Antioxidant and cytotoxic effects of essential oil, water and ethanol extracts of major Indian spices
Downloads
Published
Keywords:
Spice, essential oil, antioxidant potential, cytotoxic effect, storage study.Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2016 Indian Journal of Horticulture

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Abstract
Essential oils, water and ethanol extracts of black pepper, ginger, turmeric, cinnamon, Garcinia indica, G. gummi-gutta, tamarind and curry leaves were examined for their antioxidant potential and cytotoxicity to cancer cell lines by in vitro methods. Essential oils of ginger, turmeric, cinnamon and curry leaf were highly cytotoxic, reducing cell viability to 14 to 30% of untreated control; water and ethanol extracts of G. indica, turmeric, cinnamon, tamarind and curry leaf were also cytotoxic, though to a lesser extent (27% to none); ethanol extracts displayed approximately 50% higher cytotoxicity than water extracts. Antioxidant potential of water and ethanol extracts were similar, and decreased after six months of storage in most extracts; most were superior to BHA and BHT. Antioxidant potential of ethanol was also greater than water extracts. Change in essential oil chemoprofile stored at 40C for a year compared to fresh, most notably t-caryophyllene, is also reported here.
How to Cite
Downloads
Similar Articles
- K. Elayaraja, R.N. Gadag, Jyoti Kumari, Upama Mishra, Gene action and heterosis for yield and kernel quality traits in experimental hybrids in sweet corn relevant for Indian conditions , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 77 No. 01 (2020): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- I.S. Singh, O.P. Awasthi, A. Nagaraja, A. Nagaraja, Effect of manuring and mulches on irrigated arid brinjal in Western India , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 70 No. 2 (2013): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Madhumita Mallick, O.P. Awasthi, Vijay Paul, M.K. Verma, Girish Jha, Effect of physical and chemical mutagens on leaf sclerophylly and stomatal characteristics of Kinnow mandarin mutants , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 73 No. 02 (2016): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Kalpana Yadav, S.K. Dhankhar, Davinder Singh, Uday Singh, Amit, Genetic variability, character association and path coefficient analysis in okra , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 81 No. 03 (2024): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Gurpreet Singh, N K Arora, Gagandeep Kaur, Rachna Arora, Preharvest application of salicylic acid, ethephon and allantoin enhances ripening and fruit quality of grape cv. Flame Seedless in subtropical condition of North India , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 82 No. 04 (2025): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- B. B. Patel, S. H. Akbari, A. H. Patel, H. G. Bhatt, Novel ready to serve beverage from green tomato , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 79 No. 4 (2022): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Neeraj Silabut, I.S Naruka, R.P.S Shaktawat, K.S Verma, Azeze Seyie, Response of garlic cultivars to irrigation levels , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 71 No. 03 (2014): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- A.K. Goswami, A.K. Dubey, A.K. Singh, S.K. Singh, Manish Srivastav, Jai Prakash, O.P. Awasthi, Kanhaiya Singh, Suneha Goswami, Effect of polyamines on physio-chemical and biochemical parameters of citrus rootstocks under NaCl stress , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 73 No. 04 (2016): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Ratnesh Kumari, Seema Bedi, A. S. Dhatt, Effect of nitrogen forms on physiological and biochemical constituents of lettuce grown in soilless conditions during different seasons , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 77 No. 04 (2020): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- P.P. Bhalerao, B.N. Patel, Effect of foliar application of Ca, Zn, Fe and B on growth, yield and quality of papaya var. Taiwan Red Lady , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 72 No. 03 (2015): Indian Journal of Horticulture
<< < 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 > >>
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.
