| Literature DB >> 28683831 |
Zobaer Al Mahmud1, Sitesh C Bachar2, Choudhury Mahmood Hasan3, Talha Bin Emran4,5,6, Nazmul Qais7, Mir Muhammad Nasir Uddin8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Oleanolic acid (NZ-15), 7 α, 28-olean diol (NZ-38) and Stigmasterol (NZ-14) were isolated from the ethanolic extracts of the roots of Leea macrophylla (Family: Leeaceae) by using chromatographic analysis. This is the first report of isolation of these compounds from this plant. Their structures were constructed by spectroscopic analysis and by comparing the data with the published one. Subsequently the ethanolic extract was fractionated with two organic solvents and all the fractions were studied to evaluate their in vitro antioxidant property.Entities:
Keywords: Antioxidant potential; Compound isolation; Leea macrophylla; Phytochemical; Spectroscopic analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28683831 PMCID: PMC5501547 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-017-2503-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Solvent systems used in Sephadex column analysis of VLC fraction
| Fraction No. | Solvent system | Proportion | Volume collected (ml) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1–24 | Hexane:dichloromethane:methanol | 2:5:1 | 80 |
| 25–33 | Methanol:dichloromethane | 9:1 | 30 |
| 34–40 | Methanol:dichloromethane | 1:1 | 20 |
| 41–50 | Methanol | 100% | 50 |
Fig. 1Chemical structures of compounds isolated from roots of L. macrophylla
Comparison of 1H NMR spectral data of NZ-15 and Oleanolic acid [18]
| Proton | δH in ppm | |
|---|---|---|
| NZ-15 (CDCl3, TMS, 500 MHz) | Oleanolic acid (CDCl3, TMS, 500 MHz) | |
| H-3 | 3.21 (1H, dd, J = 11.2, 4.4 Hz) | 3.23 (1H, dd, J = 11.2, 4.4 Hz) |
| H-12 | 5.28 (1H, t, J = 3.2 Hz) | 5.27 (1H, t, J = 3.5 Hz) |
| H-18 | 2.81 (1H, dd, J = 13.6, 4.0 Hz) | 2.82 (1H, dd, J = 13.2, 3.6 Hz) |
| H-23 | 0.98 (3H, s) | 0.98 (3H, s) |
| H-24 | 0.77 (3H, s) | 0.77 (3H, s) |
| H-25 | 0.89 (3H, s) | 0.90 (3H, s) |
| H-26 | 0.75 (3H, s) | 0.75 (3H, s) |
| H-27 | 1.13 (3H, s) | 1.13 (3H, s) |
| H-29 | 0.90 (3H, s) | 0.91 (3H, s) |
| H-30 | 0.92 (3H, s) | 0.93 (3H, s) |
Comparison of 1H NMR spectral data of NZ-38 and Oleanolic acid [18]
| Proton | δH in ppm | |
|---|---|---|
| NZ-15 (CDCl3, TMS, 500 MHz) | Oleanolic acid (CDCl3, TMS, 500 MHz) | |
| H-3 | 3.63 (1H, dd,J = 8.0 & 7.6 Hz)a | 3.23 (1H, dd, J = 11.2,4.4 Hz) |
| H-12 | 5.28 (1H, t, J = 3.2 Hz) | 5.27 (1H, t, J = 3.5 Hz) |
| H-18 | 2.81 (1H, dd, J = 13.6,4.0 Hz) | 2.82 (1H, dd, J = 13.2, 3.6 Hz) |
| H-23 | 0.98 (3H, s) | 0.98 (3H, s) |
| H-24 | 0.77 (3H, s) | 0.77 (3H, s) |
| H-25 | 0.89 (3H, s) | 0.90 (3H, s) |
| H-26 | 0.75 (3H, s) | 0.75 (3H, s) |
| H-27 | 1.1 3 (3H, s) | 1.13 (3H, s) |
| Ha-28 | 3.72 (1H, d, J = 10.4 Hz) | |
| Hb-28 | 3.42 (1H, d, J = 10.0 Hz) | |
| H-29 | 0.90 (3H, s) | 0.91 (3H, s) |
| H-30 | 0.92 (3H, s) | 0.93 (3H, s) |
aThe position of this proton must he sifted elsewhere in the olean skeleton
Total phenolic content of Leea macrophylla
| Sample | Conc (µg/ml) | Absorbance | Gallic acid equivalent (µg/mg) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | A2 | Mean | |||
| EELMR | 250 | 0.243 | 0.257 | 0.249 | 14.04 |
| CCFLMR | 250 | 0.153 | 0.147 | 0.15 | 7.93 |
| EAFLMR | 250 | 0.801 | 0.87 | 0.835 | 50.21 |
IC50 values and EC50 (μg/ml) of the standard and partitionates of roots of L. macrophylla
| Sample | IC50 (μg/ml) | EC50 (μg/ml) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DPPH radical assay | Superoxide radical scavenging assay | NO radical scavenging assay | Reducing power assay | |
| EELMR | 46.41 | 1281.7 | 210.12 | 88.1 |
| CTLMR | 39.75 | 222.5 | 277.8 | 58.03 |
| EALMR | 2.65 | 155.62 | 407.70 | 15.27 |
| ASA | 5.8 | 99.66 | 356.06 | 0.91 |
Fig. 2DPPH free radical scavenging activity of different extracts of roots of L. macrophylla. EELMR: The values are the average of duplicate experiments. Ethanolic extract of L. macrophylla roots; CTLMR carbon tetrachloride soluble partitionate, EALMR ethyl acetate soluble partitionate, ASA ascorbic acid
Fig. 3Superoxide radical scavenging activity of different extracts of roots of L. macrophylla. EELMR: The values are the average of duplicate experiments. Ethanolic extract of L. macrophylla roots; CTLMR carbon tetrachloride soluble partitionate, EALMR ethyl acetate soluble partitionate, ASA ascorbic acid
Fig. 4Nitric oxide (NO∙) scavenging activity of roots of L. macrophylla. The values are the average of duplicate experiments
Fig. 5Reducing power assays of the different extracts of roots of L. macrophylla and the reference standards. The values are the average of duplicate experiments