1. Effect of employing different extraction techniques and solvents on the total phenolic content and antioxidant properties of an Iranian endemic species Zeravschania khorasanica (Apiaceae).
- Author
-
Maddah SM and Mostafavi G
- Subjects
- Iran, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Oils, Volatile chemistry, Oils, Volatile isolation & purification, Oils, Volatile pharmacology, Biphenyl Compounds chemistry, Picrates chemistry, Caffeic Acids isolation & purification, Caffeic Acids analysis, Antioxidants isolation & purification, Antioxidants analysis, Antioxidants pharmacology, Antioxidants chemistry, Phenols analysis, Phenols isolation & purification, Plant Extracts chemistry, Plant Extracts isolation & purification, Plant Extracts pharmacology, Solvents chemistry, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Apiaceae chemistry
- Abstract
Zeravschania khorasanica, a species endemic to the eastern part of Iran, possesses distinct characteristics that distinguish it from its two closely related species. This research employed five different extraction techniques to identify the active components, total phenolic content and in vitro antioxidant activity of the extract. Furthermore, hydro-distillation was utilized for GC/MS analysis to determine the composition of the essential oil. The total phenolic content was estimated using the Folin-Ciocalteu assay and the antioxidant capacity was evaluated using the DPPH radical scavenging test. The findings revealed that ethanolic Soxhlet extraction yielded the highest efficiency in extracting total phenolic content (88.19 ±1.99 gallic acid mg/100g). In contrast, water maceration extraction demonstrated the highest antioxidant activity (68.1 ±5.4%). Interestingly, the study uncovered that there is no significant positive correlation between the phenolic content and the antioxidant activity of the plant. Additionally, HPLC analysis identified three phenolic constituents in the extract. The Soxhlet extraction method yielded the highest levels of chlorogenic acid (5.8 ppm), caffeic acid (4.1 ppm) and salicylic acid (10.3 ppm). As per the GC/MS analysis, a total of eleven compounds were identified. The predominant compounds were elemicin at 58.19% and trans--bergamotene at 25.78%.
- Published
- 2024