PHYTOCHEMICAL AND ANTIMICROBIAL STUDIES OF THE METHANOL EXTRACT OF THE ROOT OF NAPOLEONAEA HEUDELOTTI (A.JUSS)
Table Of Contents
<p> <b>TABLE OF CONTENTS </b></p><p>Title Page----------------------------------------------------------------------------------ii </p><p>Declaration--------------------------------------------------------------------------------iii </p><p>Certificate---------------------------------------------------------------------------------iv </p><p>Dedication---------------------------------------------------------------------------------v </p><p>Acknowledgement----------------------------------------------------------------------vi </p><p>Abstract------------------------------------------------------------------------------------vii </p><p>Table of Contents-----------------------------------------------------------------------viii </p><p>List of Tables----------------------------------------------------------------------------xii </p><p>List of Figures--------------------------------------------------------------------------xiii </p><p>List of Abbreviations------------------------------------------------------------------xiv </p><p>
Chapter ONE
-------------------------------------------------------------------------1</p><p>1
1.0 INTRODUCTION---------------------------------------------------------------1 </p><p>1.1 Secondary Metabolites----------------------------------------------------------3 </p><p>1.1.1 Alkaloids--------------------------------------------------------------------------3 </p><p>1.1.2 Flavonoids-----------------------------------------------------------------------4 </p><p>1.1.3 Terpenes-------------------------------------------------------------------------5 </p><p>1.1.4 Steroids--------------------------------------------------------------------------6 </p><p>1.1.5 Saponins------------------------------------------------------------------------7 </p><p>1.1.6 Tannins-------------------------------------------------------------------------8 </p><p>1.1.7 Glycosides---------------------------------------------------------------------9 </p><p>1.3 Justification----------------------------------------------------------------------9 </p><p>1.4 Aim and Objectives-----------------------------------------------------------10 </p><p><b>
Chapter TWO
--------------------------------------------------------------------11 </b></p><p>2.0 LITERATURE REVIEW-------------------------------------------------------11 </p><p>2.1 Botanical Description of Napoleonaea Species-------------------------11 </p><p>2.1.1 Taxonomy of Napoleonaea Species-------------------------------------11 </p><p>2.2 Origin and geographical distribution----------------------------------------12 </p><p>2.3 Medicinal uses--------------------------------------------------------------------12 </p><p>2.4 Phytochemical Constituents of Napoleonaea species-----------------12 </p><p>2.5 Pharmacological Activities of Napoleonaea species---------------------14 </p><p>2.6 Scientific Classification of Napoleonaea heudelotti---------------------16 </p><p><b>
Chapter THREE
-------------------------------------------------------------------17 </b></p><p>3.0 MATERIALS AND METHODS------------------------------------------------17 </p><p>3.1 Materials----------------------------------------------------------------------------17 </p><p>3.1.1 Solvents-------------------------------------------------------------------------17 </p><p>3.1.2 Apparatus----------------------------------------------------------------------17 </p><p>3.1.3 Reagents for phytochemical screening-------------------------------18 </p><p>3.1.4 Test microorganisms used-----------------------------------------------19 </p><p>3.1.5 Materials used for chromatographic techniques---------------------19 </p><p>3.2 Collection of the Plant Material----------------------------------------------19 </p><p>3.3 Extraction of the Plant Material----------------------------------------------20 </p><p>3.4 Phytochemical Screening-----------------------------------------------------20 </p><p>3.4.1 Test for glycosides-------------------------------------------------------------21 </p><p>3.4.2 Test for cardiac glycoside----------------------------------------------------21 </p><p>3.4.3 Test for tannins----------------------------------------------------------------21 </p><p>3.4.4 Test for saponins-------------------------------------------------------------21 </p><p>3.4.5 Test for flavonoids------------------------------------------------------------22 </p><p>3.4.6 Test for carbohydrates------------------------------------------------------22 </p><p>3.4.7 Test for combined reduced sugar----------------------------------------23 </p><p>3.4.8 Test for steroids/terpenoids-----------------------------------------------23 </p><p>3.4.9 Test for alkaloids------------------------------------------------------------24 </p><p>3.5 Antimicrobial Screening------------------------------------------------------25 </p><p>3.6 Purification of chloroform fraction-----------------------------------------27</p><p> 3.6.1 Thin layer chromatography----------------------------------------------27 </p><p>3.6.2 Preparation of preparative TLC-----------------------------------------28 </p><p>3.6.3 Isolation of the pure compound-----------------------------------------28 </p><p>3.6.4 Melting point determination---------------------------------------------28 </p><p>3.6.5 Spectra Analysis-----------------------------------------------------------29 </p><p><b>
Chapter FOUR
-----------------------------------------------------------------30 </b></p><p>4.0 RESULTS-----------------------------------------------------------------------30 </p><p>4.1 Percentage ( %) Recovery on Extraction-------------------------------30 </p><p>4.2 Phytochemical Screening of extract and fractions--------------------31 </p><p>4.3 Antimicrobial Susceptibility test--------------------------------------------33 </p><p>4.4 Zone of Inhibition (mm)------------------------------------------------------35 </p><p>4.5 Minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of extract and fractions----37</p><p>4.6 Minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) of extract and fractions----39</p><p> 4.7 Preparative thin layer chromatography------------------------------------30 </p><p>4.8 Chemical test of the isolated compound------------------------------------41 </p><p>4.9 Spectroscopic analysis of sample NHPE----------------------------------42 </p><p><b>
Chapter FIVE
-----------------------------------------------------------------------54 </b></p><p>5.0 DISCUSSION--------------------------------------------------------------------54 </p><p>5.1 Summary--------------------------------------------------------------------------61 </p><p>5.2 Conclusion-------------------------------------------------------------------------62 </p><p>5.3 Recommendation-----------------------------------------------------------------63 </p><p>REFERENCES------------------------------------------------------------------------64 </p>
Project Abstract
<p> <b>ABSTRACT</b> </p><p>The extracts of the root part of Napoleonaea heudelotii were subjected to
phytochemical and anti-microbial studies. Extraction was done by continuous Soxhlet
extraction using methanol. The phytochemical screening of the crude methanol
extract, chloroform and ethyl acetate fractions revealed the presence of carbohydrate,
cardiac glycosides, saponins, steroids, triterpenes, flavanoids and tannins. The result
of the antimicrobial screening of the crude methanol extract, ethyl acetate and
chloroform fractions showed activity against Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus
pyogenes, Bacillus subtilis, Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhi, Pseudomonas
aeruginosa, Proteus vulgaris, and Candida albicans. However, the chloroform
fraction was the most active fraction against the test microoganisms. The zone of
inhibition of the methanol extract ranged between 16 mm and 21 mm, the chloroform
fraction ranged between 17 mm and 25 mm while the ethyl acetate fraction ranged
between 15 mm and 21 mm. The MIC results of methanol extract, ranged between
12.5 mg/ml and 1.562 mg/ml, chloroform fraction ranged between 12.5 mg/ml and
1.562 mg/ml, while ethyl acetate ranged between 6.25 mg/ml and 1.625 mg/ml. The
MBC of methanol extract and chloroform fraction ranged between 12.5 mg/ml and
1.562 mg/ml, while that of ethyl acetate fraction ranged between 6.2 mg/ml and 1.562
mg/ml. The chloroform fraction being the most active fraction was subjected to
extensive chromatographic purification; white crystalline solid labelled NHPE were
isolated. The structures of the isolated compounds were determined to be a mixture αamyrin and β-amyrin using 1D and 2D NMR.
<br></p>
Project Overview
<p>
<b>1.0 INTRODUCTION </b></p><p><b>1.1 BACKGROUND STUDY </b></p><p>Medicinal plants have been identified and used throughout human history. Plants have the
ability to synthesize a wide variety of chemical compounds that are used to perform
important biological functions, and to defend against attack from predators such as insects,
fungi and herbivorous mammals (Babalola, 2009). Chemical compounds in plant mediate
their effects on the human body through processes identical to those already well
understood for the chemical compounds in conventional drugs; thus herbal medicines do
not differ greatly from conventional drugs in terms of how they work. This enables herbal
medicines to be as effective as conventional medicines, but also gives them the same
potential to cause harmful side effects. Ethnobotany (the study of traditional human uses
of plants) is recognized as an effective way to discover future medicines. In 2001,
researchers identified 122 compounds used in modern medicine which were derived from
ethnomedical plant sources (Babalola, 2009). Many of the pharmaceuticals currently
available to physicians have a long history of use, as herbal remedies, including aspirin,
digitalis, quinine, and opium. Treatment of diseases is almost universal among nonindustrialized societies, and is often more affordable than purchasing expensive modern
pharmaceuticals (Beltrame et al., 2002). The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates
that 80 percent of the population of some Asian and African countries presently use herbal
medicine for some aspect of primary health care (Beltrame et al., 2002). Studies in the
United States and Europe have shown that the use of herbal madicine is less common in
clinical settings, but has become increasingly more in recent years as scientific evidence
about it effectiveness has become more widely available. The annual global export value of pharmaceutical plants in 2011 accounted for over US$ 2.2 billion.</p><p> Plants have
continued to be major source of medicine either in the form of traditional medicine
preparations or as pure active principles (Hill, 2011). This has made it important to
identify plants with useful therapeutic actions for possible isolation and characterization of
their active constituents. About 80 % of the world population relies on the use of
traditional medicine which is predominantly based on plant materials (Brunton et al.,
2006). Plant have been part of our lives since beginning of time, we get numerous
products from plants, most of them, not only good and beneficial but also crucial to our
existence. The use of plant to heal or combats illness is probably as old as human kind.
Out of these simple beginning came the pharmaceutical industry. Yet the current view of
plant is very different from how it all started. The acceptance of traditional medicine as an
alternate form of health care and the development of microbial resistance to the available
antibiotics has led researchers to investigate the antimicrobial herbal extract (WHO,
1993). In Africa, particularly Nigeria is rich in plants which are used in herbal medicine to
cure diseases and to heal injuries. Some of these plants exhibit a wide range of biological
and pharmacological activities such as antihelmenthics, oxytoxic laxative (Hostettmann et
al., 2012). The secondary metabolites of plant provide human with numerous biological
active components which have been used extensively as drugs, foods, additives, flavours,
insecticides and chemicals. They exhibited remarkable biological activities, which include
inhibitory effects on enzymes, modulatory effects on some cell types, protect against
allergies antioxidants (Dongmo et al., 2001).</p><p>
<b>1.2 SECONDARY METABOLITES </b></p><p><b><i>1.2.1 Alkaloid</i></b> </p><p>Alkaloids are a group of naturally occurring chemical compounds that contain mostly
basic nitrogen atoms e.g Coniine (1) and Quinine (2). This group also includes some
related compounds with neutral and even weakly acidic properties. Some synthetic
compounds of similar structure are also attributed to alkaloids. In addition to carbon,
hydrogen and nitrogen, alkaloids may also contain oxygen, sulphur and more rarely other
elements such as chlorine, bromine, and phosphorus. Alkaloids are produced by a large
variety of organisms, including bacteria, fungi, plants, and animals, and are part of the
group of natural products (also called secondary metabolites). Many alkaloids can be
purified from crude extracts by acid-base extraction. Many alkaloids are toxic to other
organisms (Kumar et al., 2010). They often have pharmacological effects and are used as
medications, as recreational drugs, or in entheogenic rituals (Kumar et al., 2010).
</p><p>
<b>1.2.2 FLAVONOID </b></p><p>Flavonoids are a class of plant secondary metabolites. Flavonoids are also described as
non-ketone polyhydroxy polyphenol compounds which are more specifically termed as
flavanoids e.g Isoflavan (3) and Neoflavonoid (4). The three cycle or heterocycles in the
flavonoid backbone are generally called ring A, B and C. Ring A usually shows a
phloroglucinol substitution pattern. Flavonoids are widely distributed in plants, fulfilling
many functions (Dongmo et al., 2001). Flavonoids are the most important plant pigments
for flower coloration, producing yellow or red/blue pigmentation in petals designed to
attract pollinator animals. In higher plants, flavonoids are involved in UV filtration,
symbiotic nitrogen fixation and floral pigmentation. They may also act as chemical
messengers, physiological regulators, and cell cycle inhibitors (Kumar et al., 2010).
<br></p><p>
<b>1.2.3 TERPENE</b></p><p>Compounds classified as terpenes constitute what is arguably the largest and most diverse
class of natural products. A majority of these compounds are found only in plants, but
some of the larger and more complex terpenes occur in animals, e.g Isopentenyl
pyrophosphate (5), is the basic unit in which terpene exist in natural organism. Instead, the
number and structural organization of carbons is a definitive characteristic. Terpenes may
be considered to be made up of isoprene (more accurately isopentane) units, an empirical
feature known as the isoprene rule (Dongmo et al., 2001).
<br></p><p>
<b>1.2.4 STERIOD</b><b></b></p><p> The important classes of lipids called steroids are actually metabolic derivatives of
terpenes, but they are customarily treated as a separate group. Steroids may be recognized
by their tetracyclic skeleton, consisting of three fused six-membered and one fivemembered ring. These rings are synthesized by biochemical processes from cyclization of
a thirty-carbon chain. Hundreds of steroids are found in animals, fungi and plants e.g
cholesterol (6), the sex homones, estradiol and testosterone (Kaisar et al., 2011).
<br></p>