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Phenolic and flavonoid contents of Thai rice extracts and their correlation with antioxidant activities using chemical and cell assays.
J Med Assoc Thai. 2011 Dec; 94 Suppl 7:S122-30.JM

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Free radicals induce oxidative stress in various cell components, leading to certain diseases. Plant-derived antioxidants have become a profitable alternative to prevent oxidative stress in cells due to adverse effects of some synthetic antioxidants.

OBJECTIVE

To determine the total phenolic and flavonoid contents and to evaluate the correlation between these two compounds and their antioxidant properties in the ethanolic extracts of brown rice and rice bran from Thai rice cultivars: Sangyod red rice and Dawk Mali 105 white rice using the chemical and cell assays.

MATERIAL AND METHOD

Total phenolic and flavonoid contents in all of the rice ethanolic extracts were determined using the colorimetric assays, as well as their antioxidant activity was analyzed through two chemical assays: DPPH radical-scavenging and inhibition of lipid peroxidation assays, as well as through a cell-based assay: scavenging capacity against intracellular superoxide in cells using DCF.

RESULTS

All the rice extracts displayed their antioxidant activities in a dose dependent manner through different assays, which were expressed as EC50 values. The DPPH scavenging assay revealed very high scavenging activity in both Sangyod brown rice and rice bran extracts. Positive correlations between this activity and total phenolic and flavonoid contents suggest the major free radical scavenging activity of such compounds. In contrast, the ethanolic extract of Sangyod rice bran exhibited non-significant anti-lipid peroxidation activity relative to that of Sangyod brown rice and Dawk Mali 105 rice bran. Phenolic content was correlated to some extent with anti-lipid peroxidation activity, whereas flavonoid content and such activity showed a relatively weak correlation. Importantly, the cell-based assay also detected potent scavenging activity against superoxide production in HL-60 cells pretreated with Sangyod extracts. The content of phenolics was a major contributor to this scavenging activity including that of flavonoids but to a lesser extent.

CONCLUSION

These findings suggest that ethanolic extracts of brown rice and rice bran of Sangyod red rice can be promising sources of potential natural antioxidants.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Preclinical Science, Faculty of Medicine, Thammasat University, Rangsit Campus, Klong Luang, Pathumthani, Thailand. hansakul@yahoo.comNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

22619918

Citation

Hansakul, Pintusorn, et al. "Phenolic and Flavonoid Contents of Thai Rice Extracts and Their Correlation With Antioxidant Activities Using Chemical and Cell Assays." Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand = Chotmaihet Thangphaet, vol. 94 Suppl 7, 2011, pp. S122-30.
Hansakul P, Srisawat U, Itharat A, et al. Phenolic and flavonoid contents of Thai rice extracts and their correlation with antioxidant activities using chemical and cell assays. J Med Assoc Thai. 2011;94 Suppl 7:S122-30.
Hansakul, P., Srisawat, U., Itharat, A., & Lerdvuthisopon, N. (2011). Phenolic and flavonoid contents of Thai rice extracts and their correlation with antioxidant activities using chemical and cell assays. Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand = Chotmaihet Thangphaet, 94 Suppl 7, S122-30.
Hansakul P, et al. Phenolic and Flavonoid Contents of Thai Rice Extracts and Their Correlation With Antioxidant Activities Using Chemical and Cell Assays. J Med Assoc Thai. 2011;94 Suppl 7:S122-30. PubMed PMID: 22619918.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Phenolic and flavonoid contents of Thai rice extracts and their correlation with antioxidant activities using chemical and cell assays. AU - Hansakul,Pintusorn, AU - Srisawat,Umarat, AU - Itharat,Arunporn, AU - Lerdvuthisopon,Nusiri, PY - 2012/5/25/entrez PY - 2012/5/25/pubmed PY - 2012/8/15/medline SP - S122 EP - 30 JF - Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand = Chotmaihet thangphaet JO - J Med Assoc Thai VL - 94 Suppl 7 N2 - BACKGROUND: Free radicals induce oxidative stress in various cell components, leading to certain diseases. Plant-derived antioxidants have become a profitable alternative to prevent oxidative stress in cells due to adverse effects of some synthetic antioxidants. OBJECTIVE: To determine the total phenolic and flavonoid contents and to evaluate the correlation between these two compounds and their antioxidant properties in the ethanolic extracts of brown rice and rice bran from Thai rice cultivars: Sangyod red rice and Dawk Mali 105 white rice using the chemical and cell assays. MATERIAL AND METHOD: Total phenolic and flavonoid contents in all of the rice ethanolic extracts were determined using the colorimetric assays, as well as their antioxidant activity was analyzed through two chemical assays: DPPH radical-scavenging and inhibition of lipid peroxidation assays, as well as through a cell-based assay: scavenging capacity against intracellular superoxide in cells using DCF. RESULTS: All the rice extracts displayed their antioxidant activities in a dose dependent manner through different assays, which were expressed as EC50 values. The DPPH scavenging assay revealed very high scavenging activity in both Sangyod brown rice and rice bran extracts. Positive correlations between this activity and total phenolic and flavonoid contents suggest the major free radical scavenging activity of such compounds. In contrast, the ethanolic extract of Sangyod rice bran exhibited non-significant anti-lipid peroxidation activity relative to that of Sangyod brown rice and Dawk Mali 105 rice bran. Phenolic content was correlated to some extent with anti-lipid peroxidation activity, whereas flavonoid content and such activity showed a relatively weak correlation. Importantly, the cell-based assay also detected potent scavenging activity against superoxide production in HL-60 cells pretreated with Sangyod extracts. The content of phenolics was a major contributor to this scavenging activity including that of flavonoids but to a lesser extent. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that ethanolic extracts of brown rice and rice bran of Sangyod red rice can be promising sources of potential natural antioxidants. SN - 0125-2208 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/22619918/Phenolic_and_flavonoid_contents_of_Thai_rice_extracts_and_their_correlation_with_antioxidant_activities_using_chemical_and_cell_assays_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -