24 June 2026
University of Jaffna
Asia/Colombo timezone

Nutritional composition, mineral profile, anti-nutritional factors, and anti-diabetic potential of Poruthumaan; an underexplored plant species

Not scheduled
20m
1/1-1 - Auditorium, Faculty of Agriculture (University of Jaffna)

1/1-1 - Auditorium, Faculty of Agriculture

University of Jaffna

Faculty of Agriculture Ariviyal Nagar, Kilinochchi Sri Lanka.
300
Oral Presentation Food Science and Nutrition

Speaker

Ms Sripriya R D M

Description

Poruthumaan is an underutilized medicinal creeper widely grown in the Northern Province of Sri Lanka and traditionally consumed for relieving menstrual discomfort, enhance bone strength, and managing arthritis. Despite its long-standing use in local diets, its nutritional and functional values have not been scientifically reported. This study aimed to analyze the proximate composition, mineral profile, anti-nutritional factors and anti-diabetic potential of Poruthumaan leaf powder. Poruthumaan leaf powder was prepared by grinding cabinet-dried (40 °C for 12 hours) mature leaves in to fine powder. The sample was analyzed for proximate composition, mineral profile, antinutritional factors and anti-diabetic potential (using α-amylase inhibition assay). The results revealed that dried Poruthumaan leaf powder is highly rich in fiber (24.12 ± 1.39%). The crude protein, crude fat, and ash contents of the dried leaf powder were 8.94 ± 0.08%, 1.07 ± 0.02%, and 8.37±0.09%, respectively. Mineral analysis reported a notably high calcium content (1835±10.2 mg/100g). Further, the results demonstrated that Prothumaan leaf powder is a good source of a number of other minerals such as Mn, Zn, Fe and Mg. Anti-nutritional factors such as tannins (hydrolysable tannin (92.9 ± 067 mg/100g) and condensed tannin (1.08 ± 0.12 mg/100g) and oxalates (352.24 ± 3.18 mg/100g) were detected at concentrations similar to commonly consumed medicinal leaves. The α-amylase inhibition assay showed strong enzyme inhibitory activity (IC50=28.05 µg/mL) comparable to the standard (Quercetin) (IC50=35.69 µg/mL). This study provides the first scientific evidence validating the nutritional richness and bioactive potential of Poruthumaan leaf. Future studies should focus on bioactive compounds profiling and underlying mechanisms responsible for the anti-diabetic effects, assessing mineral bioavailability and safety, and validate the functional potential through in-vivo experiments.

Author

Co-author

Subajiny Sivakanthan (University of Jaffna)

Presentation materials