| Literature DB >> 22016645 |
Ming-Chih Shih1, Cheng-Ming Chang, Sue-Ming Kang, Min-Lang Tsai.
Abstract
Moringa oleifera, Lam. (Moringaceae) is grown world-wide in the tropics and sub-tropics of Asia and Africa and contains abundant various nutrients. This study describes the effect of different parts (leaf, stem and stalk) and seasons (summer and winter) on the chemical compositions and antioxidant activity of M. oleifera grown in Taiwan. The results showed that the winter samples of Moringa had higher ash (except the stalk part), calcium and phenolic compounds (except the leaf part) and stronger antioxidative activity than summer samples. The methanolic extract of Moringa showed strong scavenging effect of DPPH radicals and reducing power. The trend of antioxidative activity as a function of the part of Moringa was: leaf > stem > stalk for samples from both seasons investigated. The Moringa extract showed strong hydrogen peroxide scavenging activity and high Superoxide Dismutase (SOD) activity except the stalk part.Entities:
Keywords: Moringa oleifera; antioxidative activity; extract; season
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22016645 PMCID: PMC3189769 DOI: 10.3390/ijms12096077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Proximate composition and calcium content of Moringa from different parts and seasons.
| Part | Season | Crude protein(%db) | Crude fat(%db) | Ash (%db) | NFE (%db) | Ca (mg/100 gdb) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leaf | Summer | 25.29 A | 5.75 A | 8.53 B | 60.43 | 870 D |
| Winter | 24.42 A | 5.37 A | 11.00 A | 59.21 | 1862 B | |
| Stem | Summer | 12.77 B | 2.00 B | 6.65 C | 78.58 | 780 E |
| Winter | 9.56 B | 1.98 B | 8.41 B | 80.05 | 1562 C | |
| Stalk | Summer | 5.29 C | 1.38 B | 6.48 C | 86.85 | 761 F |
| Winter | 7.07 BC | 1.00 C | 2.91 D | 89.02 | 2247 A | |
dry basis (g/g, %).
NFE = Nitrogen free extract = 100 − crude protein − crude fat − ash. Within a column followed by the same letter (A–F) don’t differ at the 5% level by Duncan’s multiple range test.
The effects of methanolic extracts of Moringa on the scavenging effect of DPPH radicals and total phenolics from different parts and seasons.
| Part | Summer | Winter | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recovery (%) | DPPH (EC50) (μg/mL) | Phenolics (mg/100g db) | Recovery (%) | DPPH (EC50) (μg/mL) | Phenolics (mg/100 g db) | |
| Leaf | 51.95 | 387 C | 200.0 A | 81.72 | 200 C | 181.3 A |
| Stem | 60.86 | 1116 B | 71.9 B | 77.50 | 316 B | 134.4 B |
| Stalk | 30.25 | 1874 A | 68.8 B | 85.38 | 624 A | 93.8 C |
Within a column followed by the same letter (A–C) don’t differ at the 5% level by Duncan’s multiple range test.
Figure 1Reducing power of methanolic extracts from different parts of Moringa in comparison with ascorbic acid.
Figure 2Scavenging effects on hydrogen peroxide from different parts of Moringa.
Antioxidant activity of different parts of Moringa extract.
| Part | H2O2 scavenging effect (EC50) (μg/mL) | Superoxide Dismutase (SOD) (EC50) (μg/mL) | Ascorbic acid (mg/100 g db) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leaf | 340 B | 2.00 B | 780 A |
| Stem | 280 B | 7.92 B | 590 B |
| Stalk | 530 A | 50.00 A | 310 C |
Within a column followed by the same letter (A–C) don’t differ at the 5% level by Duncan’s multiple range test.