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J Ethnopharmacol. 2001 Nov; 78(1): 51-8.

The effect of Senecio latifolius a plant used as a South African traditional medicine, on a human hepatoma cell line.

Steenkamp V, Stewart MJ, van der Merwe S, Zuckerman M, Crowther NJ.

Department of Chemical Pathology, South African Institute for Medical Research, University of the Witwatersrand Medical School, 7 York Road, Parktown 2193, Gauteng, South Africa.

A number of traditional remedies used in South Africa contain pyrrolizidine alkaloids, some of which are hepatotoxic. We investigated the effect on human HuH-7 cells of Senecio latifolius DC., a plant that is a component of some traditional remedies and which is known to contain toxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids. Cells were also treated with extracts of a standard pyrrolizidine, retrorsine. The changes in the gross morphology of the cells were studied using light microscopy after haematoxylin and eosin staining. The cytoskeleton was investigated using fluorescence-labelled anti-beta-tubulin antibody and the nuclear organisation was studied using fluorescence-labelled antinuclear antibodies. The plant extracts gave rise to dose-dependent gross morphological changes. At high doses, we observed necrosis and at lower doses, destruction of the cytoskeleton, nuclear fragmentation and apoptosis. Doses of less than the equivalent of 330 ng/ml retrorsine led to multinucleated cells with failure in spindle formation and clumping of nuclear chromatin. This latter finding suggests that chronic low-dose treatment with such traditional remedies could give rise to teratogenic and/or carcinogenic effects.


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