Non-toxic Salvia sclareoides Brot. extracts as a source of functional food ingredients: Phenolic profile, antioxidant activity and prion binding properties

Amélia P. Rauter, Catarina Dias, Alice Martins, Isabel Branco, Nuno R. Neng, José M. Nogueira, Margarida Goulart, Filipa V.M. Silva, Jorge Justino, Clare Trevitt, Jon P. Waltho

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

38 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Salvia sclareoides is an aromatic herb native to Portugal, of which phenolic content (Folin-Ciocalteau method), chemical profile (HPLC/DAD), antioxidant activity (DPPH, β-carotene/linoleic acid assays), acute toxicity (MTT method, adapted for non-adherent cells), genotoxicity (short-term chromosomal aberration assay) and prion binding properties were evaluated in the acetone, water, ethanol, methanol and n-butanol extracts. The latter presented the highest phenolic content and antioxidant activity (DPPH assay), and was the single one with the flavonoids (+)-catechin, kaempferol O-glucoside and quercetin. Vanillic acid was the major component of all extracts but gallic, gentisic, caffeic, syringic, coumaric and ferulic acids were also found in some extracts. Only the n-butanol extract had components binding to the cellular form of human prion protein detected by NMR which showed specificity for two regions of the folded domain and for the unstructured N-terminal region. Extracts were not cytotoxic nor genotoxic, reinforcing the potential of S. sclareoides for nutraceutical purposes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1930-1935
Number of pages6
JournalFood Chemistry
Volume132
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jun 2012
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Antioxidant activity
  • Cytotoxicity
  • Genotoxicity
  • Phenolic profile
  • Prion binding
  • Salvia sclareoides

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