2013
DOI: 10.5012/bkcs.2013.34.12.3859
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Ingacamerounol, A New Flavonol and Other Chemical Constituents from Leaves and Stem Bark of Inga edulis Mart.

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Cited by 7 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…It is worth noting that this is the first report of a CG-MS analysis of hexanic extracts from Inga jinicuil . However, similar studies have been documented for other species of the Inga genus; such is the case for I. edulis , where triterpene compounds including lupeol and stigmasterol, as well as aliphatic compounds, have been identified from extracts of the bark and leaves [ 33 , 34 ]. Likewise, extracts from the bark and leaves of I. laurina have shown the presence of terpenes such as phytol, the aliphatic nonacosane, and esterified aliphatic acids [ 35 ], whereas in a hexanic fraction obtained from the leaves of I. semialata , the main compounds isolated were triterpenes, such as lupeol, α-amyrin, oleanolic acid, and friedelin [ 30 ].…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 60%
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“…It is worth noting that this is the first report of a CG-MS analysis of hexanic extracts from Inga jinicuil . However, similar studies have been documented for other species of the Inga genus; such is the case for I. edulis , where triterpene compounds including lupeol and stigmasterol, as well as aliphatic compounds, have been identified from extracts of the bark and leaves [ 33 , 34 ]. Likewise, extracts from the bark and leaves of I. laurina have shown the presence of terpenes such as phytol, the aliphatic nonacosane, and esterified aliphatic acids [ 35 ], whereas in a hexanic fraction obtained from the leaves of I. semialata , the main compounds isolated were triterpenes, such as lupeol, α-amyrin, oleanolic acid, and friedelin [ 30 ].…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 60%
“…Likewise, other studies on leaf extracts from I. edulis , reported the presence of four triterpenes (lupeol, α-amirin, olean-18-ene acid, and frideline), three flavonoids, eight phenolic acids, an anthocyanin derived from delphinidin-3-glycoside, and a mixture of five acylated anthocyanins. It is important to highlight the fact that gallic acid, methyl gallate, protocatechuic acid, and quercetin were also identified [ 33 ]. For I. laurina , there is a presence of flavonoids 3-O-(2″-O-galloyl)-α-rhamnopyranoside and myricetin-3-rhamnoside in leaf extracts [ 19 ], as well as gallic acid, myricetin derivatives, quercetin glycoside, and glycoside myricetin-3-O-rhamnosid from ethanolic extracts of leaves from this plant [ 20 ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Differences between results of these experiments can be caused by dissimilar response of cancer cells to active compounds present in I. edulis as it has previously been observed for various classes of natural compounds (Sak, 2014). Since the kojic acid, recently found in leaves of I. edulis (Tchuenmogne et al, 2013), have exerted significant antioxidant as well as anti-proliferative activities (Novotny et al, 1999;Kusumawati and Indrayanto, 2013) it might considerably contribute to combined biological effect of the plant.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…Previous studies with the genus Inga have shown that phenolic compounds are present in the leaves of Inga umbellifera and Inga goldmani (LOKVAM; COLEY; KURSAR, 2004), in addition to Inga edulis leaves (NASCIMENTO; SOBRINHO; SOUZA; De SOUZA; SOUSA, 2021). From the leaves and bark of the species Inga edulis, phenolic compounds and flavonoids have also been isolated and their antioxidant capacity evaluated (DIAS; SOUZA; ROGEZ, 2010;TCHUENMOGNE et al, 2013). In fruit and vegetable residues, for example, seeds are commonly discarded despite having excellent nutritional and functional characteristics.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%