| Literature DB >> 23429342 |
Hongyu Wang1, Lixia Song, Shengbao Feng, Yuancai Liu, Gang Zuo, Fuli Lai, Guangyuan He, Mingjie Chen, Dejian Huang.
Abstract
Characterization of polyphenolic compounds in the stems of P. multiflorum was conducted using HPLC, high resolution LC-MS and LC-MSn. Proanthocyanidins in particular were isolated in 4.8% yield using solvent extraction followed by Sephadex LH-20 fractionation. HPLC analysis using a diol column revealed oligomers (from dimer to nonamer) as minor components, with (epi)catechin monomeric units predominating, and oligomers with higher degree of polymerization being dominant. Thiolysis treatment of the proanthocyanidins using mercaptoacetic acid produced thioether derivatives of (epi)catechin as the major product and a mean value of the degree of polymerization of 32.6 was estimated from the ratio of terminal and extension units of the (epi)catechin. The isolated proanthocyanidins were shown to strongly inhibit α-amylase with an acarbose equivalence (AE) value of 1,954.7 µmol AE/g and inhibit α-glucosidase with an AE value of 211.1 µmol AE/g.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23429342 PMCID: PMC6270252 DOI: 10.3390/molecules18022255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1HPLC chromatogram of phenolic compounds in P. multiflorum Thunb.
LC-HR-MS and LC-MSn data for compounds.
| Peak No. | Compound identity | Predicted | Mass Error (ppm) | MSn fragmentations [M−H]− | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dimer, (epi)C2 | 577.1366 | 577.1351 | −2.5 | 451,425,287 |
| Molecular formula | C30H26O12 | ||||
| 2 | Trimer, (epi)C3 | 865.2010 | 865.1985 | −2.8 | 575,407 |
| Molecular formula | C45H38O18 | ||||
| 3 | Trimer, (epi)C2+(epi)CG | 1017.2071 | 1017.2095 | 2.4 | 847,729, 677,577,287 |
| Molecular formula | C52H42O22 | ||||
| 4 | Ester of phenylpropanoid and phenylethanoid glucoside | 839.2396 | 839.2404 | 1.0 | 677,641,515 |
| Molecular formula | C41H43O19 | ||||
| 5 | Tetramer, (epi)C4 | 1153.2572 | 1153.2619 | 4.1 | 863,575,407 |
| Molecular formula | C60H50O24 | ||||
| 6 | Tetrahydroxystilbene glucoside | 405.1190 | 405.1191 | 0.3 | 243,137 |
| Molecular formula | C20H22O9 | ||||
| 7 | Methyl- | 497.0934 | 497.0937 | 0.6 | 345,327 |
| Molecular formula | C21H22O14 | ||||
| 8 | Emodin- | 431.0982 | 431.0984 | 0.3 | 269,241 |
| Molecular formula | C21H20O10 | ||||
| 9 | Physcion- | 445.1149 | 445.1140 | −1.9 | 283,268 |
| Molecular formula | C22H22O10 | ||||
| 10 | Physcion | 283.0599 | 283.0612 | 4.5 | 268,240 |
| Molecular formula | C16H12O5 | ||||
| 11 | Emodin | 269.0445 | 269.0455 | 3.9 | 241,224 |
| Molecular formula | C15H10O5 |
Figure 2Structures of phenolic compounds identified in P. multiflorum Thunb. G, galloyl group; Glu, glucose.
Figure 3HPLC chromatogram of proanthocyanidins in P. multiflorum Thunb. The identities of the compounds are listed in Table 2.
Observed ions of proanthocyanidins in P. multiflorum Thunb by ESI-MS (anionic mode).
| Peak number | Compound identity | MS2 fragmentation ions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dimer, (epi)C2 | 577 | 451,425,287 |
| 2 | Trimer, (epi)C3 | 865 | 575,407 |
| 3 | Trimer, (epi)C2-(epi)CG | 1017 | 847,729,577,287 |
| 4 | Tetramer, (epi)C4 | 1153 | 863,575,407 |
| 5 | Tetramer, (epi)C3-(epi)CG | 1305 | 1179,1017,847,729,577,451 |
| 6 | Pentamer, (epi)C5 | 1441 | 1315,1151,865 |
| 7 | Pentamer, (epi)C4-(epi)CG | 1593 | 1467,1441,1305,1017,727,575,447 |
| 8 | Hexamer, (epi)C6 | 1729 | 1603,1577,1441,1151,1027,863.737,576 |
| 9 | Hexamer, (epi)C5-(epi)CG | 1881 | 1729,1593,1305,1177,1015,865,739 |
(epi)C, (epi)CG are the abbreviation for (epi)catechin, (epi)catechin gallate, respectively. The number in subscript indicates that the number of monomers.
Figure 4HPLC chromatographic profile of thiolysis products of proanthocyanidins. Catechin, 1; epicatechin, 2; catechin thioether, 3; epicatechin thioether, 4; (epi)catechin gallate thioether, 5.
Figure 5(a) Kinetic curves of α-amylase under different concentration ofproanthocyanidins extract; (b) α-amylase inhibition activity vs. concentrations of proanthocyanidins extract; (c) Kinetic curves of α-glucosidase under different concentration of proanthocyanidins extract; (d) α-glucosidase inhibition activity vs. concentrations of proanthocyanidins extract.