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Evaluation of an Antimalarial Herbal Recipe and its Individual Plant Extracts for DNA Fragmentation and Clastogenicity Potential in Swiss Albino Mice
Author(s) -
Akeem Akinboro,
Muhammed Rufai,
R.A. Adeagbo,
A.O. Akanbi,
A.S. Ogunkola,
D.O. Okunola,
T.D. Adeyeye,
Y.R. Akanbi
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
nigerian journal of basic and applied science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 0794-5698
pISSN - 2756-4843
DOI - 10.4314/njbas.v29i2.9
Subject(s) - superoxide dismutase , traditional medicine , catalase , malondialdehyde , chemistry , biology , botany , biochemistry , antioxidant , medicine
In this study, water extracts of leaves of Azadirachta indica and stem bark of Alstonia boonei, and their recipe were evaluated at 25.0%, 50.0% and 100.0% following DNA fragmentation and micronucleus assays in Swiss albino mice. Distilled water and 0.05% sodium azide served as negative and positive controls, respectively. The levels of superoxide dismutase, catalase and malondialdehyde in the treated mice were determined. The FTIR technique was adopted to identify the functional groups of phytochemicals present, and the proximate constituents were also determined. The individual extracts of A. indica and A. boonei were not mutagenic while the recipe was not significantly mutagenic compared to the controls. Water  extract  of A. indica had the least clastogenic activity, while A. boonei extract was most cytotoxic towards  erythrocytes proliferation. Superoxide  dismutase and catalase activities of the extracts and recipe were dose-dependent; however, the recipe at 100.0% recorded best activity, with highest  amount of total  proteins. A. indica recorded highest suppression of generation of malondialdehyde molecules. The  phytochemicals in the  extracts and recipe contained hydroxyl and carbonyl functional groups, and their  proximate constituents were almost the same except for the  crude protein and fiber contents of the recipe.  Conclusively, extract of A. indica at the tested doses in this study was found to be less toxic to the  mitotic  cell division in the bone marrow, DNA and chromosomes in Swiss albino mice than the extract of A. boonei and recipe.

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