Plants (Jan 2022)

Polyphenol Composition and Antioxidant Activity of <i>Tapirira guianensis</i> Aubl. (Anarcadiaceae) Leaves

  • Arnaud Patient,
  • Elodie Jean-Marie,
  • Jean-Charles Robinson,
  • Karine Martial,
  • Emmanuelle Meudec,
  • Joëlle Levalois-Grützmacher,
  • Brigitte Closs,
  • Didier Bereau

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants11030326
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
p. 326

Abstract

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Tapirira guianensis (Anacardiaceae) is a natural resource from the Amazonian Forest and is locally known in French Guiana as “loussé” (creole), “tata pilili” (wayãpi), or “ara” (palikur). The tree is used by indigenous populations for medicinal purposes. To increase the potential of this tree for cosmetic, agro-food, or pharmaceutical uses, extracts were obtained through ultrasound-assisted extraction (UAE) from T. guianensis leaves using various extraction solvents such as water, methanol, and methanol–water (85/15; v/v). Chemical (DPPH, TEAC, ORAC) tests were applied to assess the anti-radical potential of these extracts. The polyphenol contents were determined by spectrophotometric (UV/Visible) and by means of chromatographic (UPLC-DAD-ESI-IT-MSn) methods. Tapirira guianensis leaf hydromethanolic extract produced the highest polyphenol content and exhibited antiradical activities in chemical assays (DPPH, TEAC, and ORAC) similar to (or higher than) those of a well-known antiradical plant, green tea. In T. guianensis, two classes of polyphenols were evidenced: (1) galloylquinic acids (identified for the first time in the studied species) and (2) flavonols and flavanols (present in small amounts). Flavonols seemed to play a major role in the antioxidant activity of DPPH. These findings provide a rationale for the use of T. guianensis in traditional medicine and to pave the way for seeking new biological properties involving this Amazonian tree.

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