4.7 Article

Potential health enhancing properties of edible flowers from Thailand

Journal

FOOD RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL
Volume 46, Issue 2, Pages 563-571

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2011.06.016

Keywords

Edible flowers; Phenolic compounds; Anti-proliferation; alpha-glucosidase; Lipase

Funding

  1. Office of the Higher Education Commission, Thailand
  2. Strategic Scholarships for Frontier Research Network
  3. CSIRO Food and Nutritional Sciences (Australia)
  4. Australia-Thailand Institute (Australia)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Tagetes erecta, Cosmos sulphureus, Antigonon leptopus and Bougainvillea glabra are edible flowers frequently used by the ethnic population of northern Thailand for preparation of salads and flower teas. The main constituents of ethanolic extracts of these flowers, identified with the help of a high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method, were phenolic acids and flavonoids. T. erecta flowers contained the highest level of phenolic compounds, 1107.5 mg/100 g dry weight (DW), which was 3- to 4-fold the level of phenolic compounds in three other flowers evaluated in this study. Lyophilised aqueous extract of T. erecta had the highest Folin-Ciocalteu value (212 +/- 9.0 mgGAE/g DW) and exhibited the highest total reducing capacity (Ferric Reducing Antioxidant Power, FRAP assay; 329.4 +/- 21.8 mu mol Fe2+/g DW) and cellular antioxidant activity (CAA assay: EC50 = 413 mu g/ml). However A. leptopus extract exhibited a superior oxygen free radical scavenging ability (oxygen radical absorbance capacity, ORAC-H assay). The extracts were evaluated for their abilities to suppress the proliferation of human cancer cells associated with the digestion system and to inhibit the activity of two enzymes, alpha-glucosidase and pancreatic lipase. A pronounced anti-proliferative activity against the colorectal adenocarcinoma (HT-29) cells exhibited T. erecta extract (IC50 = 1.5 mg/ml), while A. leptopus was most active against the gastric adenocarcinoma (AGS) (IC50 = 0.2 mg/ml) and bladder cancer cells (BL-13) (IC50 = 0.9 mg/ml). T. erecta extract was identified as an efficient inhibitor of alpha-glucosidase enzyme (IC50 = 0.06 mg/ml). T. erecta, C. sulphureus and B. glabra extracts equally inhibited the activity of pancreatic lipase (IC50: 4.82 and 4.60 mg/ml, respectively). The results obtained in this study for the first time identified a number of potential health-enhancing properties of aqueous extracts obtained from edible flowers consumed by the indigenous people of Thailand. (c) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available