| Literature DB >> 19538026 |
Afef Dellai1, Hedi Ben Mansour, Ilef Limem, Ines Bouhlel, Mohamed Ben Sghaier, Jihed Boubaker, Kamel Ghedira, Leila Chekir-Ghedira.
Abstract
For centuries, plants have been used in traditional medicines, and there has been recent interest in the chemopreventive properties of compounds derived from plants. In the present study, we investigated the free-radical-scavenging, antioxidant, and antimutagenic potential of polar extracts from Phlomis crinita Cav. flowers. Ethyl acetate, chloroform, and methanol extracts were prepared from powdered Phlomis flowers and characterized for the presence of tannins, flavonoids, iridoids, sterols, cardiac glycosides, and anthraquinones. All the extracts showed increased activity in scavenging the ABTS free radical, but only ethyl acetate and methanol extracts were active in scavenging the superoxide anion generated by the xanthine/xanthine oxidase system. In addition, all the extracts significantly decreased the mutagenicity induced by 2-aminoanthracene in the presence of a metabolizing homogenate (S9) and methyl methane sulfonate in the absence of metabolizing system, using the Ames test with Salmonella typhimurium TA102 and TA104. The present study indicates that extracts of P. crinita flowers are a significant source of compounds with antigenotoxic and antioxidant activity (most likely phenolic compounds) and thus may be useful candidates for chemoprevention studies.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19538026 DOI: 10.1080/01480540902882200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Chem Toxicol ISSN: 0148-0545 Impact factor: 3.356