Abstract:
Background: Polysaccharides are potent natural antioxidants which can greatly slow down or 
prevent substrate oxidation. Hemidesmus indicus has been recognized in traditional medicine 
system for its medicinal attributes such as hepatoprotective, anticancer, antidiabetic, 
antioxidant, nephroprotective, antiulcerogenic, anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial properties. 
Objective: To evaluate in vitro antioxidant activity of the polysaccharide extracted from the 
leaves of H. indicus.
Methods: The matured leaves of H. indicus were collected from Jaffna in Sri Lanka, were 
authenticated at the Department of Plant & Molecular Biology, University of Kelaniya. The 
leaves were washed, and shade dried. The dried leaves were powdered and constituents such 
as lipid and oligosaccharide were removed using petroleum ether and 80% of ethanol by 
maceration process, respectively. Then, the resulting crude product was extracted with hot 
water and subsequently deproteinized with CaCl2 and recrystallized with ethanol to obtain the 
polysaccharide. The antioxidant property of the polysaccharide sample was assessed through 
the 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radical scavenging assay and ferric reduction assay 
using ascorbic acid as the standard, all these procedures were replicated for both standard and 
samples. The IC50 value and the ascorbic acid equivalent of the polysaccharide were calculated 
from the said assays. The statistical significance was evaluated by the analysis of variance 
(ANOVA) followed by Tukey’s test using SPSS software. Differences were considered 
significant when p-value was less than 0.05.
Results: The IC50 values of the polysaccharide extracted from the leaves of H. indicus and
ascorbic acid were found to be 16, 783 and 39 mg/mL, respectively. Further, the extracted 
polysaccharide exhibited an ascorbic acid equivalent of 18.316 μg/mL for ferric reduction assay. 
The IC50 value of the polysaccharide extracted from the leaves of H. indicus and ascorbic acid 
were differed significantly (p< 0.05).
Conclusions: The polysaccharide extracted from the leaves of H. indicus has exhibited notable 
antioxidant properties. Further studies will be carried out to purify and characterize the active 
polysaccharide