
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://dspace.univ-tiaret.dz:80/handle/123456789/16732| Title: | In vitro evaluation of protiens anti-denaturation and antioxidant activities of commercially available Matricaria chamomilla L. |
| Authors: | Chikhaoui, Djamila Berbara, Ismahane |
| Keywords: | Matricaria chamomilla anti-dénaturation des protéinesprotein anti-denaturation antioxidant DPPH |
| Issue Date: | 26-Jun-2025 |
| Publisher: | University of Ibn Khaldoun Tiaret |
| Abstract: | This study extensively investigated the in vitro therapeutic potential of Matricaria chamomilla (chamomile) extracts prepared using ethanol, acetone, and water, bay evaluating their anti- denaturation and antioxidant activities. The anti-denaturation activity, employing bovine serum albumin, determined the aqueous extract to be highly active, exhibiting 75.93% inhibition of protein denaturation at its maximum concentration, significantly more than diclofenac sodium (21.81%) and Vitamin C (41.15%). At low dilutions , chamomile extracts still showed positive inhibitory activities, demonstrating their continuing effectiveness. The DPPH assay indicated the aqueous extract as a powerful scavenger (67.62% inhibition) and the ethanolic extract next at a close second (61.38%), with pro-oxidant activity in acetonic and aqueous extracts at dilutions that were very low. The FRAP assay indicated the greatest ferric reducing antioxidant power for the ethanolic extract (92.66% inhibition).These findings collectively emphasize the tremendous potential of chamomile as a natural source of anti-inflammatory and antioxidant agents worthy of further work on characterization of compounds, in-vivo studies, finding of molecular mechanisms, and comprehensive toxicity and pharmacokinetic studies |
| URI: | http://dspace.univ-tiaret.dz:80/handle/123456789/16732 |
| Appears in Collections: | Master |
Files in This Item:
| File | Description | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TH.M.SNV.2025.56.pdf | 2,44 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.