Phytochemistry, Pharmacology, and Nutraceutical Profile of Carissa Species: An Updated Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Research Methdology
1.2. Distribution of Carissa Species
2. General Morphology
3. Traditional Uses
4. Nutraceutical Profile of Carissa Species
5. Phytochemistry
5.1. Polyphenols (Phenolic Acids and Flavonoids)
5.2. Lignans
5.3. Terpenoids
5.4. Steroids
5.5. Coumarins
5.6. Cardiac Glycosides
6. Pharmacological Profile
6.1. Antioxidant Activity
6.2. Antimicrobial Activity
6.3. Anticancer Activity
6.4. Antiplasmoidal and Antimalarial Activity
6.5. Antiviral Activity
6.6. Anticonvulsant Activity
6.7. Antinociceptive Activity
6.8. Antidiabetic Activity
6.9. Antipyretic Activity
6.10. Anti-Inflammatory Activity
6.11. Hepatoprotective Activity
6.12. Antiarthritic Activity
6.13. Adaptogenic Activity
6.14. Effect on the Cardiovascular System and Cardioprotective Activity
6.15. Anthelmintic Activity
6.16. Antiemetic Activity
6.17. Neuropharmacological and Diuretic Activity
6.18. Wound Healing Activity and Toxicological Study
7. Conclusions and Summary
8. Future Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Sample Availability
Abbreviations
EC50 | Half maximal effective concentration |
IC50 | Inhibitory concentration required for 50% inhibition |
SC50 | Scavenging concentration required for 50% scavenging |
GI50 | Growth inhibition |
LD50 | Lethal dose |
MIC | Minimum inhibitory concentration |
mg/mL | Milligrams per millilitre |
mg/kg | Milligrams per kilogram |
µM | Micromolar |
µg/mL | Microgram per millilitre |
mol/min/g | Mole per min per gram |
g/kg | Gram per kilogram |
kg/mL | Kilogram per millilitre |
et al | et alia |
min. | Minimum |
syn. | Synonym |
v/v | Volume per volume |
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Carissa Species | Part Used | Indications | References |
---|---|---|---|
C. spinarum | Leaves | Cold and flu, diabetes, malaria, pneumonia, and childbirth complications | [25] |
Fruits | Constipation, diabetes, heart disease, and obesity | [36] | |
Roots | Treat worm-infested wounds in animal | [37] | |
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | Leaves | Tanning agent, cure fever and asthma | [22,38] |
Fruits | Aphrodisiac | [38] | |
Whole plant | Eye disorder, horn injuries, and maggot wounds in animal | ||
C. spinarum (syn. C. lanceolata) | Bark and twig | Toothache, respiratory infections, and cleaning sores | [39] |
Leaves | Mosquito repellent | ||
C. spinarum (syn. C. edulis) | Whole plant | Headache, chest complaints, rheumatism, gonorrhoea, syphilis, rabies, and epilepsy | [3,4,5] |
Fever, sickle cell anaemia, and hernia | [5] | ||
Leaves and roots | Anthelmintic, antiscorbutic, astringent, regulate blood glucose level, stomach pain, and tooth pain | [11] | |
C. carandas | Roots | Stomachic, vermifuge, remedy for itch, and insect repellent | [20,24] |
Stem | Strengthens tendons | [40] | |
Leaves | Fevers, earache, diarrhoea, and diabetic ulcers | [20,26] | |
Fruits | Anaemia, anti-scorbutic, biliousness | [40] | |
Whole plant | Diarrhoea, anorexia, intermittent fever, mouth ulcer, sore throat, syphilitic pain, burning sensation, scabies, and epilepsy | [41,42] | |
Anthelmintic, appetizer, antipyretic, stomach disorders, rheumatism, disease of the brain, biliousness, and biliary dysfunction | [43,44] | ||
C. macrocarpa | Fruits | Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis | [8,45] |
Leaves | Diarrhoea in livestock | [8,46] | |
Whole plant | Cough and venereal diseases | [46] | |
C. bispinosa | Roots | Toothache | [47] |
Nutritional Parameters | C. spinarum | C. carandas | C. macrocarpa | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | C. spinarum | C. spinarum (syn. C. edulis) | C. carandas | C. macrocarpa (syn. C. grandiflora) | C. macrocarpa | |
Country | India, Pakistan | India | Uganda | India | India | Tunisia |
Moisture (%) | 76.60 | 81.05 | 84.6 | 88.70 | 78.45 | 78.83 |
Ash (%) | 1.25, 4.78 | 2.46 | - | 0.78, 0.0018 | 0.43 | 0.5 |
Total protein (%) | 1.30, 6.31 | 2.07 | 0.3 | 2, 2.14 | 0.56 | 0.74 |
Dietary fibre (%) | 3.40, 13.55 | - | 2.65 | 1.81, 15.64 | 0.91 | - |
Crude lipids (%) | 0.02 | 1.30 | - | 10 | 1.03 | 3.53 |
Carbohydrates (%) | 17.39, 47 | 18.66 | - | 67, 0.019 | - | 16.40 |
Organic matter (%) | 98.75 | - | - | - | - | - |
Total sugar (g) | - | - | - | 11.58, 0.04 | 0.12 | - |
Non-reducing sugar (mg) | - | - | - | 4.25 | - | - |
Reducing sugar (mg) | - | - | - | 41.25; 41.5 | - | - |
Ascorbic acid (mg/100 g) | - | 3.24 | 62.93 | 10 | 100 | |
Sodium (mg/100 g) | - | - | 1.79 | - | - | - |
Calcium (mg/100 g) | 1 | - | 10 | 1.60, 2.92 | - | - |
Magnesium (mg/100 g) | 8.4 | - | 4 | 5.2 | - | - |
Potassium (mg/100 g) | 1.98 | - | 198 | - | - | - |
Phosphorus (mg/100 g) | 0.24 | - | 24 | 24.15 | - | - |
Iron (mg/100 g) | 0.56 | - | 0.56 | 3.9, 1.088 | - | - |
References | [10,22] | [36] | [51] | [49,52,53,54] | [19] | [46] |
Carissa Species | IC50/EC50/SC50 | Plant Parts | Solvent Used/Compounds | Major Findings | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
DPPH Assay | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | EC50 (µg/mL) | Leaves | Methanol, butanol, chloroform, hexane, ethyl acetate, aqueous | 38–500,000 | [74] |
Fruits | 59–250 | [75] | |||
Roots | 290–5530 | [17] | |||
Leaves | Methanol | 499.95 | [76] | ||
C. spinarum (syn. C. edulis) | IC50 (µg/mL) | Fruits | Petroleum ether, ethyl acetate, chloroform, ethanol, water | 169–488 | [77] |
SC50 (µg) | Stem | Chloroform | 47.04 | [78] | |
C. spinarum | IC50 (µg/mL) | Root bark | Chloroform, petroleum ether, dichloromethane, ethyl acetate, n-butanol | 31.8–500 | [74] |
C. carandas | EC50 (µg/mL) | Leaves | Methanol | 630.4 | [79] |
10.5 | [80] | ||||
IC50 (µg/mL) | Leaves | Ethanol | 1.292 | [44] | |
1.47 | [76] | ||||
Methanol | 73.1 | [81] | |||
Fruits | 27.4 | [52] | |||
Leaves and fruits | Chloroform and ethanol | 195.8–259.5 | [82] | ||
C. macrocarpa | EC50 (µg/mL) | Fruit | Hydroethanolic | 9900 | [46] |
Leaves | 26 | [83] | |||
Stem | 281 | ||||
C. bispinosa | IC50 | Fruits | Fraction 1 (Rf = 0.11) | 127.50 | [9] |
Fraction 2 (Rf = 0.38) | 183.38 | ||||
ABTS assay | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | EC50 (µg/mL) | Leaves | Methanol, butanol, chloroform, hexane, ethyl acetate, aqueous | 70–187 | [84] |
Fruits | 80–500 | [75] | |||
C. carandas | Leaves | Methanol | 1.75 | [80] | |
Phsophomolybdate or total antioxidant assay | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | EC50 (µg/mL) | Leaves | Methanol, butanol, chloroform, hexane, ethyl acetate, aqueous | 30–250 | [74] |
Fruits | 86–500 | [75] | |||
Thiobarbituric assay | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. edulis) | IC50 (µg/mL) | Fruits | Petroleum ether, ethyl acetate, chloroform, ethanol, water | 114–289 | [77] |
C. macrocarpa | EC50 (µg/mL) | Fruit | Hydroethanolic | 1230 | [46] |
Leaves | 15.4 | [83] | |||
Stem | 12.1 | ||||
β-carotene assay | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | EC50 (µg/mL) | Leaves | Methanol, butanol, chloroform, hexane, ethyl acetate, aqueous | 145–250 | [74] |
Fruits | 233.8–8000 | [75] | |||
C. macrocarpa | EC50 (µg/mL) | Fruit | Hydroethanolic | 880 | [46] |
Leaves | 300 | [83] | |||
Stem | 270 | ||||
Hydrogen peroxide scavenging activity | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | EC50 (µg/mL) | Leaves | Methanol, butanol, chloroform, hexane, ethyl acetate, aqueous | 19–250 | [74] |
Fruits | 47.2–250 | [75] | |||
C. spinarum (syn. C. edulis) | IC50 (µg/mL) | Fruits | Petroleum ether, ethyl acetate, chloroform, ethanol, water | 138–503 | [74] |
C. carandas | IC50 (µg/mL) | Leaves | Ethanol | 2.038 | [44] |
n-Hexane | 1.802 | ||||
Methanol | 84.0 | [81] | |||
Superoxide radical scavenging activity | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | EC50 (µg/mL) | Leaves | Methanol, butanol, chloroform, hexane, ethyl acetate, aqueous | 93–206 | [74] |
Fruits | 33.43–250 | [75] | |||
Hydroxyl radical scavenging activity | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | EC50 (µg/mL) | Leaves | Methanol, butanol, chloroform, hexane, ethyl acetate, aqueous | 18–22 | [74] |
Fruits | 36.24–250 | [75] | |||
C. carandas | Leaves | Methanol (E) | 606.9 | [79] | |
Chelating power | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | EC50 (µg/mL) | Leaves | Methanol, butanol, chloroform, hexane, ethyl acetate, aqueous | 16–137 | [74] |
Fruits | 25.1–46.3 | [75] | |||
Reducing power assay | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. edulis) | IC50 (µg) | Fruits | Petroleum ether, ethyl acetate, chloroform, ethanol, water | 109–240 | [77] |
C. carandas | EC50 (µg/mL) | Fruits | Fruit wine | 110300 | [85] |
Leaves | Methanol | 62.09 | [79] | ||
C. macrocarpa | EC50 (µg/mL) | Fruit | Hydroethanolic | 1590 | [46] |
Leaves | 36 | [83] | |||
Stem | 33 | ||||
Isolated compounds of genus Carissa | |||||
DPPH assay | |||||
C. spinarum | IC50 (µM) | Stem | Olivil | 18.1 | [23] |
Carinol | 20.2 | ||||
Secoisolariciresinol | 26.2 | ||||
Carissanol | 33.4 | ||||
Cycloolivil | 33.2 | ||||
Nortrachelogenin | 35.8 | ||||
Pinoresinol | 43.4 | ||||
(+)-8-Hydroxypinoresinol | 69.5 | ||||
IC50 (µM) | Root bark | Isolariciresinol3a-O-β-d-glucopyranoside | 16.5 | [73] | |
Protocatechuic acid | 45.7 | ||||
C. spinarum | SC50 (µM) | Stem | Carissanol | 37.12 | [78] |
Carinol | 47.87 | ||||
C. carandas | IC50 (µM) | Stem | Carandoside | 116.5 | [56] |
(6S,7R,8R)-7a-[(β-glucopyranosyl)oxy]lyoniresinol | 21.5 | ||||
(6R,7S,8S)-7a-[(β-glucopyranosyl)oxy]lyoniresinol | 43 | ||||
Carissanol | 12.7 | ||||
Nortrachelogenin | 30.2 | ||||
EC50 (µM) | Leaves | Naringin | 11.2 | [70] | |
Superoxide radical scavenging activity | |||||
C. carandas | EC50 (µM) | Leaves | Naringin | 0.08 | [70] |
Carissa Species | Plant Part Used | Extract/Compound | Microorganisms | MIC (mg/mL) | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | Roots | Ethyl acetate | Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacillus subtilis | 0.007–0.008 | [35] |
C. spinarum | Leaves and roots | Methanol and ethanol | Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus | 0.312–2.5 | [86] |
C. spinarum (syn. C. lanceolata) | Roots | Root bark methanol, root bark dichloromethane, root wood methanol, root wood, dichloromethane | Bacillus subtilis, Escherichia coli | 2.5–20 | [39] |
C. carandas | Fruits | Dichloromethane | Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumonia, Enterococcus faecalis | 0.31–5 | [87] |
Leaves, stems, and roots | Petroleum ether, water, and methanol | Bacillus subtilis, Agrobacterium tumifaciens, Pseudomonas aeruginosa | 0.078–1.25 | [88] | |
C. macrocarpa | Fruits | Hydroethanolic | Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Enterococcus faecalis | 10–20 | [46] |
Leaves, stems, and flower | Hydroethanolic | Escherichia coli, Enterococcus faecalis, Listeria monocytogenes | 0.62–20 | [84] | |
Fruits, stems, and flowers | Essential oil | Salmonella enterica, Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus subtilis | 0.46 -7.5 | [71] | |
C. macrocarpa (Syn. C. grandiflora) | Stems, roots, and leaves | Methanol, n-butanol, ethyl acetate, chloroform, n-hexane | Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus epidermidis | 0.24–2.69 | [89] |
Antifungal activity of Carissa species | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | Roots | Ethyl acetate, acetone | Candida albicans, Alternaria solani, Aspergillus flavus | 0.05–0.1 | [34] |
Roots | Ethyl acetate | Candida albicans | 0.007 | [7] | |
C. macrocarpa | Fruits | Essential oil | Candida albicans | 0.46 | [15] |
Antibacterial activity of some isolated compounds from Carissa species | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. lanceolata) | Wood | Dehydrocarissone (15) | Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa | 0.5–2 | [1] |
Carindone (16) | 0.5–1 | ||||
Carissone (3) | 0.1–2 | ||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. lanceolata) | Roots | 2-Hydroxyacetophenone (13) | Bacillus subtilis, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa | 1.25 | [39] |
Carinol (6) | 1.25 | ||||
Carissone (3) | 5–10 | ||||
C. macrocarpa | Fruits | 3β-Hydroxyolean-11-en-28,13 β-olide (14) | Escherichia coli, Enterococcus faecium, Staphylococcus saprophyticus, Klebsiella pneumonia,Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus | 0.06–0.12 | [8] |
Species | Part Used | Solvent Used | Isolated Compounds | Cell Lines | Major Findings | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
In vitrocytotoxic activity of Carissa species (IC50 in µg/mL) | ||||||
C. carandas | Fruits | Methanol | - | Cervical cell line (Hela), Breast cancer (MCF7), Hepatocellular carcinoma (HeptG2), Bone sarcoma (MG-63) | 56.72–86.91 | [90] |
Leaves | Methanol | Kidney carcinoma (A-498), Prostate carcinoma (PC-3), Embryonic lung tissue (L-132) | 55.56–240 | [91] | ||
C. spinarum | NM | n-Hexane, chloroform, methanol | Melanoma cells (A375) | 40–100 | [92] | |
Stems | NM | Carissanol (5) | Normal human (WI-38), Human lung (A549), Human breast (MCF7) | 6–17 | [23] | |
Carinol (6) | <1 | |||||
Nortrachelogenin (23) | 29–100 | |||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. congesta) | Stems | n-Butanol | Leukaemia cells (HL-60) | 34.58 | [93] | |
C. spinarum(Syn. C. edulis) | Fresh fruits | Ethanol | Lung cancer (A549) | 405 | [77] | |
In vitrocytotoxic activity of Carissa species (IC50 in µM) | ||||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. edulis) | Root bark | Methanol | Carissaedulosides A (24) | Human leukaemia (HL-60), Lung cancer (A549), Breast cancer (MCF-7), Colon cancer (SW480) | 10–20 | [94] |
Carissaedulosides D (25) | 10–22 | |||||
Carissaedulosides J (26) | 3.8–17 | |||||
Sarhamnoloside (22) | 0.02–0.13 | |||||
[(1S,2S,3S)-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-3,7-dihydroxy-1-(4-hydroxy-3 methoxyphenyl)-3 (hydroxymethyl)-6-methoxy-2-naphthalen-yl] methyl β-d-glucopyranoside (51) | 5.6–19 | |||||
C. carandas | Leaves | NM | Carandinol (17) | HeLa (Cervical cancer), PC-3 (Prostate cancer), 3T3 (Normal mouse fibroblast) | 6.87–12.60 | [41] |
Fresh leaves | NM | β-sitosterol-3-O-β-d-glucopyranoside (55) | Small cell lung carcinoma (NCI-H460), Oral squamous cell carcinoma (Cal-27), Normal mouse fibroblast | 18.6–63.3 | [95] | |
C. macrocarpa | Leaves | Methanol | Kaempferol 3-O-robinobioside (42) | Human lung cancer (A549) | 93.6 | [71] |
Kaempferol-3-O-α-l-rhamnopyranosyl (1-6)(4′′-p-coumaro-yl)β-D-galacto-pyranoside7-O-α-l-rhamno-pyranoside (45) | 100.4 | |||||
Variabiloside E (46) | 84.3 | |||||
In vitrocytotoxic activity of Carissa species (Inhibition in %) | ||||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. opaca) | Leaves | Chloroform, ethyl acetate, methanol | - | Breast cancer (MCF-7) | 78–99 | [60] |
C. carandas | Fruits | Aqueous ethanol | - | HeLa cancer cell | 67.87 | [87] |
Methanol | - | Breast (MCF-7), Colon (HCT-116), Lung (A-549), Ovarian (OVCAR-5), Prostate (PC-3) | 63–100 | [96] | ||
In vitrocytotoxic activity of Carissa species (EC50 in µg/mL) | ||||||
C. carandas | Leaves | Chloroform | - | Human ovarian carcinoma (Cavo 3) | 7.702 | [97] |
unripe fruits | n-Hexane | - | Lung cancer (NCL) | 2.492 | ||
In vitrocytotoxic activity of Carissa species (GI50 in µg/mL) | ||||||
C. spinarum (syn. C. congesta) | Roots | Petroleum ether | Breast cancer (MCF7) | 18.1 | [98] | |
C. macrocarpa | Leaves, stems, and flowers | Hydroethanolic | Breast carcinoma (MCF-7), Cervical carcinoma(HeLa), Non-small cell lungcarcinoma (NCI-H460), Hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2) | 52–400 | [83] | |
Fruits | - | 57–400 | [46] |
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Dhatwalia, J.; Kumari, A.; Verma, R.; Upadhyay, N.; Guleria, I.; Lal, S.; Thakur, S.; Gudeta, K.; Kumar, V.; Chao, J.C.-J.; et al. Phytochemistry, Pharmacology, and Nutraceutical Profile of Carissa Species: An Updated Review. Molecules 2021, 26, 7010. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26227010
Dhatwalia J, Kumari A, Verma R, Upadhyay N, Guleria I, Lal S, Thakur S, Gudeta K, Kumar V, Chao JC-J, et al. Phytochemistry, Pharmacology, and Nutraceutical Profile of Carissa Species: An Updated Review. Molecules. 2021; 26(22):7010. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26227010
Chicago/Turabian StyleDhatwalia, Jyoti, Amita Kumari, Rachna Verma, Navneet Upadhyay, Ishita Guleria, Sohan Lal, Shabnam Thakur, Kasahun Gudeta, Vikas Kumar, Jane C.-J. Chao, and et al. 2021. "Phytochemistry, Pharmacology, and Nutraceutical Profile of Carissa Species: An Updated Review" Molecules 26, no. 22: 7010. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26227010