Antioxidant-Rich Woodfordia fruticosa Leaf Extract Alleviates Depressive-Like Behaviors and Impede Hyperglycemia.
Mohammed Abu TayabKazi Ashfak Ahmed ChowdhuryMd JabedSyed Mohammed TareqA T M Mostafa KamalMohammad Nazmul IslamA M Kafil UddinMohammad Adil HossainTalhah Bin EmranBernabé Nuñez-EstevezPublished in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
Dhaiphul (Woodfordia fruticosa) is a frequently demanded plant in South-East Asian regions for its diverse medicinal values. This study was proposed to examine antioxidant, antidiabetic, and antidepressant potentials of methanol extract of W. fruticosa leaves (MEWF) and its derived n-hexane (NHFMEWF) and ethyl acetate (EAFMEWF) fractions through in vitro, in vivo, and computational models. Among test samples, MEWF and EAFMEWF contained the highest phenolic content and showed maximal antioxidant activity in DPPH radical scavenging and ferric reducing power assays. In comparison, NHFMEWF possessed maximum flavonoid content and a significantly potent α-amylase inhibitory profile comparable with positive control acarbose. In animal models of depression (forced swimming and tail suspension test), EAFMEWF and NHFMEWF demonstrated a dose-dependent antidepressant-like effect; explicitly, the depressive-like behaviors significantly declined in EAFMEWF-treated dosing groups in contrast to the control group. In the computational analysis, previously isolated flavonoid compounds from Dhaiphul leaves manifested potent binding affinity against several key therapeutic target proteins of diabetes and depressive disorders including α-amylase, serotonin transporter, dopamine transporter, and neuronal nitric oxide synthase with varying pharmacokinetics and toxicity profiles. This research's outcomes may provide potential dietary supplements for mitigating hyperglycemia, cellular toxicity, and depressive disorder.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- bipolar disorder
- anti inflammatory
- major depressive disorder
- nitric oxide synthase
- stress induced
- nitric oxide
- diabetic rats
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- depressive symptoms
- magnetic resonance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- uric acid
- mouse model
- high throughput
- climate change
- ionic liquid
- resistance training
- sleep quality
- brain injury
- blood brain barrier
- weight loss
- transcription factor
- contrast enhanced
- dna binding
- cerebral ischemia