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Featured researches published by Kuan-Hon Lim.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2011

Optimal methods for evaluating antimicrobial activities from plant extracts.

Mukhrizah Othman; Hwei-San Loh; Christophe Wiart; Teng-Jin Khoo; Kuan-Hon Lim; Kang Nee Ting

The search for antimicrobial agents from plants has been a growing interest in the last few decades. However, results generated from many of these studies cannot be directly compared due to the absence of standardization in particular antimicrobial methods employed. The need for established methods with consistent results for the evaluation of antimicrobial activities from plant extracts has been proposed by many researchers. Nevertheless, there are still many studies reported in the literature describing different methodologies. The aim of this study was to find optimal methods to give consistent quantitative antimicrobial results for studying plant extracts. Three different agar-based assays (pour plate disc diffusion (PPDD), streak plate disc diffusion (SPDD) and well-in agar (WA)) and one broth-based (turbidometric (TB)) assay were used in this study. Extracts from two plant species (Duabanga grandiflora and Acalypha wilkesiana) were tested on two bacterial species, namely Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus. Amongst the agar-based assays, PPDD produced the most reproducible results. TB was able to show the inhibitory effects of the test samples on the growth kinetic of the bacteria including plant extracts with low polarity. We propose that both agar- (i.e PPDD) and broth-based assays should be employed when assessing the antimicrobial activity of plant crude extracts.


Journal of Natural Products | 2008

Jerantinines A−G, Cytotoxic Aspidosperma Alkaloids from Tabernaemontana corymbosa

Kuan-Hon Lim; Osamu Hiraku; Kanki Komiyama; Toh-Seok Kam

Seven new indole alkaloids of the Aspidosperma type, jerantinines A-G (1-7), were isolated from a leaf extract of the Malayan Tabernaemontana corymbosa. The structures were established using NMR and MS analysis. Five of the alkaloids isolated and two derivatives (1-5, 8, 9) displayed pronounced in vitro cytotoxicity against human KB cells (IC50 < 1 microg/mL).


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2011

Acalypha wilkesiana extracts induce apoptosis by causing single strand and double strand DNA breaks

Su-Wen Lim; Kang Nee Ting; Tracey D. Bradshaw; Nazariah Allaudin Zeenathul; Christophe Wiart; Teng-Jin Khoo; Kuan-Hon Lim; Hwei-San Loh

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE The seeds of Acalypha wilkesiana have been used empirically by traditional healers in Southwest Nigeria together with other plants as a powder mixture to treat patients with breast tumours and inflammation. AIM OF THE STUDY There is an increasing interest among researchers in searching for new anticancer drugs from natural resources, particularly plants. This study aimed to investigate the anticancer properties of Acalypha wilkesiana extracts and the characteristics of DNA damage against brain and lung cancer cells. MATERIALS AND METHODS The antiproliferative activity of Acalypha wilkesiana extracts (ethyl acetate, hexane, and ethanol) was examined on human glioma (U87MG), human lung carcinoma (A549), and human lung fibroblast (MRC5) cells. RESULTS Cell viability MTT assay revealed that ethyl acetate extract of the plant possessed significant antiproliferative effects against both U87MG (GI(50)=28.03 ± 6.44 μg/ml) and A549 (GI(50)=89.63 ± 2.12 μg/ml) cells (p value<0.0001). The hexane extract was found to exhibit crucial antiproliferative effects on U87MG (GI(50)=166.30 ± 30.50 μg/ml) (p value<0.0001) but not on A549 cells. Neither plant extract possessed noticeable antiproliferative effects on the non-cancerous MRC5 cells (GI(50)>300 μg/ml). The ethanol extract showed no antiproliferative effects on any cell line examined. Haematoxylin & Eosin (H & E) staining and single cell gel electrophoresis (SCGE) comet assay confirmed that plant extract-treated cells underwent apoptosis and not necrosis. SCGE comet assays confirmed that plant extracts caused both single strand (SSB) and double strand (DSB) DNA breaks that led to the execution of apoptosis. CONCLUSION The extracts (especially ethyl acetate and hexane) of Acalypha wilkesiana possess valuable cytotoxic effects that trigger apoptosis in U87MG and A549 cancer cells through induction of DNA SSBs and DSBs.


Journal of Natural Products | 2015

Ibogan, Tacaman, and Cytotoxic Bisindole Alkaloids from Tabernaemontana. Cononusine, an Iboga Alkaloid with Unusual Incorporation of a Pyrrolidone Moiety

Kuan-Hon Lim; Vijay J. Raja; Tracey D. Bradshaw; Siew-Huah Lim; Yun-Yee Low; Toh-Seok Kam

Six new indole alkaloids, viz., cononusine (1, a rare example of an iboga-pyrrolidone conjugate), ervaluteine (2), vincamajicine (3), tacamonidine (4), 6-oxoibogaine (5), and N(4)-chloromethylnorfluorocurarine chloride (6), and two new vobasinyl-iboga bisindole alkaloids, ervatensines A (7) and B (8), in addition to other known alkaloids, were isolated from the stem-bark extract of the Malayan Tabernaemontana corymbosa. The structures of these alkaloids were established on the basis of NMR and MS analyses and, in one instance (7), confirmed by X-ray diffraction analysis. Vincamajicine (3) showed appreciable activity in reversing multidrug resistance in vincristine-resistant KB cells (IC50 2.62 μM), while ervatensines A (7) and B (8) and two other known bisindoles displayed pronounced in vitro growth inhibitory activity against human KB cells (IC50 < 2 μM). Compounds 7 and 8 also showed good growth inhibitory activity against A549, MCF-7, MDA-468, HCT-116, and HT-29 cells (IC50 0.70-4.19 μM). Cell cycle and annexin V-FITC apoptosis assays indicated that compounds 7 and 8 inhibited proliferation of HCT-116 and MDA-468 cells, evoking apoptotic and necrotic cell death.


Journal of Natural Products | 2014

Transformations of the 2,7-Seco Aspidosperma Alkaloid Leuconolam, Structure Revision of epi-Leuconolam, and Partial Syntheses of Leuconoxine and Leuconodines A and F.

Yun-Yee Low; Fong-Jiao Hong; Kuan-Hon Lim; Noel F. Thomas; Toh-Seok Kam

Several transformations of the seco Aspidosperma alkaloid leuconolam were carried out. The based-induced reaction resulted in cyclization to yield two epimers, the major product corresponding to the optical antipode of a (+)-meloscine derivative. The structures and relative configuration of the products were confirmed by X-ray diffraction analysis. Reaction of leuconolam and epi-leuconolam with various acids, molecular bromine, and hydrogen gave results that indicated that the structure of the alkaloid, previously assigned as epi-leuconolam, was incorrect. This was confirmed by an X-ray diffraction analysis, which revealed that epi-leuconolam is in fact 6,7-dehydroleuconoxine. Short partial syntheses of the diazaspiro indole alkaloid leuconoxine and the new leuconoxine-type alkaloids leuconodines A and F were carried out.


Cancer Letters | 2016

In vitro anticancer properties and biological evaluation of novel natural alkaloid jerantinine B

Mohannad E. Qazzaz; Vijay J. Raja; Kuan-Hon Lim; Toh-Seok Kam; Jong Bong Lee; Pavel Gershkovich; Tracey D. Bradshaw

Natural products play a pivotal role in medicine especially in the cancer arena. Many drugs that are currently used in cancer chemotherapy originated from or were inspired by nature. Jerantinine B (JB) is one of seven novel Aspidosperma indole alkaloids isolated from the leaf extract of Tabernaemontana corymbosa. Preliminary antiproliferative assays revealed that JB and JB acetate significantly inhibited growth and colony formation, accompanied by time- and dose-dependent apoptosis induction in human cancer cell lines. JB significantly arrested cells at the G2/M cell cycle phase, potently inhibiting tubulin polymerisation. Polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1; an early trigger for the G2/M transition) was also dose-dependently inhibited by JB (IC50 1.5 µM). Furthermore, JB provoked significant increases in reactive oxygen species (ROS). Annexin V+ cell populations, dose-dependent accumulation of cleaved-PARP and caspase 3/7 activation, and reduced Bcl-2 and Mcl-1 expression confirm apoptosis induction. Preclinical in silico biopharmaceutical assessment of JB calculated rapid absorption and bioavailability >70%. Doses of 8-16 mg/kg JB were predicted to maintain unbound plasma concentrations >GI50 values in mice during efficacy studies. These findings advocate continued development of JB as a potential chemotherapeutic agent.


Phytochemistry | 2013

Macroline-sarpagine and macroline-pleiocarpamine bisindole alkaloids from Alstonia angustifolia.

Shin-Jowl Tan; Kuan-Hon Lim; G. Subramaniam; Toh-Seok Kam

Nine bisindole alkaloids, comprising four belonging to the macroline-sarpagine group, and five belonging to the macroline-pleiocarpamine group, were isolated from the stem-bark extracts of Alstonia angustifolia (Apocynacea). Their structures were established using NMR and MS analyses.


Journal of Natural Products | 2012

Perhentidines A−C: Macroline−Macroline Bisindoles from Alstonia and the Absolute Configuration of Perhentinine and Macralstonine

Siew-Huah Lim; Yun-Yee Low; Shin-Jowl Tan; Kuan-Hon Lim; Noel F. Thomas; Toh-Seok Kam

Three new bisindole alkaloids of the macroline-macroline type, perhentidines A-C (1-3), were isolated from the stem-bark extract of Alstonia macrophylla and Alstonia angustifolia. The structures of these alkaloids were established on the basis of NMR and MS analyses. The absolute configurations of perhentinine (4) and macralstonine (5) were established by X-ray diffraction analyses, which facilitated assignment of the configuration at C-20 in the regioisomeric bisindole alkaloids perhentidines A-C (1-3). A potentially useful method for the determination of the configuration at C-20 based on comparison of the NMR chemical shifts of the bisindoles and their acetate derivatives, in these and related bisindoles with similar constitution and branching of the monomeric units, is also presented.


Phytochemistry | 2009

Seco-tabersonine alkaloids from Tabernaemontana corymbosa

Kuan-Hon Lim; Noel F. Thomas; Zanariah Abdullah; Toh-Seok Kam

Two seco-tabersonine alkaloids, jerantiphyllines A and B, in addition to a tabersonine hydroxyindolenine, jerantinine H, and a recently reported vincamine alkaloid 7, were isolated from the leaf extract of the Malayan Tabernaemontana corymbosa and the structures were established using NMR and MS analysis. Biomimetic conversion of jerantinines A and E to their respective vincamine and 16-epivincamine derivatives were also carried out.


The Alkaloids: Chemistry and Biology | 2008

Alkaloids of Kopsia.

Toh-Seok Kam; Kuan-Hon Lim

Publisher Summary This chapter presents a review on the chemistry and pharmacology of some recent Kopsia alkaloids and discusses the alkaloid structure type, in order of increasing complexity, and approximately along the lines of a progressing biosynthetic pathway. In each discussion, the aspects of structure elucidation, chemistry, synthesis, and biological activity of the alkaloids concerned explained. The occurrences of alkaloids in Kopsia species that have been chemically investigated are summarized in the chapter. The monoterpene alkaloids constitute a relatively small group of compounds and occur in several species, including K. pauciflora, K. profunda (K. macrophylla), and K. dasyrachis, from which several new monoterpene alkaloids related to skytanthine have been recently isolated. The North Borneo species K. pauciflora provided six such monoterpene alkaloids—namely, kinabalurines A–F. Kinabalurine G was isolated from the leaf extract of K. dasyrachis, another Kopsia from Malaysian Borneo. K. profunda (K. macrophylla) provided two more new monoterpene alkaloids, kopsilactone and kopsone, in addition to the known alkaloids 5,22-dioxokopsane, dregamine, akuammiline, tabernaemontanine, deacetylakuammiline, norpleiomutine, and kopsoffine. The leaves of K. dasyrachis also gave kopsirachine, which is constituted from union of the flavonoid, catechin, and two units of skytanthine. Nitaphylline was the only bisindole isolated from K. teoi, which otherwise yielded a large number of new indole alkaloids.

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Kang Nee Ting

University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus

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Hwei-San Loh

University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus

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Vijay J. Raja

University of Nottingham

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Carolina Santiago

University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus

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Ibrahim Babangida Abubakar

University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus

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Veronica Alicia Yap

University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus

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