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Dive into the research topics where Fabrice Fekam Boyom is active.

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Featured researches published by Fabrice Fekam Boyom.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2009

Antiplasmodial activity of extracts from seven medicinal plants used in malaria treatment in Cameroon

Fabrice Fekam Boyom; Eugénie Madiesse Kemgne; Roselyne Tepongning; Vincent Ngouana; Wilfred F. Mbacham; Etienne Tsamo; Paul Henri Amvam Zollo; Jiri Gut; Philip J. Rosenthal

AIM OF THE STUDY In a search for new plant-derived biologically active compounds against malaria parasites, we have carried out an ethnopharmacological study to evaluate the susceptibility of cultured Plasmodium falciparum to extracts and fractions from seven Cameroonian medicinal plants used in malaria treatment. We have also explored the inhibition of the Plasmodium falciparum cysteine protease Falcipain-2. MATERIALS AND METHODS Plant materials were extracted by maceration in organic solvents, and subsequently partitioned or fractionated to afford test fractions. The susceptibility of erythrocytes and the W2 strain of Plasmodium falciparum to plant extracts was evaluated in culture. In addition, the ability of annonaceous extracts to inhibit recombinant cysteine protease Falcipain-2 was also assessed. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION The extracts showed no toxicity against erythrocytes. The majority of plant extracts were highly active against Plasmodium falciparumin vitro, with IC(50) values lower than 5 microg/ml. Annonaceous extracts (acetogenin-rich fractions and interface precipitates) exhibited the highest potency. Some of these extracts exhibited modest inhibition of Falcipain-2. CONCLUSION These results support continued investigation of components of traditional medicines as potential new antimalarial agents.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2012

Ethnopharmacological survey of Annonaceae medicinal plants used to treat malaria in four areas of Cameroon

Nole Tsabang; Patrick Valere Tsouh Fokou; Lauve Rachel Yamthe Tchokouaha; Béatrice Noguem; Issakou Bakarnga-Via; Mireille Sylviane Dongmo Nguepi; Bernard Aloys Nkongmeneck; Fabrice Fekam Boyom

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE Malaria endemic countries have vital resources that are medicinal plants on which their traditional medicines depend. In some Cameroonian settings, in addition to the commonly used potions from plants like Alstonia boonei, Zanthoxylum macrophylla and Mangifera indica, other herbal species are being increasingly used to treat malaria. So, specialized traditional healers have developed alternative reasonably priced therapies, relying on the signs and/or symptoms of malaria. Within this framework, Annonaceae plants were found to be increasingly utilized and therefore, highlighting the need to document this traditional knowledge for better malaria control. MATERIALS AND METHODS Interview approach was used to document indigenous knowledge, usage customs and practices of Annonaceae species in the treatment of malaria in four Cameroonian areas (Yaoundé and its surroundings, Ngoyang, Kon-Yambetta and Mbalmayo). RESULTS A total of 19/30 users of plants accepted to share their experiences during a semi-structured survey. Twelve of the respondents were men and seven were women. Thirty recipes based on twenty-one plants were recorded. CONCLUSION Annickia chlorantha was the only plant commonly found in the four study sites. Seven species of Annonaceae were found to be used to treat malaria, while 14 were used to treat symptoms that might be related to malaria.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2014

Repurposing the Open Access Malaria Box To Discover Potent Inhibitors of Toxoplasma gondii and Entamoeba histolytica

Fabrice Fekam Boyom; Patrick Valere Tsouh Fokou; Lauve Rachel Yamthe Tchokouaha; Thomas Spangenberg; Alvine Ngoutane Mfopa; Ruffin M. T. Kouipou; Cedric Derick Jiatsa Mbouna; Valerie F. Donkeng Donfack; Paul Henri Amvam Zollo

ABSTRACT Toxoplasmosis and amebiasis are important public health concerns worldwide. The drugs currently available to control these diseases have proven limitations. Therefore, innovative approaches should be adopted to identify and develop new leads from novel scaffolds exhibiting novel modes of action. In this paper, we describe results from the screening of compounds in the Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) open access Malaria Box in a search for new anti-Toxoplasma and anti-Entamoeba agents. Standard in vitro phenotypic screening procedures were adopted to assess their biological activities. Seven anti-Toxoplasma compounds with a 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) of <5 μM and selectivity indexes (SI) of >6 were identified. The most interesting compound was MMV007791, a piperazine acetamide, which has an IC50 of 0.19 μM and a selectivity index of >157. Also, we identified two compounds, MMV666600 and MMV006861, with modest activities against Entamoeba histolytica, with IC50s of 10.66 μM and 15.58 μM, respectively. The anti-Toxoplasma compounds identified in this study belong to scaffold types different from those of currently used drugs, underscoring their novelty and potential as starting points for the development of new antitoxoplasmosis drugs with novel modes of action.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2011

Potent antiplasmodial extracts from Cameroonian Annonaceae

Fabrice Fekam Boyom; Patrick Valere Tsouh Fokou; Lauve Rachel Tchokouaha Yamthe; Alvine Ngoutane Mfopa; Eugénie Madiesse Kemgne; Wilfred F. Mbacham; Etienne Tsamo; Paul Henri Amvam Zollo; Jiri Gut; Philip J. Rosenthal

AIM OF THE STUDY In a search for new antimalarial leads, we have carried out a preliminary ethnopharmacological study with the aim of evaluating the in vitro antiplasmodial activity of extracts from thirteen Annonaceae species growing in Cameroon, and of assessing the acute toxicity of promising fractions in Swiss albino mice. MATERIALS AND METHODS Plants were selected on the basis of an ethnobotanical survey carried out in four sites in centre and south regions of Cameroon (Yaoundé neighbourhoods, Kon-Yambetta, Ngobayang and Mbalmayo) on Annonaceae plants locally used to treat malaria and related symptoms. The choice of the sites was mainly based on environmental factors enabling mosquito breeding, cosmopolitan areas regrouping people from different cultural origins, areas with limited access to health centers, and areas with people relying exclusively on traditional medical practices. Collected materials were extracted by maceration in 95% ethanol. The crude extract was partitioned using organic solvents and the fractions afforded were evaluated for antiplasmodial activity in culture against the W2 strain of Plasmodium falciparum. Promising fractions (methanol fractions) were assessed for their acute toxicity in Swiss albino mice. RESULTS From the results achieved, 37 (31.3%) out of 118 extracts tested exhibited antiplasmodial activity, with IC(50) values ranging from 1.07 μg/ml to 9.03 μg/ml. Of the active extracts, 29 (78.4%) were methanol fractions, 21 (72.4%) of which inhibited the parasites with IC(50)<5 μg/ml. The promising fractions proved to be safe through oral administration in mice. CONCLUSIONS The activities and toxicity profiles of methanol fractions indicate that they deserve to be further investigated in detail for antimalarial lead discovery.


Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology | 2010

Antiprotozoal activities of some constituents of Markhamia tomentosa (Bignoniaceae)

Ferdinand Tantangmo; Bruno Ndjakou Lenta; Fabrice Fekam Boyom; Silvère Ngouela; M. Kaiser; Etienne Tsamo; Bernard Weniger; Philip J. Rosenthal; Catherine Vonthron-Sénécheau

Abstract Phytochemical investigation of an ethyl-acetate extract of the stem bark of Markhamia tomentosa (Bignoniaceae), which had good antimalarial activity in vitro, resulted in the isolation of eight known compounds: 2-acetylnaphtho[2,3-b]furan-4,9-dione (1), 2-acetyl-6-methoxynaphtho[2,3-b]furan-4,9-dione (2), oleanolic acid (3), pomolic acid (4), 3-acetylpomolic acid (5), tormentic acid (6), β-sitosterol (7) and β-sitosterol-3-O-β-D-glucopyranoside (8). The structures of these compounds were established by spectroscopic methods. Each of compounds 1, 2, 4 and 5 was evaluated in vitro for its antiprotozoal activities against the ring stages of two chloroquine-resistant strains of Plasmodium falciparum (K1 and W2), the amastigotes of Leishmania donovani, and the bloodstream trypomastigotes of Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense (the species responsible for human malaria, visceral leishmaniasis and African trypanosomiasis, respectively). Although compounds 1 and 2 exhibited potent antiprotozoal activities, they also showed high toxicity against a mammalian (L-6) cell line.


Mycoses | 2015

Investigation of minor species Candida africana, Candida stellatoidea and Candida dubliniensis in the Candida albicans complex among Yaoundé (Cameroon) HIV‐infected patients

Thierry Ngouana; Donika Krasteva; Pascal Drakulovski; Rufin Toghueo; Charles Kouanfack; Akaba Ambe; J. Reynes; Eric Delaporte; Fabrice Fekam Boyom; M. Mallié; Sébastien Bertout

Minor species of the Candida albicans complex may cause overestimation of the epidemiology of C. albicans, and misidentifications could mask their implication in human pathology. Authors determined the occurrence of minor species of the C. albicans complex (C. africana, C. dubliniensis and C. stellatoidea) among Yaoundé HIV‐infected patients, Cameroon. Stool, vaginal discharge, urine and oropharyngeal samples were analysed by mycological diagnosis. Isolates were identified by conventional methods and mass spectrometry (MS; carried out by the matrix‐assisted laser desorption–ionisation time‐of‐flight MS protocol). Candida albicans isolates were thereafter submitted to the PCR amplification of the Hwp1 gene. The susceptibility of isolates to antifungal drugs was tested using the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute M27‐A3 protocol. From 115 C. albicans obtained isolates, neither C. dubliniensis nor C. stellatoidea was observed; two strains of C. africana (422PV and 448PV) were identified by PCR electrophoretic profiles at 700 bp. These two C. africana strains were vaginal isolates. The isolate 448PV was resistant to ketoconazole at the minimal inhibitory concentration of 2 μg ml−1, and showed reduced susceptibility to amphotericin B at 1 μg ml−1. This first report on C. africana occurrence in Cameroon brings clues for the understanding of the global epidemiology of this yeast as well as that of minor species of the C. albicans complex.


Phytochemistry | 2013

Antiplasmodial sesquiterpenes from the seeds of Salacia longipes var. camerunensis

Brice Mittérant Mba’ning; Bruno Ndjakou Lenta; Diderot Tchamo Noungoue; Cyril Antheaume; Yanick F. Fongang; Silvère Ngouela; Fabrice Fekam Boyom; Philip J. Rosenthal; Etienne Tsamo; Norbert Sewald; Hartmut Laatsch

Phytochemical investigation of the seeds of Salacia longipes var. camerunensis led to the isolation of four sesquiterpenoid derivatives, salaterpene A (1) (1α,2β,8β-triacetoxy-6β,9β-dibenzoyloxy-4β-hydroxy-dihydro-β-agarofuran), salaterpene B (2) (1α,2β,8β-triacetoxy-9β-benzoyloxy-6β-cinnamoyloxy-4β-hydroxy-dihydro-β-agarofuran), salaterpene C (3) (1α,2β-diacetoxy-6β,9β-dibenzoyloxy-4β-hydroxy-dihydro-β-agarofuran) and salaterpene D (4) (2β-acetoxy-1α,6β-dibenzoyloxy-4β-hydroxy-9β-nicotinoyloxy-dihydro-β-agarofuran) together with two known compounds (5 and 6). The structures of the compounds were established by means of NMR spectroscopy. Compounds 1-4 and 6 were tested in vitro for their antiplasmodial activity against Plasmodium falciparum chloroquine-resistant strain W2. All the tested compounds exhibited a moderate potency with IC50 below 2.7 μM.


Malaria Journal | 2012

Compounds from Sorindeia juglandifolia (Anacardiaceae) exhibit potent anti-plasmodial activities in vitro and in vivo

Raceline G Kamkumo; Alvine M Ngoutane; Lauve Ry Tchokouaha; Patrick Vt Fokou; Eugénie Ak Madiesse; Jennifer Legac; Jean Jb Kezetas; Bruno Ndjakou Lenta; Fabrice Fekam Boyom; Théophile Dimo; Wilfred F. Mbacham; Jiri Gut; Philip J. Rosenthal

BackgroundDiscovering new lead compounds against malaria parasites is a crucial step to ensuring a sustainable global pipeline for effective anti-malarial drugs. As far as we know, no previous phytochemical or pharmacological investigations have been carried out on Sorindeia juglandifolia. This paper describes the results of an anti-malarial activity-driven investigation of the fruits of this Cameroonian plant.MethodsAir-dried fruits were extracted by maceration using methanol. The extract was fractionated by flash chromatography followed by column chromatography over silica gel, eluting with gradients of hexane-ethyl acetate mixtures. Resulting fractions and compounds were tested in vitro against the Plasmodium falciparum chloroquine-resistant strain W2, against field isolates of P. falciparum, and against the P. falciparum recombinant cysteine protease falcipain-2. Promising fractions were assessed for acute toxicity after oral administration in mice. One of the promising isolated compounds was assessed in vivo against the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei.ResultsThe main end-products of the activity-guided fractionation were 2,3,6-trihydroxy benzoic acid (1) and 2,3,6-trihydroxy methyl benzoate (2). Overall, nine fractions tested against P. falciparum W2 and falcipain-2 were active, with IC50 values of 2.3-11.6 μg/ml for W2, and 1.1-21.9 μg/ml for falcipain-2. Purified compounds (1) and (2) also showed inhibitory effects against P. falciparum W2 (IC50s 16.5 μM and 13.0 μM) and falcipain-2 (IC50s 35.4 and 6.1 μM). In studies of P. falciparum isolates from Cameroon, the plant fractions demonstrated IC50 values of 0.14-19.4 μg/ml and compounds (1) and (2) values of 6.3 and 36.1 μM. In vivo assessment of compound (1) showed activity against P. berghei strain B, with mean parasitaemia suppressive dose and curative dose of 44.9 mg/kg and 42.2 mg/kg, respectively. Active fractions were found to be safe in mice after oral administration of 7 g/kg body weight.ConclusionsFractions of Sorindeia juglandifolia and two compounds isolated from these fractions were active against cultured malaria parasites, the P. falciparum protease falcipain-2, and in a rodent malaria model. These results suggest that further investigation of the anti-malarial activities of natural products from S. juglandifolia will be appropriate.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2015

Ethnopharmacological surveys and pharmacological studies of plants used in traditional medicine in the treatment of HIV/AIDS opportunistic diseases in Gabon.

Guy Raymond Feuya Tchouya; Alain Souza; Jean Claude Tchouankeu; Jean-Fabrice Yala; Marlaine Boukandou; Hibrahim Foundikou; Giresse Delphang Nguema Obiang; Fabrice Fekam Boyom; Rolande Mabika Mabika; Elisabeth Zeuko’o Menkem; Derek Tantoh Ndinteh; Jacques Lebibi

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE Ethnopharmacological surveys were conducted in two regions of Gabon. This led to highlighting some of the medicinal plants used by local populations in the management of HIV/AIDS opportunistic diseases. Two regions with the highest occurrence of HIV/AIDS cases were visited and ethnopharmarcological data was gathered. These regions were the Estuaire Province (Libreville and its neighborhood) and the Haut-Ogooué Province (Franceville and its neighborhood). The opportunistic diseases and symptomatic conditions considered during this study were: diarrhea, respiratory tract infections, cough, tuberculosis, abscesses, stomach ache, skin rashes, venereal diseases, typhoid fever, anemia, general tiredness, hepatitis and vomiting. MATERIALS AND METHODS The reported species were evaluated through three parameters: specificity, reliability and frequency. Plant parts of relevant species were harvested and extracted with an aqueous alcohol solution (ethanol/water: 1/1). The extracts obtained were submitted to phytochemical screening and in vitro microbiological assays on some clinical isolates and ATCC strains, involved in HIV/AIDS opportunistic diseases through the Agar well diffusion and Microbroth dilution methods. RESULTS Among the 52 species identified during this survey, Coelocaryon klainei Pierre ex Heckel (Myristicaceae), Dacryodes klaineana (Pierre) H.J. Lam (Bursecaceae), Phyllanthus diandrus Pax (Euphorbiaceae), Saccoglotys gabonensis (Baill.) Urb. (Humiriaceae) and Tetrorchidium didymostemon (Baill.) Pax & K. Hoffm. (Euphorbiaceae) were submitted to in vitro microbiological assays. Phyllanthus diandrus bark and leaves show best antibacterial activities against Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Klebsiella pneumoniae with MIC value of 0.25 respectively. Phytochemical screening revealed the presence in all the plant parts extracts of potentially bioactive molecules, including polyphenols, especially flavonoids and tannins. CONCLUSION It is concluded that some of these plants might be submitted to further scientific studies, including the identification and isolation of bioactive principles, that could be developed to drugs for the treatment of HIV/AIDS opportunistic diseases.


Zeitschrift für Naturforschung C | 2009

Antimalarial compounds from the stem bark of Vismia laurentii.

Diderot Tchamo Noungoue; Mehdi Chaabi; Silvère Ngouela; Cyril Antheaume; Fabrice Fekam Boyom; Jiri Gut; Philip J. Rosenthal; Annelise Lobstein; Etienne Tsamo

A phytochemical study of the stem bark of Vismia laurentii resulted in the isolation of a tetracyclic triterpene, tirucalla-7,24-dien-3-one (1), and seven other known compounds: 3-geranyloxyemodin (2), vismiaquinone A (3), vismiaquinone B (4), bivismiaquinone (5), epifriedelinol (6), betulinic acid (7) and stigmasta-7,22-dien-3-ol (8). The structure of all these compounds was elucidated by spectroscopic means. The stem bark extract and compounds 1 and 3 showed good antimalarial activity against the W2 strain of Plasmodium falciparum.

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Etienne Tsamo

University of Yaoundé I

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Jiri Gut

University of California

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Chantal Menut

École Normale Supérieure

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