| Literature DB >> 25134766 |
Yingjie Wei1, Ping Li2, Hongwei Fan3, Yunru Peng4, Wei Liu5, Changmei Wang6, Luan Shu7, Xiaobin Jia8.
Abstract
Zebrafish, a common model organism for studies of vertebrate development and gene function, has been used in pharmaceutical research as a new and powerful tool in recent years. In the present study, we applied zebrafish for the first time in a metabolic study of notoginsenoside (R1), ginsenoside (Rg1) and ginsenoside (Rb1), which are saponins isolated from Panax notoginseng. Metabolites of these three saponin compounds in zebrafish after exposure for 24 h were identified by high performance liquid chromatography - electrospray mass spectrometry (HPLC-ESI-MS) with a Zorbax C-18 column for separation using a binary gradient elution of 0.05% formic acid acetonitrile - 0.05% formic acid water. The quasi-molecular ions of compounds were detected in negative mode. Step-wise deglycosylation metabolites and hydroxylation metabolites of the three saponins were found, which were coincide with regular methods for metabolic analysis. Our study demonstrated that the zebrafish model can successfully imitate the current metabolic model with advantages of lower cost, far less amount of compound needed, easy set up and high performance. Our data suggests that the zebrafish metabolic model has the potential for developing a novel method for quickly predicting the metabolism of Chinese herb components, including those of trace compounds.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 25134766 PMCID: PMC6264432 DOI: 10.3390/molecules16086621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Structures of notoginsenoside R1, ginsenoside Rg1 and ginsenoside Rb1 in Radix Panaxnotoginseng in this study.
Figure 2Total ion chromatogram (A: solution; and B: zebrafish) and extracted ion chromatograms for notoginsenoside R1 after zebrafish exposure for 24 h.
Figure 3Total ion chromatogram (A: solution; and B: zebrafish) and extracted ion chromatograms for ginsenoside Rg1 after zebrafish exposure for 24 h.
Figure 4Total ion chromatogram (A: solution; and B: zebrafish) and extracted ion chromatograms for ginsenoside Rb1 after zebrafish exposure for 24 h.
MS data for R1, Rg1 and Rb1 and their metabolites after zebrafish exposure for 24 h.
| [M−H]− | [M+HCOO]− | |||||||
| R1 | 21.91 | 931.84 | 977.73 | 932.8 | Notoginsenoside R1 | + | + | [ |
| 13.91 | 947.71 | 993.46 | 948.7 | Hydroxynotoginsenoside R1 | + |
[ | ||
| 25.98 | 799.81 | 845.83 | 800.8 | Ginsenoside Rg1 | + | [ | ||
| 48.07 | 769.24 | 815.54 | 770.2 | Notoginsenoside R2 | + | [ | ||
| 68.52 | 637.21 | 683.1 | 638.2 | Ginsenoside F1 or Rh1 | + | [ | ||
| Rg1 | 26.1 | 799.81 | 845.83 | 800.8 | Ginsenoside Rg1 | + | + | [ |
| 13.06 | 861.77 | 816.8 | Hydroxyginsenoside Rg1 | + | [ | |||
| 55.31 | 637.69 | 683.23 | 638.7 | Ginsenoside F1 or Rh1 | + | [ | ||
| Rb1 | 48.93 | 1107.78 | 1153.46 | 1108.9 | Ginsenoside Rb1 | + | + | [ |
| 42.16 | 1123.03 | 1169.47 | 1124 | Hydroxyginsenoside Rb1 | + | [ | ||
| 49.13 | 944.86 | 991.26 | 946 | Ginsenoside Rd | + | + | [ | |
| 63.98 | 783.87 | 829.98 | 784.8 | Ginsenoside Rg3 or F2 | + | [ | ||
| 68.66 | 620.79 | 666.75 | 622 | Ginsenoside Rh2 or C-K | + | + | [ | |
+ detected.
Figure 5Representative MS spectra of notoginsenoside R1, ginsenoside Rg1 and ginsenoside Rb1 and their transformative components by zebrafish.
Figure 6The possible metabolic pathways of notoginsenoside R1, ginsenoside Rg1 and ginsenoside Rb1 by zebrafish.