Resumen :
Plants of the genus Porophyllum (Asteraceae) have traditional medicinal uses, but only 8 of
25 species have been studied. This study aimed to profile volatile compounds, phenolics,
and fatty acids in dried leaves and stems of Porophyllum gracile and assess biological
activities of extracts obtained using different solvents. GC-MS, HPLC-DAD, and GC-FID
analyses identified over 120 compounds, including fatty acids, chlorogenic acid derivatives,
quercetin derivatives, terpenes, ketones, aldehydes, and alcohols. Antioxidant activity
in vitro (ABTS, DPPH, and FRAP assays) suggested a strong electron-transfer-mediated
mechanism. In ARPE-19 cells under doxorubicin-induced oxidative stress, hexane and
ethanolic extracts from leaves and stems significantly reduced intracellular reactive oxygen
species, in some cases outperforming vitamin E. No antiproliferative activity was detected
against cancer cell lines (MDA-MB-231, HeLa, A549, HCT 116, 22Rv1), nor cytotoxicity
toward non-cancerous cells (ARPE-19, hFOB 1.19). This first detailed phytochemical
characterization of P. gracile demonstrates its cellular antioxidant potential and supports its
application as a natural antioxidant source in functional foods or nutraceuticals. Future
work should elucidate mechanisms, isolate active compounds, and evaluate bioavailability
in in vivo models.
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