11 spp.), Menispermum (3 spp.), Stephania (40 spp.), Cissampelos (30 spp.) and Cyclea (30 spp.).


Alkaloids are important constituents of the family and have been reviewed (J. M. Barbosa-Filho et al., The Alkaloids, 2000, 54, 1). Saponins are present in many species. Coscinium fenestratum (‘false calumba’, ‘tree turmeric’) stems are widely used in SE Asia and India for the treatment of a variety of ailments. The principal alkaloid constituents are berberine and jatrorrhizine, the former being responsible for its antibacterial activity (G. M. Nair et al., Fitoterapia, 2005, 76, 285); for an investigation of the hypotensive and toxicological properties of an extract, see T. Wongcome et al., J. Ethnopharm., 2007, 111, 468. Stephania pierrii (S. erecta) contains bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids and is used in Thai folk medicine as a muscle relaxant. Tinospora cordifolia is used in Ayurvedic medicine and a considerable number of pharmacological actions, including immunomodulatory, have been demonstrated for the drug. For other drugs see ‘Calumba’ and ‘Curare’.

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