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Anti-Oxiflammatory Profile of Date Extracts (Phoenix sylvestris)
Author(s) -
Rituparna Das,
Pramathadhip Paul,
Kaustab Mukherjee,
Shinjini Mitra,
Umesh Singh,
Ena Ray Banerjee
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
biomedical research and therapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.135
H-Index - 1
ISSN - 2198-4093
DOI - 10.15419/bmrat.v2i06.53
Subject(s) - chemistry , oxidative stress , flavonoid , dpph , nitric oxide , lipid peroxidation , reactive oxygen species , traditional medicine , antioxidant , radical , biochemistry , organic chemistry , medicine
Fruit of date palm (Phoenix sylvestrisL.) is edible and used as an anti-geriatric, anti-oxidant ethnomedicine. In this study, three different types ofdateextracts, methanolic, acidic ethanolic and basic ethanolicwere evaluated for their putative in vitro scavenging effects on reactive oxygen species (ROS), where scavenging of hydroxyl radicals (basic ethanolic>acidic ethanolic>methanolic), superoxide radicals (acidic ethanolic>basic ethanolic>methanolic), DPPH radicals (acidic ethanolic>methanolic>basic ethanolic), nitric oxide (NO) (methanolic>acidic ethanolic>basic ethanolic) and inhibition of lipid peroxidation (basic ethanolic>acidic ethanolic> methanolic) were found to occur in a dose dependent manner. Their flavonoid and phenolic contents proved to be the source of this potent free radical scavenging activity and indicated a direct correlation with their total anti-oxidant capacity. On human embryonic kidney cell line (HEK) and murine RAW macrophages, bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induced inflammation, the date extracts applied therapeutically, inhibit intracellular oxidative stress significantly. This reinstatement of cellular homeostasis presumably occurs via mitochondrial pathways.

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