Trypanocidal constituents in plants: 7. Mammea-type coumarins
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Vol. 103(5): 431-436, August 2008
431
Trypanocidal constituents in plants. 7. Mammea-type coumarins
Ricardo Reyes-Chilpa/+, Elizabeth Estrada-Muñiz1, Elisa Vega-Avila2, Fumiko Abe3, Junei Kinjo3,
Simón Hernández-Ortega
Instituto de Química, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Circuito Exterior, Ciudad Universitaria, México, 04510 DF, México
Sección Externa de Toxicologia, CINVESTAV-IPN, México, DF, México 2Departamento de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad Autónoma
Metropolitana, México, DF, México 3Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Fukuoka University, Fukuoka, Japan
1
Calophyllum brasiliense and Mammea americana (Clusiaceae) are two trees from the tropical rain forests of the
American continent. A previous screening showed high trypanocidal activity in the extracts of these species. Several
mammea-type coumarins, triterpenoids and biflavonoids were isolated from the leaves of C. brasiliense. Mammea A/
AA was obtained from the fruit peels of M. americana. These compounds were tested in vitro against epimastigotes
and trypomastigotes of Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiologic agent of Chagas disease. The most potent compounds were
mammea A/BA, A/BB, A/AA, A/BD and B/BA, with MC100 values in the range of 15 to 90 μg/ml. Coumarins with a
cyclized γ,γ-dimethylallyl substituent on C-6, such as mammea B/BA, cyclo F + B/BB cyclo F, and isomammeigin,
showed MC100 values > 200 μg/ml. Several active coumarins were also tested against normal human lymphocytes
in vitro, which showed that mammea A/AA and A/BA were not toxic. Other compounds from C. brasiliense, such as
the triterpenoids, friedelin, canophyllol, the biflavonoid amentoflavone, and protocatechuic and shikimic acids,
were inactive against the epimastigotes. The isopropylidenedioxy derivative of shikimic acid was inactive, and its
structure was confirmed by X-ray diffraction. Our results suggest that mammea-type coumarins could be a valuable
source of trypanocidal compounds.
Key words: Trypanosoma cruzi - Calophyllum brasiliense - Mammea americana - coumarins - Chagas disease
The protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi is the etiological
agent of Chagas disease (American trypanosomiasis),
which affects 16-18 million people in Latin America
and is responsible for the deaths of more than 45,000 patients per year (WHO 1997). It is transmitted to humans
by triatomine bugs or through infected blood transfusions (Pizzolatti et al. 2002). The life cycle of T. cruzi
is complex, and it alternates between vertebrate and invertebrate hosts. When the triatomine bug is feeding on
human blood, it defecates and releases metacyclic trypomastigotes near the bite wound. This infective agent
is capable of reaching intracellular locations and transforming into amastigotes. After reproduction, the amastigotes turn back into trypomastigotes, and the cells
burst. The released parasites can either infect other cells
or be consumed by other triatomine bugs. In the intestine of an invertebrate host, the blood trypomastigotes
transform into epimastigotes, which divide and give rise
to infective metacyclic-trypomastigotes (Brener 1973,
Contreras et al. 2002).
Medication for Chagas disease is usually effective
when given during the acute stage of infection. Once
the disease has progressed to later stages, no medication has proven to be completely effective. Moreover,
synthetic drugs such as nifurtimox, a 5-nitrofuran, and
+ Corresponding author:
Received 20 March 2008
Accepted 21 July 2008
benznidazole, a 2-nitro-imidazole (Lampit®, Bayer, and
Rochagan®, Roche, respectively) are used for the treatment of this disease. Unfortunately, both drugs have
limited efficacy during the chronic phase of the disease
and present several undesirable side effects (Gutteridge 1985, Umezawa et al. 2001, Coura & Castro 2002).
Chemoprophylatic measures against Chagas disease are
scarce, present variable efficacy, or are not adopted due
to their costs. Currently, gentian violet is used to sterilize blood banks in endemic areas (Pizzolatti et al. 2002,
Coura & Castro 2002). An urgent need to develop new
drugs exists, and natural products can provide useful
drug leads as well as the scientific basis for the rational
use of medicinal plants.
Calophyllum brasiliense Camb. is a large tree, measuring up to 40 m in height, from the tropical rain forest.
It is distributed throughout Latin America, from Brazil
to Mexico, and is used in folk medicine. In Mexico, its
most common name is bari, and the infusion of the cortex is consumed by women over nine days for “cleaning”
the womb after child-birth, while the seeds provide an oil
used for lighting and for healing skin afflictions (Soto &
Sousa 1995). In Colombia, the peasants call this tree árbol de aceite (oil tree), and the yellow latex exuded from
the cortex is applied topically for healing the navels of
newborn children (García-Barriga 1992). In Brazil, it is
known as guanandi, and has been used in folk medicine
for the treatment of rheumatism, varicose hemorrhoids
and chronic ulcers (Corrêa 1978). In the Amazon basin,
the bark infusion is used by the Karaja ethnic group for
the treatment of diarrhea, and in Guyana, C. brasiliense
is mixed with Coutarea hexandra to treat diabetes and
worms (Mesía-Vela et al. 2001).
online | memorias.ioc.fiocruz.br
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Trypanocidal coumarins • R Reyes-Chilpa et al.
C. brasiliense heartwood contains xanthones with
trypanocidal (Abe et al. 2002) and antifungal (ReyesChilpa et al. 1997) properties. The methanol extract
from the leaves contains hyperin (hyperoside), amentoflavone, quercetin, gallic acid and protocatechuic acid
(da Silva et al. 2001). The analysis of the hexane extracts
of the leaves has demonstrated the existence of two
chemotypes of C. brasiliense in Mexico. Only the organic extracts from C. brasiliense chemotype 1 showed
trypanocidal activity during preliminary screening
(Abe et al. 2002). The leaves of this chemotype contain
mammea-type coumarins that were cytotoxic to human
tumor cells in vitro (Reyes-Chilpa et al. 2004). The mixture of two of these coumarins, mammea A/BA and A/
BB, was better than vincristine at inhibiting the growth
of implanted tumors in mice (Ruiz-Marcial et al. 2007).
The leaves of chemotype 2 contain chromanones and
triterpenoids as the major constituents, and tetracyclic
dipyranocoumarins in low concentrations, which inhibit
the reverse transcriptase of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 in vitro (Huerta-Reyes et al. 2004).
It has recently been reported that (-) -mammea A/BB
from the leaves of C. brasiliense showed potent activity
against the promastigote and amastigote forms of Leishmania (L.) amazonensis (Brenzan et al. 2007). Mammea A/BB is also known to be molluscicidal against
Biomphalaria glabrata (Gasparotto et al. 2005).
Mammea americana L. is a tree measuring up to
20 m in height from the tropical rain forest. Its original distribution was through the Antilles Islands and
South America, but it was p (...truncated)