EXTACTION OF ALKALOID FROM CARICA PAPAYA (LEAF) AND, THE REVIEW OF ITS MEDICINAL PROPERTIES AND POTENTIAL BENEFITS
ABSTRACT
Carica papaya, a plant
widely used in the traditional medicinal system of India has been
reported to possess analgesic, heart tonic, anti-inflammation,
anti-helminitic and to treat malaria fever, dengue fever, ringworm, high
blood pressure, stomachache, skin sores, fungal infections, jaundice,
rheumatism, psoriasis, sand also used for removal of cancerous growths,
burns and scalds. This project is to extract alkaloid in this plant and
highlights some of the medicinal or pharmacological aspects of the
papaya plant. Extraction of the phytochemical was done using method,
where 50g of 5g each (i.e 10 samples) of the dried pulverized dried
papaya leaves were weighed into a 250ml beaker and 200ml of 10% acetic
acid in ethanol were added and covered and allowed to stand for 4hrs.
This was filtered and the extract was concentrated on a water bath to
one-quarter of the original volume. Concentrated ammonium hydroxide was
added drop wise to the extract until the precipitate was completed. The
whole solution was allowed to settle and alkaloid precipitated. The
precipitate was washed with dilute ammonium hydroxide then filtered. The
residue is the alkaloid which was dried and weighed, yielding 0.3g(6%),
0.44g(8.8%), 0.49g(9.2%), 0.31g(6.2%), 0.50g(10%), 0.46g(9.2%),
0.45g(9%), 0.40g(8%), 0.45g(9%) and 0.39g(7.8%) of a dark green alkaloid
residue for ten (10) samples of 5g each. The findings of this study
recommends that Carica papaya plants may serve as an alternative to
modern drugs in the treatment of certain diseases and also help to
sensitize people on the benefits of Carica papaya plants.
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
The plant kingdom has proven to be the
most useful in the treatment of diseases and they provide an important
source of all the world’s pharmaceuticals. The most important of these
bioactive constituents of plants are steroids, terpenoids, carotenoids,
flavanoids, alkaloids, tannins and glycosides. Often a time, the
bioactive compounds in the plants that intrigue the chemist are the
nitrogen containing bases called alkaloids. Alkaloids have complex
molecule structures. They are usually bitter in taste and are
characterized by powerful physiologic activities. Some alkaloids
stimulate the central nervous system, while others cause paralysis. Some
alkaloids are derived from relatively simple precursors such as
ornithine,lysine, phenylalanine, trytophan, histidine, tyrosine,
aspartic acid and anthranilic acid. The alkaloids content in plants is
usually within a few percent and is inhomogeneous over the plant tissues
and could be classified as true alkaloids, proto alkaloids, and pseudo
alkaloids (Rajnikant et al., 2005). Depending on the type of
plants, the maximum concentration is observed in the leaves, some in the
fruits or seeds, others in the root or bark. (Grinkevich and Safronich,
1983). Furthermore, different tissues of the same plants may contain
different alkaloids and these alkaloids are extracted by dissolving the
plant in dilute acid. Plants in all facet of life have served a valuable
starting material for drug development (Ajibesin, 2011). The
phytoconstituents are antibiotic principles of plants yet these
compounds were not well established due to the lack of knowledge and
techniques.
Carica papaya also known as
paw-paw is one of the many medicinal plants of great importance to the
health of individuals and communities especially in the developing
countries than orthodox medicine, and there is lower incidence of
adverse effects after use. These reasons might account for their
worldwide attention and use. The papaya plant is a small un-branched
tree (about 20-30 ft in height) which is from Caricaceae family; the sole specie in the genus Carica,
Said to be a native of the Caribbean and Central America, the Papaya is
now grown abundantly throughout tropical America, Hawaii and many other
tropical countries. It is an interesting tree, practically, every part
of Carica papaya is of economic value and its use ranged from
nutritional to medicinal and other benefits. The edible part of papaya
which is the fruit is a good source of iron, magnesium, calcium and an
excellent source of vitamin A and C (Nakasone and Paul, 1998). In fact
the vitamin C content in Carica papaya is much higher than in
either tomatoes or oranges (Benson and Poffley, 1998). The Natural
compounds isolated from various parts of the plant such as leaves,
fruits, stem, roots, seeds have been shown to possess excellent
medicinal properties including anticancer, antiviral, anti-inflammatory,
antimicrobial, anti-diabetic, antihypertensive, wound healing activity,
free radical scavenging activity and increase in thrombocyte count,
etc. The unripe fruit of papaya is used as mild laxative and
abortifacient agent and leaves are used for treatment of pyrexia,
malaria fever, diabetes, gonorrhea, syphilis, inflammation and as a
dressing component for wounds.
Other benefit of papaya plant is that,
papaya is an economical fruit. Besides providing food, the crop has
potential to be exploited to serve as source of revenue generation in
the country. The fruit produced can serve not only for domestic trade
but can also be actively exported to countries like Singapore and Hong
Kong. The objective of this study is to extract alkaloids, a bioactive
chemical compound present in Carica papaya leaves. This will
help in determining of its medicinal value which may be useful in
pharmaceutical industry. Also, the economical values of Carica papaya plant which ranged form nutritional to medicinal and other benefits were investigated in this study.
1.2 ALKALOIDS
Human recognition of alkaloids is as old
as civilization, since these substances have been used as drugs in
potions, medicines, teas, poultices and poisons for 400years. Alkaloids
are a group of naturally occurring chemical compounds that contain
mostly basic nitrogen atoms. This group also includes some related
compounds with neutral and even weakly acidic properties (McNaught and
Wilkinson, 1997). Some synthetic compounds of similar structure are also
termed alkaloids. (Robert, 1998) In addition to carbon, hydrogen and
nitrogen, alkaloids may also contain oxygen, sulfur and more rarely
other elements such as chlorine, bromine, and phosphorus. Most alkaloids
contain oxygen in their molecular structure are usually colorless
crystals at ambient conditions. Oxygen-free alkaloids, such as nicotine
or coniine, are typically volatile, colorless, oily liquids. Some
alkaloids are colored, like berberine (yellow) and sanguinarine
(orange). Alkaloids are produced by a large variety of organisms
including bacteria, fungi, plants, and animals. They can be purified
from crude extracts of these organisms by acid-base extraction. Natural
compounds containing nitrogen in the exocyclic position (mescaline,
serotonin, dopamine, etc.) are usually attributed to amines rather than
alkaloids. Some authors, however, consider alkaloids a special case of
amines (Raj, 2004; Aniszewski and Tadeusz, 2007). Most alkaloids are
weak bases, but some, such as theobromine and theophylline, are
amphoteric .Many alkaloids dissolve poorly in water but readily dissolve
in organic solvents, such as diethyl ether, chloroform or 1,
2-dichloroethane, Caffeine, cocaine ,codeine and nicotine are water
soluble (with a solubility of ≥1g/L), whereas others, including morphine
and yohimbine are highly water soluble (0.1– 1 g/L). Alkaloids and
acids form salts of various strengths. These salts are usually soluble
in water and ethanol and poorly soluble in most organic solvents.
Exceptions include scopolamine hydrobromide, which is soluble in organic
solvents, and the water-soluble quinine sulfate. Most alkaloids have a
bitter taste or are poisonous when ingested. Alkaloid production in
plants appeared to have evolved in response to feeding by herbivorous
animals; however, some animals have evolved the ability to detoxify
alkaloids. Some alkaloids can produce developmental defects in the
offspring of animals that consume but cannot detoxify the alkaloids. One
example is the alkaloid cyclopamine, produced in the leaves of corn
lily. During the 1950s, up to 25% of lambs born by sheep that had grazed
on corn lily had serious facial deformations. These ranged from
deformed jaws to cyclopia. After decades of research, in the 1980s, the
compound responsible for these deformities was identified as the
alkaloid 11-deoxyjervine, later renamed to cyclopamine. (Thomas et al,
2004).
1.2.1 ACTIVITY OF ALKALOIDS
Alkaloids have a wide range of
pharmacological activities including antimalarial (e.g. quinine),
antiasthma (e.g. ephedrine ), anticancer (e.g.homoharringtonine),
(Kittakoop et al, 2014) cholinomimetic (e.g.galantamine ), (Russo et al,
2013) vasodilatory (e.g. vincamine ),antiarrhythmic (e.g. quinidine),
analgesic (e.g.morphine), (Raymond et al, 2010) antibacterial (e.g.
chelerythrine ), (Cushnie et al, 2014) and antihyperglycemic activities
(e.g. piperine). (Raymond et al, 2010) .Many have found use in
traditional or modern medicine , or as starting points for drug
discovery .Other alkaloids possess psychotropic (e.g.psilocin ) and
stimulant activities (e.g. cocaine,caffeine , nicotine) and have been
used in entheogenic rituals or as recreational drugs. Alkaloids can be
toxic too (e.g. atropine , tubocurarine). (Robbers et al, 1996) Although
alkaloids act on a diversity of metabolic systems in humans and other
animals, they almost uniformly invoke a bitter taste.
1.3 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
Developing countries are face with high
level of poverty, high cost of living because of inflation and
increasing resistance of diseases such as cancer, malaria, dengue fever
and many more to orthodox drugs. With the passage of time, many problems
associated become prominent like severe side effects. In recent times,
research on medicinal plants has been intensified all over the world.
There is an urgent need to discover new
antimicrobial agents for human and veterinary therapeutic uses, as
resistance to current drugs increases in severity and extent with
frequent use. For instance, many Plasmodium falciparum strains,
the parasite responsible for many fatalities from malaria, have become
resistant to chloroquine (Robert and Meunier,1998). This phenomenon has
also occurred with some important pathogenic bacteria (Setti and
Micetich, 1998). As a result, more than two billion people worldwide are
at high risk of malarial/bacterial diseases. The identification of new
and structurally novel natural products with antimicrobial activity, and
hopefully new modes of action, is one of the ways of tackling this
problem. By targeting alkaloid-containing medicinal plants, specifically
Carica papaya plant, it is hoped that structural novelty with
the required bioactivity will be achieved more efficiently. Alkaloids
have diverse structures and many show a range of pharmacological
activities, there is a need to facilitate the herbal research and its
application to solve the problem of health seeking population.
On the other hand synthetic drugs are
expensive and a large population cannot afford these drugs. The need for
a cheap, renewable, easily available and nutritive source of drug
supplements has therefore attracted the investigation of Carica Papaya leaf as an alternative. This study delves to prove the effectiveness of papaya leaf extract as an agent with pharmacological capabilities thereby increasing access to health care services and reduce cost.
1.4 JUSTIFICATION
Medicinal plants play a major role in
the health care sector of developing nations for the management of
diseases. They have macronutrients and micronutrients, which have
curative and preventive role in combating diseases and for the proper
functioning of vital organs in the body. The phytochemicals and mineral
elements in plants are preserves of good health and boost body immunity.
Phytochemical and bioactivity studies have been done on Carica Papaya
revealing the presence of alkaloids, steroids, flavanoids and many
more, and they have been attributed to the curative properties of the
plants. The mineral elements in this medicinal plant could also
contribute to their curative functions. This study therefore sought to
determine the medicinal properties and other benefits of the plant.
1.5 AIM AND OBJECTIVES
The aim of this research work is to determine the potential medicinal properties of Carica papaya plant.
Objectives
- To extract alkaloid, a photochemical present in Carica Papaya leaf, this helps in determining its potentials that may be useful in pharmaceutical industries.
- To ascertain the quantity of some phytochemicals such as alkaloids in Carica Papaya, this will help in determining the effectiveness of the medicinal plants in treating various diseases and to understand their pharmacological action.
1.6 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
The significance or importance of Carica payaya
plant cut across its economical values ranged from nutritional to
medicinal amongst some potential benefits. It is known that papaya
leaves is one of by-products from papaya tree. These by-products are
generally disposed in open areas. Rather than that, one potential
alternative use for these wastes is extraction of phytochemicals such as
alkaloids and others which produce valuable products. Utilization of
leaves can create waste to wealth, hence reducing the disposal problem.
Furthermore, it has been proved that isolated phytochemicals from papaya
leaves can gives benefit to human health. These alkaloids can be used
as remedy against various diseases, including cancer, malaria, dengue
fever, diabetic heart disease and infectious diseases etc. Thus, this
papaya leaves can create waste to health as it is efficacious and
chemotherapeutically becoming an alternate health care system to solve
the health problems of world in today’s synthetic allopathic era.
Cost wise the Carica papaya is
very cheap and this plant is cosmopolitan in distribution meaning it is
very much available in most of the parts of the world. The finding will
also be used as a baseline study for other researchers working on
medicinal plants and used to sensitize people on the role of traditional
medicine. The concern about the quantitative estimation of various
essential element concentrations is important for determining the
effectiveness of the medicinal plants in treating various diseases and
to understand their pharmacological action.
1.7 SCOPE AND LIMITATION OF THE STUDY
The conceptual and contextual scope of this research includes examining the medicinal potentials (effectiveness) of Carica Papaya, as well as extracting alkaloids, a phytochemical contained in the leaf of Carica Papaya using a feasible method.
Temporal scope of this research is not
time or season bound, it can be carried out in wet or dry season
provided the resource is available
This research is limited to the
qualitative and quantitative analysis of alkaloids, other phytochemicals
and bioactive constituents of Carica Papaya leaf such as saponins, flavanoids, steroids glycosides, and phenols were not extracted and analyzed.
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