Mark Ofosuhene
University of Ghana
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Featured researches published by Mark Ofosuhene.
Phytomedicine | 2002
Alexander K. Nyarko; Henry Asare-Anane; Mark Ofosuhene; Marian E. Addy
Aqueous extract of Ocimum canum Sim, (Lamiaceae) is used by some Ghanaians to manage diabetes mellitus. In vivo modulation of levels of fasting blood glucose by 0. canum extract was evaluated in type-II diabetes mellitus using the C57BL/KsJ db/db genetically diabetic animal model, and its effects on glucose-stimulated insulin release in vitro were monitored using isolated rat pancreatic beta-islet cells. The results showed that fasting blood glucose levels and body weight decreased significantly (p < 0.05) in diabetic and non-diabetic C57BL/KsJ mice, which were administered aqueous extract of 0. canum. In vitro, the 0. canum extract significantly enhanced insulin release from isolated rat pancreatic beta-islet cells. Insulin release was found to be dependent on glucose concentration and increased with increasing O. canum concentration in the incubation medium up to an optimum extract concentration of 0.03 mg/ml. Release of the hormone decreased beyond this concentration of extract in the medium. Addition to the medium of Desmodium adscendens, a plant preparation used to manage inflammatory disorders, did not increase but rather inhibited insulin secretion by the pancreatic beta-islet cells. These results could explain the use of 0. canum in Ghanaian folk medicine to manage diabetes mellitus.
BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2012
Edmund T. Nartey; Mark Ofosuhene; William Kudzi; Caleb M Agbale
BackgroundCassia sieberiana is a savannah tree with a wide phytotherapeutic application including the use of its roots in the management of various stomach disorders including gastric ulcer, stomach pains and indigestion. The aim of the study is to evaluate the antioxidant, gastric cytoprotective prostaglandins, secretory phospholipase A2, phytochemical and acute toxicity properties of Cassia sieberiana roots bark extract in a bid to justify its phytotherapeutic applications in gastric ulcer.MethodsAntioxidant and radical scavenging activities of the roots bark extract of Cassia sieberiana were assayed. Serum secretory phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) concentration and activity and the formation of gastric mucosal prostaglandins E2 (PGE2) and I2 (PGI2) were also assessed. Comparisons between means were performed using analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by Students Standard Newman-Keuls post hoc analysis to determine statistical significance. P < 0.05 was considered significant.ResultsThe extract was found to possess significant ferric reducing antioxidant power and can scavenge hydroxyl radicals. The extract also possesses DPPH scavenging activity, can chelate ferrous ion and a dose-dependent protective effect against lipid peroxidation and free radical generation. Prostaglandin studies showed that the roots bark extract dose dependently increased gastric mucosal PGE2 and PGI2 levels and also decreased serum sPLA2 activity. Phytochemical analyses suggest that the roots extract contains polyhydroxyl/phenolic substances. Acute toxicity test showed no sign of toxicity up to a dose level of 2000 mg/kg body weight p.o.ConclusionsC. sieberiana roots extract possesses significant antioxidant and gastric cytoprotective prostaglandin properties as well as serum secretory phospholipase A2 inhibitory activity which could be due to its content of polyhydroxy and/or phenolic substances. This may justify its use as an anti-ulcerogenic agent in traditional medicine in West Africa.
BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2012
Edmund T. Nartey; Mark Ofosuhene; Caleb M Agbale
BackgroundDespite the widespread use of roots of Cassia sieberiana in managing several health conditions including gastric ulcer disease, there is little scientific data to support the rational phytotherapeutics as an anti-ulcer agent. This paper reports an evaluation of the in vivo anti-oxidant properties of an aqueous root bark extract of C. sieberiana in experimental gastric ulcer rats in a bid to elucidate its mechanism of action.MethodsFisher 344 (F344) rats received pretreatment of C. sieberiana root bark extract (500, 750, and 1000 mg/kg body wt.) for 7 days after which there was induction of gastric injury with absolute ethanol. The mean ulcer index (MUI) was calculated and serum total anti-oxidant level determined. Gastric mucosal tissues were prepared and the activity level of the enzymes superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and myeloperoxidase (MPO) were measured together with the level of lipid hydroperoxides (LPO). Statistical difference between treatment groups was analysed using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by Dunnett’s post hoc t test. Statistical significance was calculated at P< 0.05.ResultsThe administration of ethanol triggered severe acute gastric ulcer and pretreatment with C. sieberiana root bark extract significantly and dose dependently protected against this effect. The root bark extract also dose dependently and significantly inhibited the ethanol induced decrease in activity levels of the enzymes SOD, CAT and GPx. The extract also inhibited the ethanol-induced decrease in level of serum total anti-oxidant capacity. The increase in ethanol-induced LPO level and MPO activity were also significantly and dose-dependently inhibited by the root bark extract.ConclusionsThe gastro-cytoprotective effect, inhibition of decrease in activity of gastric anti-oxidant enzymes and MPO as well as the inhibition of gastric LPO level suggests that one of the anti-ulcer mechanisms of C. sieberiana is the anti-oxidant property.
Vascular Pharmacology | 2002
Alexander K. Nyarko; Henry Asare-Anane; Mark Ofosuhene; Marian E. Addy; Kwesi Teye; Phyllis Addo
The basis for managing diabetes mellitus with aqueous extract of Ocimum canum Sim (Lamiaceae), in Ghana was investigated in diabetic and normoglycemic mice. In the diabetic mice, fasting blood glucose decreased by 60% compared to 10% in control mice after 13 weeks of extract administration. Body weight, serum total cholesterol (TC) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) decreased while serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) increased in the extract-treated group. In vitro hydroxyl (OH) and superoxide (O2) radical formation, and lipid peroxidation of isolated human LDL and mouse liver homogenates decreased in extract-treated experimental systems. These findings justify the use of O. canum extract as an antidiabetic folk medicine.
Phytotherapy Research | 1999
Alexander K. Nyarko; Nii-Ayi Ankrah; Mark Ofosuhene; Archibald A. Sittie
Indigofera arrecta, an anti diabetic plant was investigated in ddY mice to determine its acute and subchronic effects, and whether it modulated hepatic cytochrome P450 (CYP) isozymes and glutathione (GSH). No mortality was observed in the acute (up to 10 g I. arrecta/kg body wt, p.o.) and subchronic (2 g I. arrecta/kg body wt, p.o. daily for 30 days) studies. The extract did not alter haematological indices, serum and tissue lipids and glutathione but lowered serum bile acids. The latter phenomenon is under further investigation. Neither the duration of pentobarbital (PB) and zoxazolamine (ZA) effects in vivo, nor CYP‐dependent 7‐ethoxyresorufin‐O‐deethylase (EROD), 7‐pentoxyresorufin‐O‐depentylase (PROD) and p‐nitrophenol hydroxylase (PNPH) activities in vitro were altered by I. arrecta. The extract was thus devoid of overt acute and subchronic toxic effects, and did not affect CYPs and GSH whose modulation may cause interactions of components in a multiple drug therapy. Copyright
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2015
Takanori Hori; Jacob Samson Barnor; Tung Nguyen Huu; Osamu Morinaga; Akiko Hamano; Jerry Ndzinu; Angela Frimpong; Keren Minta-Asare; Mildred Amoa-Bosompem; James Brandful; John Kofi Odoom; Joseph Humphrey Kofi Bonney; Isaac Tuffour; Baffour-Awuah Owusu; Mark Ofosuhene; Philip Atchoglo; Maxwell Sakyiamah; Richard Adegle; Regina Appiah-Opong; William Ampofo; Kwadwo Koram; Alexander K. Nyarko; Laud Kenneth Okine; Dominic Edoh; Alfred Ampomah Appiah; Takuhiro Uto; Yoshiyuki Yoshinaka; Shin Uota; Yukihiro Shoyama; Shoji Yamaoka
Despite remarkable advances in combination antiretroviral therapy (cART), human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection remains incurable due to the incomplete elimination of the replication-competent virus, which persists in latent reservoirs. Strategies for targeting HIV reservoirs for eradication that involves reactivation of latent proviruses while protecting uninfected cells by cART are urgently needed for cure of HIV infection. We screened medicinal plant extracts for compounds that could reactivate the latent HIV-1 provirus and identified a procyanidin trimer C1 derived from Theobroma cacao as a potent activator of the provirus in human T cells latently infected with HIV-1. This reactivation largely depends on the NF-κB and MAPK signaling pathways because either overexpression of a super-repressor form of IκBα or pretreatment with a MEK inhibitor U0126 diminished provirus reactivation by C1. A pan-PKC inhibitor significantly blocked the phorbol ester-induced but not the C1-induced HIV-1 reactivation. Although C1-induced viral gene expression persisted for as long as 48 h post-stimulation, NF-κB-dependent transcription peaked at 12 h post-stimulation and then quickly declined, suggesting Tat-mediated self-sustainment of HIV-1 expression. These results suggest that procyanidin C1 trimer is a potential compound for reactivation of latent HIV-1 reservoirs.
BioMed Research International | 2015
Patrick Valere Tsouh Fokou; Alexander K. Nyarko; Regina Appiah-Opong; Lauve Rachel Tchokouaha Yamthe; Mark Ofosuhene; Fabrice Fekam Boyom
Mycobacterium ulcerans disease has been a serious threat for people living in rural remote areas. Due to poverty or availability of traditional medicine these populations rely on herbal remedies. Currently, data on the anti-Mycobacterium ulcerans activity of plants, so far considered community-based knowledge, have been scientifically confirmed, concomitantly with some medicinal plants used to treat infectious diseases in general. Products derived from plants usually responsible for the biological properties may potentially control Mycobacterium ulcerans disease; numerous studies have aimed to describe the chemical composition of these plant antimicrobials. Thus, the present work provides the first compilation of medicinal plants that demonstrated inhibitory potential on Mycobacterium ulcerans. This work shows that the natural products represent potential alternatives to standard therapies for use as curative medicine for Mycobacterium ulcerans disease.
Journal of Evidence-Based Complementary & Alternative Medicine | 2017
Osbourne Quaye; Precious Cramer; Mark Ofosuhene; Laud Kenneth Okine; Alexander K. Nyarko
Extracts of Desmodium adscendens (Sw) DC are used for the treatment of various diseases but limited toxicological evaluations have been done on the medicinal plant. This study investigates toxicity effects of the leave extract of D adscendens, and the possibility of drug-drug interaction of the plant extract when co-administered with other drugs. Oral administrations of leaf extract of D adscendens to white Wistar rats in an acute toxicity studies allowed the estimation of an LD50 (median lethal dose) value of 1122 mg/kg body weight. In a subchronic toxicity studies, the plant extract caused a decrease in zoxazolamine paralysis time and prevented thiopentone from causing sleep in test animals compared to controls. Overall, the results are consistent with the plant extract being safe at the doses administered in humans. However, the induction of the CYP enzymes is an indication of a possible drug interaction when the plant extract is co-administered with other drugs.
Phytotherapy Research | 2003
Nii-Ayi Ankrah; Alexander K. Nyarko; Phyllis Addo; Mark Ofosuhene; Comfort Dzokoto; Ethel Marley; Michael M. Addae; Frederick A. Ekuban
Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2005
Laud Kenneth Okine; Alexander K. Nyarko; N. Osei-Kwabena; I.V. Oppong; F. Barnes; Mark Ofosuhene