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
- M.S. Aneesa Rani, N. Kumar, R. Marimuthu, Evolving cashew F1 hybrids suitable for high density planting system , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 68 No. 02 (2011): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Alka Singh, Mamilla Sindhuja, A. J. Bhandari, H.P. Shah, A. I. Patel, V. B. Parekh, Morphological characterization of different genotypes of adenium , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 79 No. 3 (2022): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- J.K. Ranjan, N. Ahmed, B. Das, Pragya ., Hare Krishna, Effect of bio-fertilizers in combination with reduced dose of fertilizers on growth and yield of garlic at high altitude of north-west Himalayas , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 67 No. Special Issue (2010): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- K.K. Srivastava, Khursheed Ahmad, S.R. Singh, P.A. Shagoo, Influence of different physiological stages of cuttings and plant bioregulators on rooting potential of hazelnut , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 67 No. Special Issue (2010): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- R.K. Verma, N. Ahmed, J.I. Mir, M.K. Verma, K.K. Srivastava, S.Z. Focktoo, R. Rashid, M. Andrabi, W. Shafi, Detection of apple mosaic and chlorotic leaf spot viruses by DAS-ELISA from farmers orchards of Kashmir valley , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 71 No. 4 (2014): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- B. Ramanujam, S. Sriram, R. Rangeshwaran, Honnur Basha, Biocontrol efficacy of fungal and bacterial antagonists against early blight of tomato caused by Alternaria solani , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 72 No. 01 (2015): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- T. Boopathi, P. Karuppuchamy, S.B. Singh, M. Ravi, T. Manju, Microbial control of exotic spiraling whitefly, Aleurodicus dispersus with entomopathogenic fungi on cassava under open field conditions , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 72 No. 03 (2015): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- H.R Bhoomika, S Sreelakshmi, B.M Dushyanthakumar, Morphological characterization and genetic variability of Bird’s Eye chilli – an underutilized spice crop , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 78 No. 01 (2021): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Sameer Muhamed, Sajan Kurien, Remzeena A, Character association and path coefficient analysis for improved traits in rambutan , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 76 No. 02 (2019): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- B.N.S. Murthy, F. Karimi, R.H. Laxman, V.S.J. Sunoj, Response of strawberry cv. Festival grown under vertical soilless culture system , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 73 No. 02 (2016): Indian Journal of Horticulture
<< < 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 > >>
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.
