Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5851675 Food and Chemical Toxicology 2013 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Artemisia annua L., important in the treatment of malaria, is a rich source of both artemisinin and essential oil.•Chemical and pharmacological profiles of A. annua oil are complex and can differ for different plant populations.•Artemisia ketone/α-pinene/1,8-cineole-type A. annua essential oil has low acute toxicity.•It also has modest antinociceptive, nephroprotective, antimicrobial, but low antioxidant properties.•Benefits of A. annua botanical drugs usage is not limited only to their antimalarial properties.

Botanical drugs based on Artemisia annua L. (Asteraceae) are important in the treatment of malaria. Alongside with artemisinin, this aromatic species produces high and variable amounts of other chemicals that have mostly unknown biological/pharmacological activities. Herein, we have studied the toxicological/pharmacological profile of volatile constituents of a Serbian population of A. annua. Fifty-eight components were identified, among them, artemisia ketone (35.7%), α-pinene (16.5%) and 1,8-cineole (5.5%) were the most abundant ones. Significant variability of A. annua volatile profile was confirmed by means of agglomerative hierarchical cluster analysis indicating the existence of several different A. annua chemotypes. In an attempt to connect the chemical profile of A. annua oil with its biological/toxicological effects, we have evaluated in vivo and/or in vitro toxicity (including hepato- and nephrotoxicity/protection), antinociceptive, antioxidant (DPPH, ABTS and superoxide radical scavenging activity assays), enzyme inhibiting (protein kinase A and α-amylase) and antimicrobial potential of A. annua oil and of its constituents. Our results revealed that the beneficial properties of A. annua botanical drugs are not limited only to their antimalarial properties. Taking into account its relatively low toxicity, the usage of A. annua volatiles (at least of the herein studied population) does not represent a health risk.

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