| Literature DB >> 23122155 |
Daniele G Machado1, Mauricio P Cunha, Vivian B Neis, Grasiela O Balen, André Colla, Luis E B Bettio, Agatha Oliveira, Francis Leonardo Pazini, Juliana B Dalmarco, Edésio Luiz Simionatto, Moacir G Pizzolatti, Ana Lúcia S Rodrigues.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the antidepressant-like effect of fractions from Rosmarinus officinalis L.: ethyl acetate 1 and 2 (AcOEt1 and 2), hexane (HEX), ethanolic (ET), and essential oil-free (EOF) fractions, as well as essential oil, the isolated compounds carnosol and betulinic acid in the tail suspension test, a predictive test of antidepressant activity. Swiss mice were acutely administered by oral route (p.o.) with fractions, essential oil or isolated compounds, 60 min before the tail suspension test or open-field test. All of them produced a significant antidepressant-like effect: AcOEt1, ET, EOF fractions and essential oil (0.1-100mg/kg, p.o); HEX (0.1-10mg/kg, p.o) and AcOEt2 fraction (0.1-1mg/kg, p.o), carnosol (0.01-0.1mg/kg, p.o.) isolated from the HEX fraction and betulinic acid (10mg/kg, p.o.), isolated from the AcOEt1 and AcOEt2 fractions. No psychostimulant effect was shown in the open-field test, indicating that the effects in the tail suspension test are specific. This study suggests that carnosol and betulinic acid could be responsible for the anti-immobility effect of extracts from R. officinalis.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23122155 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2012.09.028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514