TY - JOUR
T1 - Phytochemical composition and in -vitro pharmacological evaluation of Emex australis Steinh
T2 - A natural source of enzyme inhibitors
AU - Saleem, Hammad
AU - Zengin, Gokhan
AU - Sarfraz, Muhammad
AU - Alafnan, Ahmed
AU - Locatelli, Marcello
AU - Tartaglia, Angela
AU - Ahmad, Irshad
AU - Mahomoodally, Mohamad Fawzi
AU - Khurshid, Umair
AU - Ahemad, Nafees
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 SAAB
PY - 2021/12
Y1 - 2021/12
N2 - The current research investigated the chemical profiling and biological activities of Emex australis Steinh. aerial and fruit parts (methanol and dichloromethane-DCM extracts). Chemical composition was established by determining the amounts of phenolic and flavonoid contents, HPLC-PDA polyphenolic quantification, and UHPLC-MS secondary metabolites profiling to understand the observed biological activities. Antioxidant evaluation was performed utilizing six different assays (DPPH, ABTS, FRAP, CUPRAC, phosphomolybdenum, and metal chelation). Moreover, enzyme inhibition abilities against cholinesterases, α-amylase, α-glucosidase, and tyrosinase were also determined. The fruit methanol extract contained the highest phenolic (157.96 mg GAE/ g extract) and flavonoid contents (41.43 mg QE/g extract), which could justify the observed significant antioxidant (except metal chelating), α-amylase, α-glucosidase, and tyrosinase inhibitory potentials. The other extracts were active against cholinesterases and tyrosinase. The HPLC-PDA polyphenolic analysis quantified a number of 11 phenolic secondary metabolites. The fruit-MeOH extract was found to quantify the maximum phenolics with catechin (4.27 μg/g extract) and gallic acid (4.84 μg/g extract) in higher amounts. Similarly, rutin present in maximum quantity in the aerial-MeOH extract (2.93 μg/g extract). Furthermore, the UHPLC-MS study of aerial and fruit methanol extracts reveals the existence of 22 secondary metabolites, most of which were flavonoid derivatives. Besides that, Pearson coefficient analysis (PCA) was also carried to determine a possible correlation between bioactive contents and observed biological assays. Thus, it is concluded that E. australis extracts contain important classes of secondary metabolites and also exhibited considerable antioxidant and inhibition potential against clinically relevant enzymes.
AB - The current research investigated the chemical profiling and biological activities of Emex australis Steinh. aerial and fruit parts (methanol and dichloromethane-DCM extracts). Chemical composition was established by determining the amounts of phenolic and flavonoid contents, HPLC-PDA polyphenolic quantification, and UHPLC-MS secondary metabolites profiling to understand the observed biological activities. Antioxidant evaluation was performed utilizing six different assays (DPPH, ABTS, FRAP, CUPRAC, phosphomolybdenum, and metal chelation). Moreover, enzyme inhibition abilities against cholinesterases, α-amylase, α-glucosidase, and tyrosinase were also determined. The fruit methanol extract contained the highest phenolic (157.96 mg GAE/ g extract) and flavonoid contents (41.43 mg QE/g extract), which could justify the observed significant antioxidant (except metal chelating), α-amylase, α-glucosidase, and tyrosinase inhibitory potentials. The other extracts were active against cholinesterases and tyrosinase. The HPLC-PDA polyphenolic analysis quantified a number of 11 phenolic secondary metabolites. The fruit-MeOH extract was found to quantify the maximum phenolics with catechin (4.27 μg/g extract) and gallic acid (4.84 μg/g extract) in higher amounts. Similarly, rutin present in maximum quantity in the aerial-MeOH extract (2.93 μg/g extract). Furthermore, the UHPLC-MS study of aerial and fruit methanol extracts reveals the existence of 22 secondary metabolites, most of which were flavonoid derivatives. Besides that, Pearson coefficient analysis (PCA) was also carried to determine a possible correlation between bioactive contents and observed biological assays. Thus, it is concluded that E. australis extracts contain important classes of secondary metabolites and also exhibited considerable antioxidant and inhibition potential against clinically relevant enzymes.
KW - Antioxidant
KW - Bioactive agents
KW - Emex australis
KW - Enzyme inhibition
KW - Secondary metabolites
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85103088767
U2 - 10.1016/j.sajb.2021.02.023
DO - 10.1016/j.sajb.2021.02.023
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85103088767
SN - 0254-6299
VL - 143
SP - 374
EP - 381
JO - South African Journal of Botany
JF - South African Journal of Botany
ER -