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
- Nilanjan Nilanjan Biswas, Soumik Samanta, Narayan Chattopadhyay, Apurba Bandyopadhyay, Dipak Kumar Ghosh, Effect of seaweed extract on productivity and quality dynamics of onion cv. Sukhsagar , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 81 No. 03 (2024): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- S.D. Shikhamany, J.N. Kalbhor, T.S. Shelke, T.S. Mungare, Variation in nutrient absorption tendency of Thompson Seedless grape on own root and Dog Ridge rootstock , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 76 No. 01 (2019): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Panch R. Mirjha, D.S. Rana, Anil K. Choudhary, A.K. Dubey, Influence of cultivars, cropping systems and nutrient levels on yield and quality of mango in north India , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 75 No. 01 (2018): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Sunil Kumar, O.P Awasthi, A.K Dubey, Awtar Singh, Renu Dubey, Impact of ionising irradiation on physio-biochemical traits of Kinnow mandarin , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 78 No. 02 (2021): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Aylin C. Oluk, Veysel Aras, Erdal Ağçam, Asiye Akyildiz, Nebahat Sari, Some biochemical characteristics of grafted watermelon , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 74 No. 01 (2017): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Sanjay Kumar Singh, S.K. Singh, R.R. Sharma, Manish Srivastav, V.B. Patel, Influence of pruning intensities on leaf nutrient composition in some mango cultivars planted under high density , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 67 No. 01 (2010): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- C.K Thankamani, M.S. Madan, V. Srinivasan, K.S. Krishnamurthy, K. Kandiannan, Application of Azospirillum and nutrients on yield, quality parameters and economics of black pepper , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 71 No. 02 (2014): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- V.J. Singh, Som Dev Sharma, Pramod Kumar, Satish Kumar Bhardwaj, Effect of bio-organic and inorganic nutrient sources to improve leaf nutrient status in apricot , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 69 No. 01 (2012): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Sunny Sharma, V. S. Rana, L.N. Mishra, D. S. Thakur, Vijay Kumar, Ravina Pawar, Harvest maturity for low chill cultivars of peach under mid hill conditions of Himachal Pradesh , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 79 No. 3 (2022): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- P.M. Haldankar, A.V. Somavanshi, Studies on the effect of foliar sprays of nutrients after fruit set on harvesting, yield and quality of kokum (Garcinia indica Choisy) , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 72 No. 01 (2015): Indian Journal of Horticulture
<< < 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 > >>
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.
