INVESTIGADORES
CENZANO Ana Maria
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
. In vitro cytotoxicity of Condalia microphylla and Schinus johnstonii leaves extracts.
Autor/es:
TORRES C; ESCOBAR FM; CENZANO AM
Lugar:
Mendoza
Reunión:
Congreso; IV Reunión conjunta de Sociedades de Biología de la República Argentina Nuevas Evidencias y Cambios de Paradigmas en Ciencias Biológicas; 2020
Institución organizadora:
Sociedad de Biología de Cuyo
Resumen:
In the last decades, the interest for studying the biological activities of natural products for food and/or therapeutic purposes has been increased. Ethnobotanical research reveals that Condalia microphylla (piquillín, Cm) and Schinus johnstonii (molle, Sj) shrubs, from Patagonian Monte, are used as food (alcoholic beverage) and medicine (Cm, fever-reducing and laxative; Sj, analgesic, anti-inflammatory, anesthetic, healing, balsamic, anti-catarrhal, antirheumatic, purgative and antimicrobial). However, determining natural extracts safety is an essential preliminary step indispensable for their use. The aim of this work was to determine the in vitro cytotoxic effect of two leaves extracts from C. microphylla: ethanolic extract (EE-Cm) and methanolic extract (EM-Cm), and methanolic extract from S. johnstonii (EM-Sj) leaves. For this, the different extracts were tested in a wide range of concentrations (0.025-2 mg/ mL) on the eukaryotic cell line Vero (Cercopithecus aethiops). The Neutral Red colorimetric method was used to determine cell viability. As control, wells with Vero cells in untreated culture medium were used. The concentration that reduced 50% of cell viability (CC50) was determined from the cell viability vs. extract concentration curve. A dose-response relationship in the three extracts studied, with a relatively low toxicity, was observed. The CC50 for each extract was the following: EE-Cm = 0.775 mg/mL; EM-Cm = 0.480 mg/mL and EM-Sj = 0.170 mg/ mL. Our results report for first time the in vitro cytotoxic concentrations from C. microphylla and S. johnstonii leaf extracts, reveal less cytotoxicity of EM from S. Johnstonii than C. microphylla, and constitute the initial tests for subsequent cytotoxicity analysis of their fruits.