| Literature DB >> 26231294 |
Dorota Wianowska1, Rafał Typek2, Andrzej L Dawidowicz2.
Abstract
The analytical procedures for determining plant constituents involve the application of sample preparation methods to fully isolate and/or pre-concentrate the analyzed substances. High-temperature liquid extraction is still applied most frequently for this purpose. The present paper shows that high-temperature extraction cannot be applied for the analysis of chlorogenic acids (CQAs) and their derivatives in plants as it causes the CQAs transformation leading to erroneous quantitative estimations of these compounds. Experiments performed on different plants (black elder, hawthorn, nettle, yerba maté, St John's wort and green coffee) demonstrate that the most appropriate method for the estimation of CQAs/CQAs derivatives is sea sand disruption method (SSDM) because it does not induce any transformation and/or degradation processes in the analyzed substances. Owing to the SSDM method application we found that the investigated plants, besides four main CQAs, contain sixteen CQAs derivatives, among them three quinic acids. The application of SSDM in plant analysis not only allows to establish a true concentration of individual CQAs in the examined plants but also to determine which chlorogenic acids derivatives are native plant components and what is their concentration level. What is even more important, the application of SSDM in plant analysis allows to eliminate errors that may arise or might have arisen in the study of chlorogenic acids and their derivatives in plant metabolism.Entities:
Keywords: Chlorogenic acids (CQAs); Chlorogenic acids derivatives; Plants analysis; Sample preparation; Sea sand disruption method (SSDM)
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26231294 DOI: 10.1016/j.phytochem.2015.07.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phytochemistry ISSN: 0031-9422 Impact factor: 4.072