Antitumor activity of Bulgarian herb Tribulus terrestris L. on human breast cancer cells

Journal Title: Journal of BioScience and Biotechnology - Year 2013, Vol 2, Issue 1

Abstract

Medicinal plants have been intensively studied as a source of antitumor compounds. Due to the beneficial climate conditions Bulgarian herbs have high pharmacological potential. Currently, the antitumor effect of the Bulgarian medicinal plant Tribulus terrestris L. on human cancer cell lines is not studied. The main active compounds of the plant are the steroid saponins. The present study aims to analyze the effect on cell viability and apoptotic activity of total extract and saponin fraction of Bulgarian Tribulus terrestris L. on human breast cancer (MCF7) and normal (MCF10A) cell lines. Antitumor effect was established by МТТ cell viability assay and assessment of apoptotic potential was done through analysis of genomic integrity (DNA fragmentation assay) and analysis of morphological cell changes (Fluorescence microscopy). The results showed that total extract of the herb has a marked dose-dependent inhibitory effect on viability of MCF7 cells (half maximal inhibitory concentration is 15 μg/ml). Cell viability of MCF10A was moderately decreased without visible dose-dependent effect. The saponin fraction has increased inhibitory effect on breast cancer cells compared to total extract. Morphological changes and DNA fragmentation were observed as markers for early and late apoptosis predominantly in tumor cells after treatment. Apoptotic processes were intensified with the increase of treatment duration. The obtained results are the first showing selective antitumor activity of Bulgarian Tribulus terrestris L. on human cancer cells in vitro. Apoptotic processes are involved in the antitumor mechanisms induced by the herb. This results give directions for future investigations concerning detailed assessment of its pharmacological potential.

Authors and Affiliations

Svetla Angelova, Zlatina Gospodinova, Maria Krasteva, Georgi Antov, Valentin Lozanov, Tsanko Markov, Stefan Bozhanov, Elena Georgieva, Vanio Mitev

Keywords

Related Articles

 Earthworms – good indicators for forest disturbance

 In temperate forests, formation of canopy gaps by windthrow is a characteristic natural disturbance event. Little work has been done on the effects of canopy gaps on soil properties and fauna, especially earthworms...

 Production of itaconic acid by Ustilago maydis from agro wastes in solid state fermentation

 Itaconic acid (IA) is one of the hopeful substances within the cluster of organic acids. IA is used in artificial glass, bioactive compounds in pharmacy, medicine, agriculture, for the synthesis of fiber, resin, pl...

Meiotic changes in Vicia faba L. subsequent to treatments of hydrazine hydrate and maleic hydrazide

Assessing the impact of mutagens for creating variations in crops like faba bean (Vicia faba L.) is an important criterion in the contemporary world where food insecurity and malnutrition is alarming at the doors of vari...

Effect of natural bioflavonoid on in vitro ruminal microbiota activity in sheep rumen liquor

A pure bioflavonoid (rutin) was extracted from Eucalyptus globulus leaves and identified by Thin Layer Chromatography using purified flavonoids moieties as a control. The purified flavonoid was used in in vitro gas produ...

 In silico sequence analysis and homology modeling of predicted beta-amylase 7-like protein in Brachypodium distachyon L.

 Beta-amylase (β-amylase, EC 3.2.1.2) is an enzyme that catalyses hydrolysis of glucosidic bonds in polysaccharides. In this study, we analyzed protein sequence of predicted beta-amylase 7-like protein in Brachypodi...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP151385
  • DOI -
  • Views 109
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Svetla Angelova, Zlatina Gospodinova, Maria Krasteva, Georgi Antov, Valentin Lozanov, Tsanko Markov, Stefan Bozhanov, Elena Georgieva, Vanio Mitev (2013). Antitumor activity of Bulgarian herb Tribulus terrestris L. on human breast cancer cells. Journal of BioScience and Biotechnology, 2(1), 25-32. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-151385