Qualitative and quantitative analysis of different extracts of Monochoria vaginalis (Diya habarala) grown in Sri Lanka
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Faculty of Science, University of Kelaniya
Abstract
Monochoria vaginalis, locally known as Diya habarala belonging to the family Pontederiaceae
is an endemic species with many medicinal uses in Ayurveda and Traditional medicine. This is
used to treat dermatological disorders and also an ingredient of Neelyaadi oil. Since current trend
is to develop quality control parameters for the standardization of herbal drugs; the study was
aimed at the establishment of qualitative and quantitative analytical parameters for whole aerial
parts of M. vaginalis. Plants were collected from Western province, Sri Lanka and authenticated
from the National Herbarium, Botanical Garden, Peradeniya, Sri Lanka. Long petioles with leaves
except underground parts were obtained. They were cleaned, oven-dried at a temperature below
45 ⁰C until a constant weight was obtained and powdered. Extracts were obtained with distilled
water, methanol and acetone. The aqueous extract was obtained by hot Soxhlet extraction while
methanol and acetone extracts were obtained by cold maceration. Each was subjected to
preliminary phytochemical screening, determination of physico-chemical parameters and HighPerformance Thin Layer Chromatography (HPTLC). TLC was run to select the best solvent
system for each extract. Normal phase TLC was run for methanol and acetone extracts while
reverse phase TLC was run for aqueous extract and HPTLC fingerprints were obtained. Each test
was conducted in triplicate and results were expressed as mean±standard deviation using SPSS
25. All extracts contained carbohydrates, terpenoids and flavonoids. Aqueous and methanol
extracts contained saponins, phenols, diterpenes and reducing sugars. Proteins were found only
in aqueous extract while glycosides and phytosterols were found in acetone extract. Total ash,
acid insoluble ash, water soluble ash, loss on drying, extractability in distilled water, methanol
and acetone were 14.91±0.29, 6.15±2.92, 8.88±3.28, 11.66±0.65, 23.62±1.04, 17.46±0.17 and
2.89±0.11 % w/w respectively. HPTLC fingerprint of aqueous extract exhibited 9 Rf values; 0.06,
0.14, 0.17, 0.20, 0.40, 0.44, 0.50, 0.75 and 0.82 with distilled water: methanol (4:2). HPTLC
profile of methanol extract showed 8 Rf values; 0.03, 0.06, 0.17, 0.24, 0.43, 0.54, 0.83 and 0.90
with methanol: n-hexane: ethyl acetate (6:2:2). HPTLC profile of acetone extract showed 6 peaks
with Rf values; 0.03, 0.13, 0.17, 0.24, 0.33 and 0.51 with methanol: n-hexane (8:2). Hence, it is
concluded that the above can be used as preliminary quality control parameters of M. vaginalis
aerial parts grown in Western province, Sri Lanka. Further, it is recommended to use more
advanced tools like DNA barcoding in standardization of herbal raw materials.
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Keywords
High Performance Thin Layer Chromatography, Monochoria vaginalis, Physico-chemical, Phytochemical
