(Press-News.org) Leishmaniasis, a neglected tropical disease caused by Leishmania parasites, affects millions globally. Current synthetic treatments face limitations including toxicity, cost, and resistance. Phytochemicals from medicinal plants offer promising alternatives. This mini-review synthesizes preclinical mechanisms of plant-derived compounds against leishmaniasis, focusing on mitochondrial disruption, immunomodulation, and redox imbalance.
Key Antileishmanial Mechanisms
1. Membrane Disruption & Mitochondrial Dysfunction
Hydrophobic terpenoids (e.g., essential oil components) penetrate cytoplasmic and mitochondrial membranes, causing structural damage:
Disruption of bioenergetics: Impairs ATPase activity and ATP production.
Mitochondrial swelling: Coumarin derivatives (e.g., mammea A/BB) induce membrane depolarization and ultrastructural damage in L. amazonensis.
Cell cycle arrest: Interference with lipid-protein interactions halts parasite replication.
2. Apoptosis Induction
Terpenoids trigger programmed cell death via mitochondrial pathways:
Artemisinin (sesquiterpene lactone): Causes DNA fragmentation, ATP depletion, and mitochondrial membrane collapse in L. donovani.
Ursolic acid (triterpenoid): Induces caspase-independent apoptosis in L. amazonensis, reducing lesion size in mice.
(–)-α-Bisabolol: Promotes phosphatidylserine externalization and chromatin condensation in Leishmania promastigotes.
3. Pro-Oxidant Effects & Redox Imbalance
Leishmania's single mitochondrion is vulnerable to oxidative stress:
Flavonoids: Apigenin and quercetin increase ROS, causing mitochondrial swelling and trans-Golgi disruption.
Alkaloids: Berberine induces ROS overproduction, depleting ATP and depolarizing mitochondrial membranes.
Quinones: Plumbagin inhibits trypanothione reductase, disrupting redox homeostasis.
4. Immunomodulation
Compounds enhance host immune responses:
Steroidal alkaloids (solamargine/solasonine): Activate macrophages and dendritic cells in cutaneous leishmaniasis.
Diterpenes (e.g., 12-hydroxyabietatriene): Reduce parasite load via immunostimulation in L. amazonensis-infected mice.
Apigenin: Activates host autophagy pathways in infected macrophages.
5. Biomacromolecule Interference
Lignans and neolignans target parasitic enzymes and DNA:
Diphyllin: Inhibits protein synthesis and enzyme function.
Niranthin: Forms DNA-topoisomerase I adducts, activating nucleases.
Neolignans: Disrupt plasma membranes and nuclear integrity.
Clinical Translation Challenges
Despite promising preclinical results, critical gaps remain:
No clinical trials: Limited human pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic data.
Combination potential: Synergy with existing drugs (e.g., amphotericin B) underexplored.
Standardization: Bioactive variability in plant extracts complicates dosing.
Future Perspectives
Mechanistic Depth: Validate mitochondrial targeting and immunomodulatory pathways.
Clinical Studies: Prioritize phase I trials for lead compounds (e.g., artemisinin derivatives).
Drug Delivery: Optimize bioavailability of hydrophobic terpenoids.
Natural Libraries: Screen unexplored plant species for novel scaffolds.
Conclusion
Since the beginning of time, dietary, medicinal, and aromatic plants, as well as their active constituents, have been used to treat a wide range of human ailments worldwide, including leishmaniasis. This practice served as the foundation for modern or contemporary medicine. Several natural compounds obtained from medicinal plants (phytochemicals) have shown strong effects against different Leishmania species in preclinical studies under both in vitro and in vivo conditions. Medicinal plant-derived compounds can effectively manage leishmaniasis by killing the parasite and preventing its growth and transmission to hosts. The mechanisms, as extracted from the scientific literature, include disruption of cytoplasmic and mitochondrial membranes, induction of apoptosis and autophagy, gene expression and immunomodulatory pathways, pro-oxidant effects (disrupting cellular redox equilibrium) with mitochondrial dysfunction, cell cycle arrest, impaired cellular bioenergetics (ATP production), protein/enzyme interaction, and coagulation of cellular contents within the Leishmania parasites. The mitochondrion of the parasite (Leishmania has only one mitochondrion) is the chief target of most of the active natural products.
Full text:
https://www.xiahepublishing.com/2835-6357/FIM-2025-00021
The study was recently published in the Future Integrative Medicine.
Future Integrative Medicine (FIM) is the official scientific journal of the Capital Medical University. It is a prominent new journal that promotes future innovation in medicine.It publishes both basic and clinical research, including but not limited to randomized controlled trials, intervention studies, cohort studies, observational studies, qualitative and mixed method studies, animal studies, and systematic reviews.
Follow us on X: @xiahepublishing
Follow us on LinkedIn: Xia & He Publishing Inc.
END
The Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP), the premier global molecular diagnostic professional society, today announced the recipients of its 2025 Excellence in Molecular Diagnostics, Jeffrey A. Kant Leadership and Meritorious Service Awards. These prestigious honors will be presented in November during the AMP 2025 Annual Meeting & Expo in Boston.
Award for Excellence in Molecular Diagnostics
Elaine R. Mardis, Ph.D.
Co-executive Director, Steve and Cindy Rasmussen Institute for Genomic Medicine, Nationwide Children’s Hospital
Rasmussen Nationwide Foundation Endowed Chair in Genomic ...
Usually, light waves can pass through each other without any resistance. According to the laws of electrodynamics, two light beams can exist in the same place without influencing each other; they simply overlap. Light saber battles, as seen in science fiction films, would therefore be rather boring in reality.
Nevertheless, quantum physics predicts the effect of “light-on-light scattering”. Ordinary lasers are not powerful enough to detect it, but it has been observed at the CERN particle accelerator. Virtual particles can literally emerge from nothing for a short time, interact with the photons and change their direction. The effect is extremely small, ...
A new study finds that White students visit academic advisers the least, but have the highest academic benefits, in terms of GPA and graduation rates, compared to nonwhite students and international students.
In higher education, substantial gaps exist between White and nonwhite students, with a greater number of White students graduating in fewer years and receiving higher grades than many other groups. Prior research shows that nonwhite students are less likely to engage with faculty members, but there is a dearth of information related to interactions with academic advisers—staffers ...
A frog croaks from a walking trail. A hiker snaps a photo and uploads it to iNaturalist. That single act — one person, one amphibian and one click — feeds into a growing global dataset that scientists now use to map shifting species ranges, detect invasive threats and even discover new species.
An international study led by researchers at the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) shows how iNaturalist, the global technology platform through which everyday people share ...
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Though scientists have long understood how lightning strikes, the precise atmospheric events that trigger it within thunderclouds remained a perplexing mystery. The mystery may be solved, thanks to a team of researchers led by Victor Pasko, professor of electrical engineering in the Penn State School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, that has revealed the powerful chain reaction that triggers lightning.
In the study published today (July 28) in the Journal ...
Hybrid water electrolysis (HWE) is an emerging field that aims to overcome some of the limitations of conventional water electrolysis (CWE) for the production of green hydrogen. In CWE, two reactions take place at each of the electrodes (anode and cathode): one reaction produces hydrogen at the cathode (the hydrogen evolution reaction) and the other produces oxygen at the anode (the oxygen evolution reaction, OER). The concept of hybrid water electrolysis revolves around replacing the anode reaction of CWE (the OER), which is inefficient and requires ...
There is broad consensus that the overall body of evidence shows lowering LDL (low-density lipoprotein) cholesterol provides both statistically significant and clinically meaningful benefits in treating and preventing cardiovascular disease. Often referred to as the “bad” cholesterol, elevated levels of LDL can clog arteries and significantly increase the risk of heart attacks and strokes.
In an invited editorial published in the current issue of Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine, researchers from Florida ...
DALLAS, July 28, 2025 — People in 15 regions across the U.S. will soon benefit from the American Heart Association’s Cardiovascular-Kidney-Metabolic Health Initiative™, designed to improve treatment of the interconnected conditions that lead to heart disease and stroke. The initiative began with five regions in February and has now expanded to include the final 10 regions. The regions include states, cities and metro areas.
The initiative, supported by founding sponsors Novo Nordisk and Boehringer Ingelheim, supporting sponsor Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation and champion sponsor DaVita, will enroll 150 health care ...
Alexandria, VA – The AADOCR is now accepting applications for Cohort 6 of the Mind the Future Program, thanks to the generous support of CareQuest Institute for Oral Health.
The AADOCR Mind the Future program has been instrumental in fostering five cohorts of early-career investigators in the dental, oral, and craniofacial (DOC) research workforce. The network's principal purpose has been to establish a robust and enduring national mentoring program centrally managed by AADOCR. The overarching ...
Chronic liver disease (CLD) is a major global health concern, affecting approximately 1.5 billion people. This life-threatening disease often progresses silently, eventually leading to worsened conditions like liver cirrhosis or liver cancer. There is currently no treatment for CLD other than liver transplantation.
Vitamin D is commonly consumed for enhanced bone health. This study opens exciting possibilities for repurposing an inexpensive supplement as a complementary therapy for liver diseases. Prof. Hyo-Jung Kwon from the College of Veterinary Medicine, Chungnam National University in Daejeon, Republic of Korea, and his colleagues ...