Elephantopus scaber


Elephantopus scaber is a tropical species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae. It is native to tropical Africa, Eastern Asia, Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, and northern Australia. It has become naturalized in tropical Africa and Latin America. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist montane forests.

Uses

Elephantopus scaber is used as a traditional medicine. Different parts of the plant are used in traditional medicine of India as an astringent agent, cardiac tonic, and diuretic, and is used for eczema, rheumatism, fever, and bladder stones. E. scaber modulates inflammatory responses by inhibiting the production of TNFα and IL-1β.

Etymology

The genus name Elephantopus comes from the Greek words "elephantos" and "pous". The term likely refers to the large basal leaves of some members of the genus.

Chemical constituents

Elephantopus scaber contains elephantopin which is a germacranolide sesquiterpene lactone containing two lactone rings and an epoxide functional group. 17,19-Dihydrodeoxyelephantopin, iso-17,19- dihydro-deoxy elephantopin and 8-hydroxyl
naringenin are the most important bioactive compounds responsible for anti-bacterial activity. By UPLC MS Q-TOF, 34 components were identified.

Subspecies and varieties

Varieties of E. scaber include:
  • Elephantopus scaber subsp. plurisetus Philipson
  • Elephantopus scaber subsp. scaber
  • Elephantopus scaber var. scaber
  • Elephantopus scaber var. sinuatus Miq.