In-vitro inhibition of Malaysian grown Aquilaria Spp. extracts and kinetic on pancreatic lipase / Miradatul Najwa Muhd Rodhi

Pancreatic lipase inhibitory compounds, which are gallic acid and quercetin, are among the effective inhibition compounds that had been identified in natural remedies. In the current work, the content of gallic acid and quercetin in the crude leaves extract of widely grown Aquilaria spp. in Malaysia...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Muhd Rodhi, Miradatul Najwa
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/60691/1/60691.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my-uitm-ir.60691
record_format uketd_dc
institution Universiti Teknologi MARA
collection UiTM Institutional Repository
language English
advisor Ku Hamid, Ku Halim (Prof. Dr.)
topic Nutrition
Plant food
Assimilation of nitrogen, etc.
spellingShingle Nutrition
Plant food
Assimilation of nitrogen, etc.
Muhd Rodhi, Miradatul Najwa
In-vitro inhibition of Malaysian grown Aquilaria Spp. extracts and kinetic on pancreatic lipase / Miradatul Najwa Muhd Rodhi
description Pancreatic lipase inhibitory compounds, which are gallic acid and quercetin, are among the effective inhibition compounds that had been identified in natural remedies. In the current work, the content of gallic acid and quercetin in the crude leaves extract of widely grown Aquilaria spp. in Malaysia, which was Aquilaria malaccensis and Aquilaria subintegra, that was obtained after soaking, ultrasonication and hydrodistillation process were determined. Moreover, the inhibition activity, kinetic mode and behaviour, mechanism, equation and kinetic parameters of in-vitro pancreatic lipase inhibition also were suggested and evaluated based on the linear model of Michaelis–Menten kinetic plots, namely, Lineweaver-Burk, Eadie-Hofstee, and Hanes-Woolf. The Aquilaria spp. leaves were dried for 24 hours at 60oC before it was ground and sieved into a particle size of 250 μm, 300 μm, 400 μm, 500 μm, and 1000 μm. Each particle size was water-soaked at a ratio of 0.5:100, 1.0:100, and 1.5:100 (w/v) for 24 hours and underwent the ultrasonication process (37 kHz), at the temperature of 40oC, 50oC, 60oC, 70oC, and 80oC for 30 minutes. The results disclosed that the highest concentration of gallic acid and quercetin equivalent determined was 89.99 mg/ml and 0.0295 mg/ml in A.malaccensis and 101.27 mg/ml and 0.0373 mg/ml in A.subintegra crude extract of the particle size of 250 μm, respectively, extracted at the ultrasonication temperature of 60oC and soaking ratio of 1.0:100 (w/v). The FTIR spectrum also exhibits the stretching of the O–H groups that were identified at 3297-3224 cm−1, showing that the inhibition functional group exists in the extract, which results in 77.7% inhibition of pancreatic lipase by A.malaccensis and 82.34% inhibition by A.subintegra. The 50% inhibition concentration of gallic acid and quercetin equivalent calculated from the linear regression method were 54.631 mg/ml and 0.0195 mg/ml in A.malaccensis and 57.373 mg/ml and 0.0185 mg/ml in A.subintegra, respectively. The Lineweaver-Burk plot of the inhibition activities exhibited the mixed-typed pancreatic lipase inhibition, which indicates that the inhibitors were attached to the free pancreatic lipase and also binding to the pancreatic lipase-p-NPP complex. The reaction mechanism was similar to the non-competitive inhibition; however, the value of dissociation constant (Ki) which denoted by Kia and Kib, of the diverse pathways of gallic acid and quercetin binding to pancreatic lipase was different, where the value of Kia was lower than Kib, which indicates that this mixed-inhibition was predominantly towards competitive inhibition. The value of cooperativity coefficient (n) of this inhibition was above one which presents that the multiple ligand binding occurred and this proved the existence of allosteric sites for the mixed-inhibition to take place. The kinetic parameters determined in the inhibition at various concentrations of p-NPP and pancreatic lipase using the Lineweaver-Burk, Eadie-Hofstee, and Hanes-Woolf kinetic plots gave the increasing value of Km with the decreasing value of Vm, kcat, and kcat/Km compared to the non-inhibition reaction. In the comparative study of the experimental and theoretical kinetic plots, the error of R2 was between 0.07% and 60.62%. The results showed that the data of inhibition activities fit well in the Michaelis-Menten and Hanes-Woolf kinetic plots with an error in R2 of less than 5%. In conclusion, this study revealed that Aquilaria spp. leaves contributed a substantial pancreatic lipase inhibition activity that makes it a potential natural product for diabetes control. The kinetic study conducted can be used as guidance in finding the mechanism and the optimal kinetic inhibition activity of plant-based inhibitors used in diabetes therapy.
format Thesis
qualification_name Doctor of Philosophy (PhD.)
qualification_level Doctorate
author Muhd Rodhi, Miradatul Najwa
author_facet Muhd Rodhi, Miradatul Najwa
author_sort Muhd Rodhi, Miradatul Najwa
title In-vitro inhibition of Malaysian grown Aquilaria Spp. extracts and kinetic on pancreatic lipase / Miradatul Najwa Muhd Rodhi
title_short In-vitro inhibition of Malaysian grown Aquilaria Spp. extracts and kinetic on pancreatic lipase / Miradatul Najwa Muhd Rodhi
title_full In-vitro inhibition of Malaysian grown Aquilaria Spp. extracts and kinetic on pancreatic lipase / Miradatul Najwa Muhd Rodhi
title_fullStr In-vitro inhibition of Malaysian grown Aquilaria Spp. extracts and kinetic on pancreatic lipase / Miradatul Najwa Muhd Rodhi
title_full_unstemmed In-vitro inhibition of Malaysian grown Aquilaria Spp. extracts and kinetic on pancreatic lipase / Miradatul Najwa Muhd Rodhi
title_sort in-vitro inhibition of malaysian grown aquilaria spp. extracts and kinetic on pancreatic lipase / miradatul najwa muhd rodhi
granting_institution Universiti Teknologi MARA
granting_department Faculty of Chemical Engineering
publishDate 2021
url https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/60691/1/60691.pdf
_version_ 1783735153525260288
spelling my-uitm-ir.606912022-05-31T06:21:16Z In-vitro inhibition of Malaysian grown Aquilaria Spp. extracts and kinetic on pancreatic lipase / Miradatul Najwa Muhd Rodhi 2021-12 Muhd Rodhi, Miradatul Najwa Nutrition. Plant food. Assimilation of nitrogen, etc. Pancreatic lipase inhibitory compounds, which are gallic acid and quercetin, are among the effective inhibition compounds that had been identified in natural remedies. In the current work, the content of gallic acid and quercetin in the crude leaves extract of widely grown Aquilaria spp. in Malaysia, which was Aquilaria malaccensis and Aquilaria subintegra, that was obtained after soaking, ultrasonication and hydrodistillation process were determined. Moreover, the inhibition activity, kinetic mode and behaviour, mechanism, equation and kinetic parameters of in-vitro pancreatic lipase inhibition also were suggested and evaluated based on the linear model of Michaelis–Menten kinetic plots, namely, Lineweaver-Burk, Eadie-Hofstee, and Hanes-Woolf. The Aquilaria spp. leaves were dried for 24 hours at 60oC before it was ground and sieved into a particle size of 250 μm, 300 μm, 400 μm, 500 μm, and 1000 μm. Each particle size was water-soaked at a ratio of 0.5:100, 1.0:100, and 1.5:100 (w/v) for 24 hours and underwent the ultrasonication process (37 kHz), at the temperature of 40oC, 50oC, 60oC, 70oC, and 80oC for 30 minutes. The results disclosed that the highest concentration of gallic acid and quercetin equivalent determined was 89.99 mg/ml and 0.0295 mg/ml in A.malaccensis and 101.27 mg/ml and 0.0373 mg/ml in A.subintegra crude extract of the particle size of 250 μm, respectively, extracted at the ultrasonication temperature of 60oC and soaking ratio of 1.0:100 (w/v). The FTIR spectrum also exhibits the stretching of the O–H groups that were identified at 3297-3224 cm−1, showing that the inhibition functional group exists in the extract, which results in 77.7% inhibition of pancreatic lipase by A.malaccensis and 82.34% inhibition by A.subintegra. The 50% inhibition concentration of gallic acid and quercetin equivalent calculated from the linear regression method were 54.631 mg/ml and 0.0195 mg/ml in A.malaccensis and 57.373 mg/ml and 0.0185 mg/ml in A.subintegra, respectively. The Lineweaver-Burk plot of the inhibition activities exhibited the mixed-typed pancreatic lipase inhibition, which indicates that the inhibitors were attached to the free pancreatic lipase and also binding to the pancreatic lipase-p-NPP complex. The reaction mechanism was similar to the non-competitive inhibition; however, the value of dissociation constant (Ki) which denoted by Kia and Kib, of the diverse pathways of gallic acid and quercetin binding to pancreatic lipase was different, where the value of Kia was lower than Kib, which indicates that this mixed-inhibition was predominantly towards competitive inhibition. The value of cooperativity coefficient (n) of this inhibition was above one which presents that the multiple ligand binding occurred and this proved the existence of allosteric sites for the mixed-inhibition to take place. The kinetic parameters determined in the inhibition at various concentrations of p-NPP and pancreatic lipase using the Lineweaver-Burk, Eadie-Hofstee, and Hanes-Woolf kinetic plots gave the increasing value of Km with the decreasing value of Vm, kcat, and kcat/Km compared to the non-inhibition reaction. In the comparative study of the experimental and theoretical kinetic plots, the error of R2 was between 0.07% and 60.62%. The results showed that the data of inhibition activities fit well in the Michaelis-Menten and Hanes-Woolf kinetic plots with an error in R2 of less than 5%. In conclusion, this study revealed that Aquilaria spp. leaves contributed a substantial pancreatic lipase inhibition activity that makes it a potential natural product for diabetes control. The kinetic study conducted can be used as guidance in finding the mechanism and the optimal kinetic inhibition activity of plant-based inhibitors used in diabetes therapy. 2021-12 Thesis https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/60691/ https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/60691/1/60691.pdf text en public phd doctoral Universiti Teknologi MARA Faculty of Chemical Engineering Ku Hamid, Ku Halim (Prof. Dr.)