| Literature DB >> 17472473 |
Raman Chawla1, Rajesh Arora, Shikha Singh, Ravinder Kumar Sagar, Rakesh Kumar Sharma, Raj Kumar, Ashok Sharma, Manju L Gupta, Surender Singh, Jagdish Prasad, Haider A Khan, Anand Swaroop, A K Sinha, A K Gupta, Rajender P Tripathi, P S Ahuja.
Abstract
Plants are an abundant source of medicinal compounds, some of which are useful in combating free radical-mediated oxidative stress. In the present study, initially two fractions designated REC-1001 (flavonoid-rich fraction) and REC-1002 (flavonoid-poor fraction) of Hippophae rhamnoides were screened on the basis of their reducing power in the aqueous phase. REC-1001 was selected for further study, since it exhibited 27.38 times higher antioxidant activity than REC-1002. REC-1001 also showed significant (P < .05) membrane protection potential at 50 microg/mL, which was attributed to its ability to scavenge peroxyl radicals (64.82 +/- 1.25% scavenging within 1,440 min). A significant (P < .05) difference of 67.02% in free radical scavenging activity at 1,000 ng/mL between REC-1001 and vitamin E demonstrated the extract fraction's worth in radiation protection. Such activities were attributed to the presence of quercetin, isorhamnetin, and kaempferol in this fraction. Further, REC-1001 was found to be nontoxic up to 200 mg/kg of body weight. This research suggests that the REC-1001 fraction of H. rhamnoides extract is a safe and effective antioxidant nutraceutical product.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17472473 DOI: 10.1089/jmf.2006.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Food ISSN: 1096-620X Impact factor: 2.786