- Title
- The use of the toxic plant myoporum montanum in a traditional Australian Aboriginal medicine
- Creator
- Zaleta-Pinet, Diana; McCluskey, Adam; Hall, Sharron; Brophy, Joseph; Ashhurst-Smith, Chris; Sakoff, Jennette; van Altena, Ivan
- Relation
- Australian Journal of Chemistry Vol. 69, Issue 2, p. 161-168
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/CH15586
- Publisher
- C S I R O Publishing
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2016
- Description
- Plants from the family Myoporaceae, which includes the genus Myoporum, are extremely prized by the Australian Aboriginal people for their medicinal properties. Leaves from a plant, which was subsequently identified as Myoporum montanum, were provided for chemical investigation by representatives of an Aboriginal community from the Northern Tablelands district of northern New South Wales, Australia. Acetone extraction of the leaves provided a complex mixture of compounds including sesquiterpene hydrocarbons and more polar furanosesquiterpenes, which were identified by gas-liquid chromatography and retention indices (sesquiterpene hydrocarbons) and spectrometric techniques (furanosesquiterpenes). The major compounds found in a water extract were studied for their antibacterial activity using a disc diffusion assay and for their cell growth inhibition activity. The acetone extract contained sesquiterpene hydrocarbons (~30% of the total extract) in which the major compounds were germacrene-D and bicyclogermacrene. In addition, the extract contained five known toxic furanosesquiterpenes: myoporum ketol, (-)-10,11-dehydroisomyodesmone, (+)-10,11-dehydromyodesmone, 10,11-dehydromyoporum ketol, (-)-10,11-dehydromyoporone, and (±)-myoporone. An aqueous extract of the leaves, emulating the medicinal tea used by the Australian Aboriginal community, was found not to contain significant quantities of the sesquiterpene hydrocarbons and the most toxic furanosesquiterpenes. (±)-Myoporone and (-)-10,11-dehydromyoporone remained in the extract as well as a new furanosesquiterpene, 11-hydroxymyoporone. These three compounds were found to have significant antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus epidermidis, Enterococcus faecalis, and Moraxella catarrhalis but low cytotoxicity against a range of cancer cell lines and normal breast cells at 25µM.
- Subject
- Aboriginal medicine; medicine; myoporum montanum; traditional medicine
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1343539
- Identifier
- uon:29199
- Identifier
- ISSN:0004-9425
- Language
- eng
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