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Protective Effect of Selected Medicinal Plants against Hydrogen Peroxide Induced Oxidative Damage on Biological Substrates
Author(s) -
Namratha Pai Kotebagilu,
Vanitha Reddy Palvai,
Asna Urooj
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
international journal of medicinal chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-2069
pISSN - 2090-2077
DOI - 10.1155/2014/861084
Subject(s) - chemistry , antioxidant , phytochemical , polyphenol , flavonoid , oxidative stress , hydrogen peroxide , nutraceutical , traditional medicine , thiobarbituric acid , medicinal plants , biochemistry , lipid peroxidation , medicine
Oxidative stress is developed due to susceptibility of biological substrates to oxidation by generation of free radicals. In degenerative diseases, oxidative stress level can be reduced by antioxidants which neutralize free radicals. Primary objective of this work was to screen four medicinal plants, namely, Andrographis paniculata , Costus speciosus , Canthium parviflorum , and Abrus precatorius , for their antioxidant property using two biological substrates—RBC and microsomes. The antioxidative ability of three solvent extracts, methanol (100% and 80%) and aqueous leaf extracts, was studied at different concentrations by thiobarbituric acid reactive substances method using Fenton's reagent to induce oxidation in the substrates. The polyphenol and flavonoid content were analyzed to relate with the observed antioxidant effect of the extracts. The phytochemical screening indicated the presence of flavonoids, polyphenols, tannins, and β -carotene in the samples. In microsomes, 80% methanol extract of Canthium and Costus and, in RBC, 80% methanol extract of Costus showed highest inhibition of oxidation and correlated well with the polyphenol and flavonoid content. From the results it can be concluded that antioxidants from medicinal plants are capable of inhibiting oxidation in biological systems, suggesting scope for their use as nutraceuticals.

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