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      A Cytotoxic and Anti-inflammatory Campesterol Derivative from Genetically Transformed Hairy Roots of Lopezia racemosa Cav. (Onagraceae)

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          Abstract

          The genetically transformed hairy root line LRT 7.31 obtained by infecting leaf explants of Lopezia racemosa Cav with the Agrobacterium rhizogenes strain ATCC15834/pTDT, was evaluated to identify the anti-inflammatory and cytotoxic compounds reported previously for the wild plant. After several subcultures of the LRT 7.31 line, the bio-guided fractionation of the dichloromethane–methanol (1:1) extract obtained from dry biomass afforded a fraction that showed important in vivo anti-inflammatory, and in vitro cytotoxic activities. Chemical separation of the active fraction allowed us to identify the triterpenes ursolic ( 1) and oleanolic ( 2) acids, and (23 R)-2α,3β,23,28-tetrahydroxy-14,15-dehydrocampesterol ( 3) as the anti-inflammatory principles of the active fraction. A new molecule 3 was characterized by spectroscopic analysis of its tetraacetate derivative 3a. This compound was not described in previous reports of callus cultures, in vitro germinated seedlings and wild plant extracts of whole L. racemosa plants. The anti-inflammatory and cytotoxic activities displayed by the fraction are associated to the presence of compounds 13. The present study reports the obtaining of the transformed hairy roots, the bioguided isolation of the new molecule 3, and its structure characterization.

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          Agrobacterium-Mediated Plant Transformation: the Biology behind the "Gene-Jockeying" Tool

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            Mexican medicinal plants used for cancer treatment: pharmacological, phytochemical and ethnobotanical studies.

            This review provides a summary of Mexican medicinal flora in terms of ethnobotanical, pharmacology, and chemistry of natural products related to anticancer activity. Bibliographic investigation was carried out by analyzing recognized books and peer-reviewed papers, consulting worldwide accepted scientific databases from the last five decades. Mexican plants with attributed anti-cancer properties were classified into six groups: (a) plant extracts that have been evaluated for cytotoxic effects, (b) plant extracts that have documented anti-tumoral effects, (c) plants with active compounds tested on cancer cell lines, (d) plants with novel active compounds found only in Mexican species, (e) plants with active compounds that have been assayed on animal models and (f) plants with anti-cancer ethnopharmacological references but without scientific studies. Three hundred plant species belonging to 90 botanical families used for cancer treatment have been recorded, of which only 181 have been experimentally analyzed. The remaining 119 plant species are in use in empirical treatment of diseases consistent with cancer symptomatology. Only 88 of the plant extracts experimentally studied in in vitro cellular models have demonstrated active cytotoxic effects in at least one cancer cell line, and 14 out of the 88 have also been tested in vivo with the results that one of them demonstrated anti-neoplasic effects. A total of 187 compounds, belonging to 19 types of plant secondary metabolites, have been isolated from 51 plant extracts with active cytotoxic effects, but only 77 of these compounds (41%) have demonstrated cytoxicity. Seventeen of these active principles have not been reported in other plant species. However, only 5 compounds have been evaluated in vivo, and 3 of them could be considered as active. Clearly, this review indicates that it is time to increase the number of experimental studies and to begin to conduct clinical trials with those Mexican plants and its active compounds selected by in vitro and in vivo activities. Also, the mechanisms of action by which plant extracts and their active compounds exert anti-cancer effects remain to be studied. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
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              Hairy root cultures: A suitable biological system for studying secondary metabolic pathways in plants

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Academic Editor
                Journal
                Molecules
                Molecules
                molecules
                Molecules : A Journal of Synthetic Chemistry and Natural Product Chemistry
                MDPI
                1420-3049
                12 January 2017
                January 2017
                : 22
                : 1
                : 118
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Centro Investigación en Biotecnología, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Morelos, Av. Universidad 1001 Col, Chamilpa C.P. 62209, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico; norma.moreno@ 123456uaem.mx (N.E.M.-A.); castillo@ 123456uaem.mx (P.C.-E.); iperea@ 123456uaem.mx (I.P.-A.)
                [2 ]Centro de Investigaciones Químicas-IICBA, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Morelos, Av. Universidad 1001 Col, Chamilpa C.P. 62209, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico; lalvarez@ 123456uaem.mx
                [3 ]Centro de Investigación Biomédica del Sur (IMSS), Argentina No. 1, Xochitepec Centro C.P. 62790, Morelos, Mexico; azamilpa_2000@ 123456yahoo.com.mx (A.Z.); pisaliva@ 123456yahoo.com.mx (P.N.T.); edanae10@ 123456yahoo.com.mx (M.H.-R.); edgarrdg@ 123456hotmail.com (E.R.D.G.); jaime.tortoriello@ 123456imss.gob.mx (J.T.G.)
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: smarquina21@ 123456hotmail.com (S.M.); jesus.arellano@ 123456uaem.mx (J.A.-G.); Tel.: +52-777-329-7997 (S.M.); +52-777-329-7057 (J.A.-G.)
                Article
                molecules-22-00118
                10.3390/molecules22010118
                6155711
                28085103
                58267fd1-bb56-46b8-82f0-b5b87d12e36c
                © 2017 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 12 November 2016
                : 05 January 2017
                Categories
                Article

                genetic transformation,lopezia racemosa,agrobacterium rhizogenes,hairy roots,cytotoxic,anti-inflammatory

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