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Research Article

Antidiabetic components of Cassia alata leaves: Identification through α-glucosidase inhibition studies

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Pages 345-349 | Received 20 Jun 2012, Accepted 07 Sep 2012, Published online: 09 Nov 2012
 

Abstract

Context: Cassia alata Linn. [syn. Senna alata (L.) Roxb.] (Caesalpiniaceae) is used for treating various disease conditions including diabetes but its mechanism(s) of action and active principles remain to be elucidated.

Objective: The antidiabetic principles were identified using an in vitro α-glucosidase inhibition study.

Materials and methods: The methanol extract of leaves of C. alata, which showed potent α-glucosidase inhibitory activity (IC50, 63.75 ± 12.81 µg/ml), was fractionated. Active fractions were taken for further analysis by a variety of techniques including HPLC and Combiflash chromatography. The identity of the isolated compounds was established by spectroscopic analysis while their potential antidiabetic activity was assessed by in vitro enzyme inhibition studies.

Results: The α-glucosidase inhibitory effect of the crude extract was far better than the standard clinically used drug, acarbose (IC50, 107.31 ± 12.31 µg/ml). A subsequent fractionation of the crude extract was made using solvents of ascending polarity (petroleum ether, chloroform, ethyl acetate, n-butanol and water). The ethyl acetate (IC50, 2.95 ± 0.47 µg/ml) and n-butanol (IC50, 25.80 ± 2.01 µg/ml) fractions which contained predominantly kaempferol (56.7 ± 7.7 µM) and kaempferol 3-O-gentiobioside (50.0 ± 8.5 µM), respectively, displayed the highest carbohydrate enzyme inhibitory effect.

Discussion: One of the possible antidiabetic mechanisms of action of C. alata is by inhibiting carbohydrate digestion. This is the first report on α-glucosidase activity of kaempferol 3-O-gentiobioside.

Conclusion: Considering the activity profile of the crude extract and isolated bioactive compounds, further in vivo and clinical studies on C. alata extracts and compounds are well merited.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank the technical support of staff at the School of Science, University of Greenwich and Department of Botany, C.M.S. College, Kottayam, Kerala, India.

Declaration of interest

This work was supported by the University of Greenwich internal funding streams. The authors declared that there is no conflict of interest.

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