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Metabolomic analysis of Viscum album L homeopathic tinctures and antitumor studies in 3D spheroid models
Author(s) -
Carla Holandino,
Michelle ato de Oliveira Melo,
Adriana Passos Oliveira,
Rafael Garrett,
Mirio Grazi,
Hartmutt Ramm,
Tim M. Jaeger,
Stephan Baumgartner
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of high dilution research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.129
H-Index - 9
ISSN - 1982-6206
DOI - 10.51910/ijhdr.v18i02.996
Subject(s) - viscum album , traditional medicine , chemistry , botany , biology , medicine
Background The antitumoral efficacy of aqueous Viscum album extracts is attributed to the presence of lectins and viscotoxins. However, previous studies demonstrated an antitumoral activity of European V. album ethanolic homeopathic tinctures (VAHT) prepared according to homeopathic methodology. Aims To investigate the seasonal influences (summer and winter) in the metabolomic profile of V. album ssp. homeopathic mother tinctures (VAHT) and to evaluate the antitumoral activity of some VAHT in 3D tumor spheroid models. Methodology The following VAHT were prepared by ethanolic maceration: V. album ssp. album growing on Malus domestica, Quercus sp. and Ulmus sp.; V. album ssp. austriacum from Pinus sylvestris; V. album ssp. abietis from Abies alba. Chemical analyses were performed using liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry. Data was submitted to multivariate statistical analysis using principal component analysis (PCA) and Partial Least Squares Discriminant Analysis (PLSDA) in Metaboanalyst platform. The antitumor potential of VAHT (0.5% v/v) was conducted in 3D tumor spheroid models (MDA-MB-231 cell line) by MTT for 72 hours. Results and discussion The PCA analysis explained 40% of data variation and clustered VAHT samples into 3 groups, emphasizing the chemical similarity between the botanical subspecies of V. album. Some key compounds were mainly responsible for this separation: pinobankasin hexose-pentose (V. album ssp. abietis); citric acid (V. album ssp. austriacum); malic acid (V. album ssp. album). The chemical differences among summer and winter samples, detected by PLSDA, were related to the Viscum album host trees. A significant reduction of 50% and 41% (p

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