Study of Chemical Composition of Extract from Beta Vulgaris Seeds and its Cytotoxic Activity
- 1 Department of Physiology, E.A. Buketov Karaganda University, Karaganda, Kazakhstan
- 2 The Laboratory of Engineering Profile of NMR Spectroscopy, Sh. Ualikhanov Kokshetau University, Kokshetau, Kazakhstan, Republican Collection of Microorganisms, Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan
Abstract
Nowadays, a variety of plants is being investigated with the aim of developing new medicines with improved properties and expanding the range of efficient and safe preparations. Modern studies of representatives of the family Amaranthaceae (Beta vulgaris) have revealed medicinal properties in plants that were used previously only as food. Many medicinal properties are due to the presence of betalains and phenols in the roots and the stems of red beetroot (Beta vulgaris L. var. conditiva). Along with this, there is a lack of information on the chemical composition and biological activity of seeds of this species. The purpose of our research was to study the chemical composition of Beta vulgaris seeds and to assess the cytotoxic activity. The research objects: CO2 extracts of beetroot seeds: Thick POCO2 (1), liquid POCO2 (2) and liquid alcohol extract POC2H5. Determination of the component composition of the extract was performed on the gas chromatograph Clarus 580 (PerkinElmer) with the mass spectrometric detector Clarus-SQ. To determine the cytotoxic activity, the marine crustaceans Artemia salina were taken. Based on the results of the analysis of the chemical composition of the thick CO2-extract, 25 compounds were identified and the liquid CO2-extract-11 components were identified. The dominant compounds in both extracts are phenol and creosol. The results of determining the cytotoxic activity allow determining that liquid CO2 extract of beetroot seeds POC2H5 at a concentration of 10 mg/mL exhibits cytotoxicity (68%) and does not exhibit activity at concentrations of 5 and 1 mg/mL; thick CO2 beetroot seed extract POCO2 (1) at all tested concentrations does not exhibit cytotoxicity; liquid alcohol extract of beetroot seeds at all tested concentrations does not exhibit cytotoxicity.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3844/ojbsci.2021.253.259
Copyright: © 2021 Aiman Konkabayeva, Margarita Ishmuratova, Gulmira Tykezhanova, Aidana Yerubay and Yerlan Suleimen. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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Keywords
- Carbon Dioxide
- Seeds Alcohol Extract
- Cytotoxicity
- Beta vulgaris
- Component Composition
- Biological Activity