[HTML][HTML] Medicinal attributes of major phenylpropanoids present in cinnamon

UK Sharma, AK Sharma, AK Pandey�- BMC complementary and�…, 2016 - Springer
UK Sharma, AK Sharma, AK Pandey
BMC complementary and alternative medicine, 2016Springer
Background Excessive production of free radicals has been implicated in many diseases
including cancer. They are highly reactive and bring about oxidation of biomolecules ie,
proteins, lipids and nucleic acids which are associated with many degenerative diseases.
Natural products acting as antioxidants have ability to neutralize free radicals and their
actions and hence they mitigate their harmful effects. The present study was designed to
investigate pharmacological properties viz., antioxidant, antibacterial and antiproliferative�…
Background
Excessive production of free radicals has been implicated in many diseases including cancer. They are highly reactive and bring about oxidation of biomolecules i.e., proteins, lipids and nucleic acids which are associated with many degenerative diseases. Natural products acting as antioxidants have ability to neutralize free radicals and their actions and hence they mitigate their harmful effects. The present study was designed to investigate pharmacological properties viz., antioxidant, antibacterial and antiproliferative activities of cinnamaldehyde and eugenol, the two naturally occurring phenylpropanoids present in Cinnamomum spp. and other plants.
Methods
The antioxidant potential of test compounds was evaluated by measuring DPPH free radical scavenging, reducing power and metal ion chelating activities. Protection against membrane damage was assayed by inhibition of lipid peroxidation in rat liver homogenate. Antibacterial activity was measured by Kirby-Bauer disc diffusion method while antiproliferative activity of test compounds was measured by sulforhodamine-B (SRB) assay.
Results
Eugenol exhibited noticeable antioxidant potential in DPPH radical scavenging (81�%) and reducing power (1.12) assays at 1.0�μM/ml and 0.1�μM/ml concentrations, respectively. IC50 value of eugenol for radical scavenging activity was found to be 0.495�μM/ml. Cinnamaldehyde demonstrated considerable metal ion chelating ability (75�%) at 50�μM/ml and moderate lipo-protective activity in lipid peroxidation assay at 3�μM/ml. In addition cinnamaldehyde also showed appreciable antibacterial activity (zone of inhibition 32–42�mm) against Bacillus cereus (MTCC 6840), Streptococcus mutans (MTCC 497), Proteus vulgaris (MTCC 7299), Salmonella typhi (MTCC 3917) and Bordetella bronchiseptica (MTCC 6838) while eugenol produced moderate activity at 80�μM/disc. Cinnamaldehyde exhibited comparatively better antiproliferative potential against breast (T47D) and lung (NCI-H322) cancer cell lines than eugenol in SRB assay at 50�μM concentration.
Conclusion
Cinnamaldehyde possessed metal ion chelating, lipo-protective, antibacterial and antiproliferative activities while eugenol showed potent H-atom donating potential indicating radical quenching and reducing power abilities. Medicinal attributes shown by both the compounds indicated their usefulness in food and pharmaceutical sector.
Springer