| Literature DB >> 28828287 |
Jitendriya Panigrahi1, Saikat Gantait2,3, Illa C Patel4.
Abstract
The present study documents a simultaneous production and comparative assessment of extracted vasicinone from in vivo (leaves and stems) and in vitro (leaves, stems and calli) plant parts of Adhatoda vasica Nees, a well-known medicinal plant. High-performance thin layer chromatography (HPTLC) analysis of the above-mentioned plant parts, collected at their 60-day-old growth stage, was performed via methanolic extraction and with the aid of toluene:butanol:butyl acetate (9:0.5:0.5; v/v/v) solvent system. The method was validated with the help of aluminium sheet precoated with silica gel 60 F254 TLC plates, following the ICH guidelines in order to maintain accuracy, precision and repeatability. Correlation coefficient, limit of detection and limit of quantification values were found to be reasonable. The outcome revealed a linearity that ranged between 2 and 6 µg/spot. During the comparison of estimated vasicinone quantity from in vivo and in vitro plant parts, it was evident that in vitro samples produced relatively higher vasicinone than that of the in vivo counterparts. Maximum vasicinone (6.402 ± 0.010% of dry weight) production was quantified from in vitro leaves followed by calli (5.222 ± 0.092% of dry weight) and in vitro stems (2.007 ± 0.041% of dry weight). On the other hand, in vivo leaves and stems produced comparatively lower quantities of vasicinone (2.412 ± 0.139 and 1.933 ± 0.046% of dry weight, respectively) suggesting the in vitro clonal propagation as a superior approach in comparison to in vivo propagation. Nonetheless, simultaneous production from both the sources (in vivo and in vitro plant parts) provides a new avenue for augmented production of vasicinone.Entities:
Keywords: Adhatoda vasica; HPTLC; Malabar nut; Medicinal plant; Vasicinone
Year: 2017 PMID: 28828287 PMCID: PMC5559387 DOI: 10.1007/s13205-017-0882-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: 3 Biotech ISSN: 2190-5738 Impact factor: 2.406
Fig. 1In vivo and in vitro propagation of Adhatoda vasica Nees for simultaneous production, extraction and quantification of vasicinone. a In vivo propagation through stem-cuttings; b in vitro multiple shoot and leaf regeneration from nodal-segment explant; c in vitro callus induction from nodal-segment explant
Fig. 2TLC profile of the Adhatoda vasica Nees samples at 233 nm remission; samples extracted from in vivo and in vitro sources along with vasicinone as standard
Fig. 3Overlay spectra of methanolic extract of different parts of in vivo and in vitro grown Adhatoda vasica Nees at 233 nm
Fig. 4HPTLC fingerprinting (all tracks at 233 nm) of vasicinone along with the methanolic extract of different parts of in vivo and in vitro grown Adhatoda vasica Nees
Fig. 5Calibration curve of vasicinone
Fig. 6Specificity in Adhatoda vasica Nees samples at 233 nm remission
Fig. 7Comparative vasicinone content (mean value ± standard error bar; n = 3) in various (in vivo and in vitro) plant parts of Adhatoda vasica Nees. Columns with the different letters are significant at P = 0.05 based on one-way analysis of variance followed by Duncan’s multiple range test (Duncan 1955)