The Antioxidant and Immunomodulatory Potential of ICoccoloba alnifolia/I Leaf Extracts

Oxidative stress has been associated with different diseases, and different medicinal plants have been used to treat or prevent this condition. The leaf ethanolic extract (EE) and aqueous extract (AE) from Coccoloba alnifolia have previously been characterized to have antioxidant potential in vitro...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International journal of molecular sciences Vol. 24; no. 21
Main Authors: de Melo, Luciana Fentanes Moura, Barbosa, Jefferson da Silva, Cordeiro, Maria Lúcia da Silva, Aquino-Ma, Silva, Ariana Pereira da, Paiva, Weslley de Souza, Silveira, Elielson Rodrigo, dos Santos, Déborah Yara A. Cursino, Rocha, Hugo Alexandre Oliveira, Scortecci, Kátia Castanho
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 01-11-2023
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Summary:Oxidative stress has been associated with different diseases, and different medicinal plants have been used to treat or prevent this condition. The leaf ethanolic extract (EE) and aqueous extract (AE) from Coccoloba alnifolia have previously been characterized to have antioxidant potential in vitro and in vivo. In this study, we worked with EE and AE and two partition phases, AF (ethyl acetate) and BF (butanol), from AE extract. These extracts and partition phases did not display cytotoxicity. The EE and AE reduced NO production and ROS in all three concentrations tested. Furthermore, it was observed that EE and AE at 500 μg/mL concentration were able to reduce phagocytic activity by 30 and 50%, respectively. A scratch assay using a fibroblast cell line (NHI/3T3) showed that extracts and fractions induced cell migration with 60% wound recovery within 24 h, especially for BF. It was also observed that AF and BF had antioxidant potential in all the assays evaluated. In addition, copper chelation was observed. This activity was previously not detected in AE. The HPLC-DAD analysis showed the presence of phenolic compounds such as p-cumaric acid and vitexin for extracts, while the GNPS annotated the presence of isoorientin, vitexin, kanakugiol, and tryptamine in the BF partition phase. The data presented here demonstrated that the EE, AE, AF, and BF of C. alnifolia have potential immunomodulatory effects, antioxidant effects, as well as in vitro wound healing characteristics, which are important for dynamic inflammation process control.
ISSN:1422-0067
DOI:10.3390/ijms242115885