Hippocratea excelsa and Hippocratea celastroides have therapeutic and insecticide applications in Mexican traditional medicine. The toxicity of H. excelsa root cortex has been previously demonstrated against the stored grain pest Sitophilus zeamais. To identify the active compounds, several extracts (petroleum ether, CH2Cl2, acetone, methanol, and water) and compounds were obtained from the roots, and tested (1% w/w) with a force-feeding assay against S. zeamais. All H. excelsa extracts showed high antifeedant activity, and elicited moderate mortality. The triterpenoid pristimerin and a mixture of sesquiterpene evoninoate alkaloids, isolated from the hexane and methanol extracts, respectively, strongly reduced the insect feeding capacity. Other triterpenoids (friedelin, β-sitosterol, canophyllol) isolated from the hexane extract, and the alditol galactitol obtained from the water extract, were innocuous or its activity was not statistically significant. The organic extracts from H. celastroides only showed moderate antifeedant activity, while the water extract was innocuous. Galactitol was also obtained from this extract.
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1 January 2003
Natural Insecticides from Hippocratea Excelsa and Hippocratea Celastroides
Ricardo Reyes-Chilpa,
Manuel Jiménez-Estrada,
Elizabeth Cristóbal-Telésforo,
Leticia Torres-ColÍn,
Miguel Angel Villavicencio,
Blanca Estela Pérez-Escandón,
Roberto Mercado-González
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Economic Botany
Vol. 57 • No. 1
January 2003
Vol. 57 • No. 1
January 2003
alditols
alkaloids
botanical insecticides
canophyllol
friedelin
galactitol
Hippocratea celastroides