2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2009.09.066
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Survey of 55 Turkish Salvia taxa for their acetylcholinesterase inhibitory and antioxidant activities

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Cited by 121 publications
(68 citation statements)
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“…The n-butanol extract had the highest TPC value (379 mg GAE/g dry extract), while the lowest one (22 mg GAE/ g dry extract) was exhibited by the water extract (Table 1). Moreover, TPC of the S. sclareoides n-butanol extract was higher than those reported for South African Salvia species (45.6-212 mg GAE/g dry extract) (Kamatou et al, 2010) and for the Turkish plant Salvia fruticosa, where a TPC of 87.9 mg GAE/g dry extract was given for a dichloromethane extract (Senol et al, 2010). The TPC of S. sclareoides is, however, consistent with the one reported for the ethanolic extract of Salvia juduica (380.5 mg GAE/g dry extract) evaluated by the Folin Dennis method (Al-Ismail, Herzallah, & Rustom, 2007).…”
Section: Chemical Analysiscontrasting
confidence: 68%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The n-butanol extract had the highest TPC value (379 mg GAE/g dry extract), while the lowest one (22 mg GAE/ g dry extract) was exhibited by the water extract (Table 1). Moreover, TPC of the S. sclareoides n-butanol extract was higher than those reported for South African Salvia species (45.6-212 mg GAE/g dry extract) (Kamatou et al, 2010) and for the Turkish plant Salvia fruticosa, where a TPC of 87.9 mg GAE/g dry extract was given for a dichloromethane extract (Senol et al, 2010). The TPC of S. sclareoides is, however, consistent with the one reported for the ethanolic extract of Salvia juduica (380.5 mg GAE/g dry extract) evaluated by the Folin Dennis method (Al-Ismail, Herzallah, & Rustom, 2007).…”
Section: Chemical Analysiscontrasting
confidence: 68%
“…Hence, evaluation of radical scavenging properties and antioxidant activity is relevant with plants claimed to have medicinal applications. A variety of Salvia species were reported to have promising radical scavenging activities, namely S. officinalis (Oboh & Hente, 2009), Turkish (Senol et al, 2010) and South African (Kamatou, Viljoen, & Steenkamp, 2010) species.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Asekun et al, 2007;Ross & Sombrero, 1991;Singh et al, 2008). Many targets, including acetylcholinesterase and octopaminic systems, have been proposed as the cause of killing insects exposed to fumigation with essential oils (Kostyukovsky et al, 2002;Enan, 2005a,b;Orhan et al, 2008;López & Pascual-Villalobos, 2010;Şenol et al, 2010). The cowpea beetle, Callosobruchus maculatus (F.) (Coleoptera: Bruchidae) is an important pest that causes great damage to cowpea and other stored pulses (Casswell, 1988;Dongre et al, 1993).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The members of Salvia are biennial, annual or perennial and herbaceous, suffruticose or shrubby (Standley and Williams 1973, Hedge 1982, Wu and Li 1982, Ozdemir and Senel 1999, Kharazian 2011. Species of Salvia genus have anti-tumour, anti-diabetic, anti-septic, anti-oxidant and anti-bacterial effects (Demirci et al 2005, Ulubelen et al 2001, Senol et al 2010). Anatolia is a major centre for Salvia taxa, and 47 of these species are endemic for Turkey (Davis et al 1988, Vural and Adıgüzel 1996, Donmez 2001, Kahraman et al 2009.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%