| Literature DB >> 29209613 |
Allie Brown1,2, Danielle Anderson2, Kenneth Racicot2, Sarah J Pilkenton1, Emmanouil Apostolidis1.
Abstract
Green tea (GT), cranberry (CR), and tart cherry extracts were evaluated for their ability to inhibit yeast α-glucosidase, relevant to glucose uptake. The total phenolic content (TPC), antioxidant activity, and in vitro inhibitory activity of yeast α-glucosidase were examined for the extracts in the present study. GT had higher TPC and antioxidant activity, but CR demonstrated a greater α-glucosidase inhibitory activity, on phenolic basis. CR was fractionated using LH-20 column chromatography into two fractions: 30% methanol (CME) and 70% acetone (CAE). TPC, antioxidant activity, and yeast α-glucosidase inhibitory activity were determined for the fractions. CAE had a greater TPC and antioxidant activity than CME, but the two fractions had a synergistic effect when inhibiting yeast α-glucosidase. Our findings suggest that CR has the greatest potential to possibly manage post-prandial blood glucose levels via the inhibition of α-glucosidase, and that the effect is through synergistic activity of the extract's phenolic compounds.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidants; cranberry extract; glucose management; glucosidase inhibition; phenolic phytochemicals
Year: 2017 PMID: 29209613 PMCID: PMC5701620 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2017.00056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1The total phenolic content of the extract powders (different letters signify significant different values, p < 0.05).
Figure 2The total phenolic content of the cranberry fractions (different letters signify significant different values, p < 0.05).
The IC50 values for the antioxidant activity of the extract powders.
| Extract Powder | IC50 (mg/mL solids) |
|---|---|
| Green tea | 0.039 |
| Cranberry | 0.26 |
| Tart cherry | 14.67 |
The IC50 values for the antioxidant activity of the cranberry fractions.
| Fraction | IC50 (mg/mL solids) |
|---|---|
| Methanol | 0.54 |
| Acetone | 0.068 |
The IC50 values for the yeast α-glucosidase inhibitory activity of the extract powders (tart cherry did not result to inhibition greater than 50% at any tested dose).
| Extract Powder | IC50 (μg/mL Total Phenolic Content) |
|---|---|
| Green tea | 68.98 |
| Cranberry | 20.34 |
| Tart cherry | >105.80 |
The IC20 values for the yeast α-glucosidase inhibitory activity of the whole cranberry (CR) extract and CR fractions.
| Sample | IC20 (μg/mL Total Phenolic Content) |
|---|---|
| Whole CR | 6.12 |
| Methanol fraction (CME) | 51.29 |
| Acetone fraction (CAE) | 101.78 |
Figure 3The chromatogram for the total scan from 200–600 nm for the whole cranberry (CR) extract and CR fractions.
Figure 4The chromatogram at 320 nm for the whole cranberry (CR) extract and CR fractions.
Figure 5The chromatogram at 520 nm for the whole cranberry (CR) extract and CR fractions.