4.7 Article

Anethole rich Clausena heptaphylla (Roxb.) Wight & Arn., essential oil pharmacology and genotoxic efficiencies

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-13511-8

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Funding

  1. CSIR, New Delhi [HCP-0010, HCP-0007]

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ARCHEO, an essential oil rich in anethole sourced from Clausena heptaphylla leaves, showed antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities superior to standard compound anethole. It also exhibited stronger anti-diabetic, skin whitening, and neurodegenerative disorder inhibitory activities. However, it had lower antimicrobial activity compared to anethole and did not show genotoxic effects. ARCHEO could serve as a commercially viable and easily accessible alternative source of anethole for the food flavoring, fragrance, and pharmaceutical industries.
Anethole, a widely used industrial flavoring agent is majorly sourced from anise and star anise. The present study is aimed to the in-depth pharmacological analysis i.e. anti-diabetic, skin whitening, neurodegenerative disorder inhibitory activities of anethole-rich Clausena heptaphylla leaf essential oil (ARCHEO) (88.59%) as revealed by the Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS) analysis and further confirmed by proton nuclear magnetic resonance H-1-NMR as well as to compare with standard compound anethole. ARCHEO (ABTS EC50 6.97 +/- 0.004 mu g/mL; Protease assay 4.51 +/- 0.004 mu g/mL) outperformed the standard compound anethole (ABTS EC50 9.48 +/- 0.048 mu g/mL; Protease assay EC50 22.64 +/- 0.016 mu g/mL) in antioxidant and anti-inflammatory experiments. ARCHEO was also shown to be more effective than the reference compound anethole in terms of anti-diabetic activity (EC50 22.35 +/- 0.121 mu g/mL), tyrosinase inhibitory activity (EC50 16.45 +/- 0.012 mu g/mL), and anti-cholinesterase activity (EC50 22.32 +/- 0.016 mu g/mL). However, ARCHEO exhibited lower antimicrobial activity towards all the tested microbes compared to standard compound anethole and as for the MIC, ARCHEO was effective only towards Salmonella typhimurium (60 mu g/mL), Streptococcus mutans (20 mu g/mL), and Aspergillus fumigatus (75 mu g/mL). ARCHEO (11.11%) and anethole (12.33%) showed no genotoxic effect based on Allium cepa assay mitotic index value. Thus, ARCHEO could be a commercially viable and widely available cheaper source of anethole, which has buoyant demand in the field of food flavoring, fragrance, and pharmaceutical industries.

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