| Literature DB >> 28367437 |
Yugal K Mohanta1, Sujogya K Panda2, Rasu Jayabalan3, Nanaocha Sharma4, Akshaya K Bastia1, Tapan K Mohanta5.
Abstract
In this experiment, biosynthesized silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) were synthesized using aqueous leaf extract of Erythrina suberosa (Roxb.). The biosynthesis of silver nanoparticle was continuously followed by UV-vis spectrophotometric analysis. The response of the phytoconstituents resides in E. suberusa during synthesis of stable AgNPs were analyzed by ATR- fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. Further, the size, charge, and polydispersity nature of AgNPs were studied using dynamic light scattering spectroscopy. The morphology of the nanoparticles was determined by scanning electron microscopy. Current result shows core involvement of plant extracts containing glycosides, flavonoids, and phenolic compounds played a crucial role in the biosynthesis of AgNPs. The antimicrobial activities of silver nanoparticles were evaluated against different pathogenic bacterium and fungi. The antioxidant property was studied by radical scavenging (DPPH) assay and cytotoxic activity was evaluated against A-431 osteosarcoma cell line by MTT assay. The characteristics of the synthesized silver nanoparticles suggest their application as a potential antimicrobial and anticancer agent.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial activity; antioxidant activity; biosynthesis; cytotoxic activity; silver nanoparticle
Year: 2017 PMID: 28367437 PMCID: PMC5355429 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2017.00014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
Figure 1A comparative bar diagram showing total TPC and TFC contents of .
Phytochemical screening (qualitative) of .
| Alkaloids | − |
| Tannins and phenolic compounds | ++ |
| Glycoside | + |
| Flavonoids | +++ |
| Proteins and amino-acids | + |
| Triterpenoids | − |
| Steroids and sterols | − |
Quantitative phyto-chemical constituents of aqueous extract of .
| TPC | 186.66 ± 8.32 |
| TFC | 640 ± 36.05 |
Figure 2DPPH radical scavenging capacity of AgNPs.
Figure 3UV-Vis spectra of AgNPs synthesized by . Color change from pale yellow to brown upon synthesis of AgNPs (In set).
Figure 4FTIR spectrum of AgNPs synthesized by .
Figure 5DLS spectra on (A) hydrodynamic size distribution and (B) Zeta potential (mV) of synthesized AgNPs.
Figure 6TEM image of biogenically derived silver nanoparticles.
Antimicrobial activity of AgNPs by agar-cup method.
| – | |
| 23 ± 0.8 | |
| – | |
| 24 ± 0.8 | |
| – | |
| 15 ± 0.8 | |
| – | |
| 16 ± 0.8 |
Figure 7Antimicrobial activity of AgNPs. (Sa, Staphylococcus aureus; Pa, Pseudomonas aeruginosa; Ck, Candida kruseii; Tm, Trichophyton mentagrophytes).
Antimicrobial activity in broth dilution method.
| 16.27 | |
| 99.26 | |
| 28.43 | |
| 95.41 | |
| 36.00 | |
| 80.27 | |
| 74.40 | |
| 82.27 |
Figure 8Cytotoxic activity evaluation against A-431 osteosarcoma cell line.
Figure 9(A) BJ-5Ta cells treated with HBSS (−ve control) (B) BJ-5Ta cells treated with Allantoin (+ve control) (C) BJ-5Ta cells treated with silver nanoparticles.