Abstract:
Vateria copallifera is an endemic plant to Sri Lanka, and it is used traditionally for the
treatment of wound healing. Therefore, this study focused on the antibacterial activity of
fractionations obtained from the acetone extract of roots of V.copallifera. The root was
collected and authenticated by the national herbarium. The powdered root was macerated
with acetone and the solvent was removed using a rotatory evaporator under reduced
pressure. The dried crude extract was analysed in the thin layer chromatography, followed by
silica flash column chromatography, and obtained as five distinct fractions (F1, F2, F3, F4,
F5). The antimicrobial activity of fractions was tested against Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC
25923) and Escherichia coli (ATCC 25922) using the agar well diffusion method and coamoxiclav
as positive control and acetone as negative control. A preliminary phytochemical
screening was carried out for antimicrobial active fraction F5. The diameter of the zone of
inhibition(mm) was expressed as Mean ± Standard Deviation of the mean and the
antimicrobial activity of extracts was analyzed with one-way ANOVA. F3, F4 and F5
showed antibacterial activity against both organisms, however F1 and F2 showed
antibacterial activity against only for S. aureus. Among the five fractions, F5 demonstrated
better activity compared to the others for S. aureus (17.67 ± 0.57 mm) and E. coli
(16.00±0.00 mm) while the zone of inhibition for co-amoxiclav was 24.13 ± 0.74 mm and
34.46±0.63 mm respectively. Phytochemical analysis indicated that the F5 showed positive
results for polyphenol. One-way ANOVAs revealed that the antimicrobial inhibitory effects
showed by standard and fractions differed significantly (P < 0.05). This study revealed that
fractionation F5 showed better antibacterial activity against the S. aureus and E. coli than
other fractions and possibly phenolic compound was responsible for its antibacterial activity.