Planta Med 1995; 61(2): 187-188
DOI: 10.1055/s-2006-958047
Letters

© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Isolation of the Anthropogenic Compound Fluoranthene in a Screening of Chinese Medicinal Plants for Antiviral Compounds

Lynn Yip1 , Jim B. Hudson2 , G. H. Neil Towers1
  • 1Department of Botany, University of British Columbia, 3529-6270 University Blvd., Vancouver, B.C., V6T 1Z4 Canada
  • 2Department of Pathology, University of British Columbia, 2733 Heather Street, Vancouver, B.C. V5Z 1M5 Canada
Further Information

Publication History

1994

1994

Publication Date:
04 January 2007 (online)

Abstract

Thirty-one species of medicinal plants used in the treatment of diseases of viral origin in Yunnan Province of China were assayed for inhibition of Sindbis and murine cytomegalovirus in mammalian cell cultures. Sixteen species displayed antiviral activity. A compound, which exhibited long wavelength UV-mediated antiviral activity, was isolated from leaves and twigs of Elsholtzia ciliata (Lamiaceae) using bioassay-guided fractionation and identified as the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, fluoranthene. The discovery of an anthropogenic photosensitizer with antiviral activity in a plant has implications in studies of plants as sources of bioactive constituents.

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