New Insight on In Vitro Biological Activities of Sulfated Polysaccharides from Ulvophyte Green Algae.
Fahrul NurkolisRudy KurniawanIsma KurniatantyMoon Nyeo ParkMyunghan MoonSiti FatimahWilliam Ben GunawanReggie SuryaNurpudji Astuti TaslimHangyul SongBonlgee KimPublished in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Green algae are natural bioresources that have excellent bioactive potential, partly due to sulfated polysaccharides (SPs) which are still rarely explored for their biological activities. There is currently an urgent need for studies exploring the anticancer biological activity of SPs extracted from two Indonesian ulvophyte green algae: the sulfated polysaccharide of Caulerpa racemosa (SPCr) and the sulfated polysaccharide of Caulerpa lentillifera (SPCl). The method of isolating SPs and their assessment of biological activities in this study were based on previous and similar studies. The highest yield sulfate/total sugar ratio was presented by SPCr than that of SPCl. Overall, SPCr exhibits a strong antioxidant activity, as indicated by smaller EC 50 values obtained from a series of antioxidant activity assays compared to the EC 50 values of Trolox (control). As an anti-obesity and antidiabetic, the overall EC 50 value of both SPs was close to the EC 50 of the positive control (orlistat and acarbose). Even more interesting was that SPCl displayed wide-ranging anticancer effects on colorectal, hepatoma, breast cancer cell lines, and leukemia. Finally, this study reveals new insights in that SPs from two Indonesian green algae have the potential to be promising nutraceuticals as novel antioxidative actors, and to be able to fight obesity, diabetes, and even cancer.