Abstract

BackgroundAntioxidant compounds like phenols and flavonoids scavenge free radicals and thus inhibit the oxidative mechanisms that lead to control degenerative and other diseases. The aim of this study was to investigate the antioxidant activity in vitro, total phenolic and flavonoid contents in ethanol extracts and fractions of Crescentia cujete leaves and stem bark.MethodsCrescentia cujete leaves and bark crude ethanol extract (CEE) and their partitionates petroleum ether (PEF), chloroform (CHF), ethyl acetate (EAF) and aqueous (AQF) were firstly prepared. Different established testing methods, such as 1, 1-diphenyl-2-picryl hydrazyl (DPPH) radical, ferric reducing power (FRP), and total antioxidant capacity (TAC) assays were used to detect the antioxidant activity. Further, the total yield, total phenolic (TPC) and total flavonoid contents (TFC) of CEE and all the fractions were determined. Ethanol extracts of both leaves and stem bark were also subjected to preliminary phytochemical screening to detect the presence of secondary metabolites, using standard phytochemical methods (Thin layer chromatography and spray reagents).ResultsPhytochemical screening of crude ethanol extract of both leaves and stem bark revealed the presence of steroids, flavonoids, saponins, tannins, glycosides and terpenoids. All the fractions and CEE of leaves and bark exhibited antioxidant activities, however, EAF of leaves showing the highest antioxidant activity based on the results of DPPH, FRP and TAC assay tests. The above fraction has shown the significant DPPH scavenging activity (IC50 = 8.78 μg/ml) when compared with standard ascorbic acid (IC50 =7.68 μg/ml). The TAC and FRP activities increased with increasing crude extract/fractions content. The TPC (371.23 ± 15.77 mg GAE/g extract) and TFC (144.64 ± 5.82 mg QE/g extract) of EAF of leaves were found significantly higher as compared to other solvent fractions for both leaves and bark. TPC were highly correlated with the antioxidant activity (R2 = 0.9268 and 0.8515 in DPPH test for leaves and bark, respectively).ConclusionThe results of the study show that leaves of C. cujete possesses significant free radical scavenging properties compared with stem bark and a clear correlation exists between the antioxidant activity and phenolic content.

Highlights

  • Antioxidant compounds like phenols and flavonoids scavenge free radicals and inhibit the oxidative mechanisms that lead to control degenerative and other diseases

  • We report the total phenolic (TPC) and total flavonoid contents (TFC) as well as the antioxidant properties of C. cujete in different plant parts to identify the plant part and solvent extract that gives the highest antioxidant activities and this may justify important ethnomedical uses of this medicinal plant as antioxidants have diverse biological actions

  • Phytochemical screening The phytochemical screening of crude ethanol extract (CEE) of leaves and stem bark showed the presence of different types of secondary metabolites, namely saponins, alkaloids, tannins, glycosides, terpenes and flavonoids

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Antioxidant compounds like phenols and flavonoids scavenge free radicals and inhibit the oxidative mechanisms that lead to control degenerative and other diseases. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as superoxide anion (O2-), hydroxyl radicals (OH), singlet oxygen (1O2) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) have the damaging effects on cells [1]. Antioxidant compounds present in many plants can protect cells against this damaging caused by ROS. Antioxidant therapy has gained utmost importance in the treatment of these diseases and oxidative damage. The factors such as high cost, lack of availability and side effects of synthetic antioxidants remain as major setbacks in combating oxidative stress.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call