/
/
/
Antimicrobial and Antioxidant Activities of Thai Herbal Tea Extracts

Antimicrobial and Antioxidant Activities of Thai Herbal Tea Extracts

Original Research ArticleMar 30, 2018Vol. 6 No. 2b (2006)

Abstract

In this study, eight species of Thai herbal teas, including fruits of Aegle marmelos Correa, and leaves of Annona squamosal Linn., Camella sinensis, Centella asiatica Linn. Urban, Morus alba, Pandanus amaryllifolius Roxb, Phyllanthus acidus Skeels, and Piper betle Linn. Were extracted using ethanol as a solvent, and tested for their antimicrobial activity against 9 species of bacteria and 6 species of yeasts using agar diffusion method as preliminary screening. Of these, five ethanoic extracts of plants, including A. marmelos, C. sinensis, C. asiatica, P. amaryllifolius, and P. betle showed great antimicrobial effect on microbial strains tested, and were selected to determine the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) using microbroth dilution test. Crude ethanolic extracts of C. sinensis and A. marmelos showed the highest antimicrobial activity, followed by P. betle, P. amaryllifolius, C.asiatica, M. alba, A. squamosal, and P. acidus. The most susceptible pathogenic bacteria to C. sinensis and A. marmelos extracts were Bacillus cereus, Escherichia coli, and Staphylococus aureus (the MIC of 10.4-41.7 mg/ml). The most sensitive food spoilage bacteria to those extracts was Leuconostoc mesenteroides (the MIC of 10.4-20.8 mg/ml). The most valuable yeasts to C. sinensis extract were Hanseniaspora uvarum and Rhodotorula glutinis (the MIC of 41.7 mg/ml), while Candida lipolytica and Pichia membranaefaciens were the most sensitive yeast strains to A. marmelos extract (the MIC of 83.3 mg/ml).

            Antioxidant activity of eight herbal tea extracts was studied. P. betle extract had the highest antioxidant activity, followed by C. sinensis, A. squamosal, M. alba, C. asiatica, A. marmelos, P.acidus, and P. amaryllifolius extracts. The EC50 values of the extracts were in the range of 699.29-13,886.94 µg extract/mg DPPH. Total phenolic contents of these extracts were also analyzed. The extract of C. sinensis had the highest phenolic content, followed by those of P. betle, P. amaryllifolius, A. marmelos, A. squamosal, P. acidus, C. asiatica, and M. alba. The total phenolic contents of these extracts were in the range of 6.0-546.0 µg gallic acid/mg dry extract.

Keywords: herbal tea, antimicrobial activity, antioxidant activity, phenolics

Corresponding author: E-mail: knsuree@kmitl.ac.th

 

How to Cite

Nanasombat*, S. ., Kaewkan, K. ., & Chanapart, P. . (2018). Antimicrobial and Antioxidant Activities of Thai Herbal Tea Extracts. CURRENT APPLIED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 642-651.

References

  • Alzoreky, N. S. and Nakahara, K. 2002. Antibacterial Activity if Extracts from Some Edible Plants Commonly Consumed in Asia, Journal of Food Microbiology, 80, 223-230.
  • Sohn, H. Y., Son, K. H., Kwon, C. S., Kwon, G. S. and Kang, S. S. 2004 Antimicrobial and Cytotoxic Activity of Prenylated Flavonoids Isolated from Medicinal Plant: Morus alba L., Morus mongolica Schneider, Broussnetia papyrifera (L.) Vent, Sophora flavescens Ait and Echinosophora koreensis Nakai, Phytomedicine, 11, 666-672.
  • Yang, J. and Chou, C. 1997. Antimicrobial Activity of Various Solvent Extracts of Betel Quid Ingredients, Chemistry Abstracts, 128, 8407bb.
  • Linda, S. M., Ooi, S. S. M. and Sun, V. E. 2004. Purification and Characterization of a New Antiviral Protein from the Leaves of Pandanus amaryllifolius (Pandanaceae), The International Journal of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, 36, 1440-1446.
  • Atoui, K., Mansouri, A., Boskou, G. and Kefalas, P. 2004. Tea and Herbal Infusion: Their Antioxidant Activity and Phenolic Profile, Food Chemistry, xx,xxx-xxx.

Author Information

S. Nanasombat*

Department of Applied Biology, Faculty of Science, King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology LadKrabang, Bangkok, Thailand.

K. Kaewkan

Department of Applied Biology, Faculty of Science, King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology LadKrabang, Bangkok, Thailand.

P. Chanapart

Department of Applied Biology, Faculty of Science, King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology LadKrabang, Bangkok, Thailand.

About this Article

Journal

Vol. 6 No. 2b (2006)

Type of Manuscript

Original Research Article

Keywords

herbal tea, antimicrobial activity, antioxidant activity, phenolics

Published

30 March 2018