4.6 Article

Antioxidant, antimutagenic and antiproliferative activities in selected seaweed species from Sinaloa, Mexico

Journal

PHARMACEUTICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 10, Pages 2196-2210

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.3109/13880209.2016.1150305

Keywords

Algae; carotenoids; cellular antiproliferation; chemopreventive; chlorophylls; mutagenic inhibition; phenolic compounds

Funding

  1. CONACYT [336726]
  2. [PROFAPI 2013/084]
  3. [PROFAPI 2013/124]
  4. [PROFAPI 2013/106]

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Context Seaweeds from the Mexican Pacific Ocean have not been evaluated as a source of chemoprotectants. Objective The objective of this study is to evaluate chemopreventive activities of the seaweeds Phaephyceae - Padina durvillaei (Dictyotaceae) - Rodhophyceae - Spyridia filamentosa (Spyridiaceae), Gracilaria vermiculophylla (Gracilariaceae) - and Chlorophyceae-Ulva expansa (Ulvaceae), Codium isabelae (Codiaceae), Rhizoclonium riparium (Cladophoraceae) and Caulerpa sertularioides (Caulerpaceae). Materials and methods Methanol, acetone and hexane seaweed extracts were assessed at 30 and 3 mg/mL on antioxidant capacity (DPPH and ABTS assays), 0.003-3.0 mg/plate on antimutagenic activity against AFB(1) using Salmonella typhimurium TA98 and TA100 tester strains in Ames test, and 12.5 to 100 mu g/mL on antiproliferative activity on Murine B-cell lymphoma. Phenols, flavonoids and pigments content were also assessed as antioxidant compounds. Results Extraction yield was higher in methanol than in acetone and hexane extracts (6.4, 2.7 and 1.4% dw). Antioxidant capacity was higher in brown and green than in red seaweed species, particularly in P. durvillaei extracted in acetone (EC50 value = 16.9 and 1.56 mg/mL for DPPH and ABTS). Flavonoids and chlorophylls were identified as mainly antioxidant components; particularly in hexane extracts, which were correlated with the antioxidant capacity. Highest mutagenesis inhibition (>0%) occurred in R. riparium at the lowest concentration assayed (0.003 mg/plate), while highest antiproliferative inhibition (37 and 72% for 12.5 and 25 mu g/mL) occurred in C. sertularioides. Discussion and conclusion Flavonoids and chlorophylls explained the chemopreventive activities assessed in S. filamentosa, R. riparium and C. sertularioides. These seaweeds have a high potential as a source of novel chemoprotectants.

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