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South African knobwood yields cancer-killing compound that converts during lab processing

Millan PMM, Riveiro ME, Zhu W, Naidoo-Maharaj D, Maharaj V.

Medicinal Plants

Native prickly ash, planted by eastern gardeners for zebra swallowtail caterpillar habitat, belongs to the same genus as this South African medicinal tree, whose alkaloids proved potent enough to kill prostate cancer cells in the lab.

Researchers screened dozens of South African medicinal plants to find ones that could kill prostate cancer cells. One tree, small knobwood, contains a compound so potent it halted cancer cell growth at very low doses. The study also caught something unexpected: when scientists processed this compound using certain lab solvents, it transformed into a weaker version of itself, which means earlier studies may have unknowingly tested the wrong molecule.

Key Findings

1

Chelerythrine from small knobwood killed three prostate cancer cell lines with IC50 values of 1.3-2.5 μM, indicating strong potency at low concentrations

2

Chelerythrine converts to the less active derivative dihydrochelerythrine when processed in acidic acetonitrile solvents, but remains stable in methanol

3

Prefractionating crude plant extracts before screening improved identification of which specific compounds drove cancer-cell killing activity

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists screened dozens of South African medicinal plants against prostate cancer cells and found that small knobwood contains a natural compound, chelerythrine, that kills cancer cells at very low doses. They also discovered that this compound quietly converts into a weaker form when processed with certain lab solvents, which may help explain inconsistencies in earlier studies on similar plant compounds.

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Abstract Preview

Original paper

Characterisation of anti-prostate cancer metabolites from a prefractionated south African medicinal plant library reveals a bioactive metabolite conversion.

Natural products remain important sources of structurally diverse metabolites with anticancer potential, but biological screening of crude plant extracts can obscure active constituents. In this st...

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 12 other discoveries — Small Knobwood, Cape Knobwood medicinal-plants, ethnobotany, alkaloids +2 more 5 related articles

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