| Literature DB >> 29234065 |
Bijayalakshmi Devi Nongmaithem1, Peter Mouatt2, Joshua Smith1,2, David Rudd1, Michael Russell2, Caroline Sullivan1, Kirsten Benkendorff3.
Abstract
Muricidae molluscs are the source of a valuable purple dye that was traded as a luxury item in the Mediterranean region and by the late Byzantine was reserved for royalty and priests. Less well known is the use of muricid opercula in sacred incense and traditional medicines, although they are still used as rare ingredients today. This study provides the first chemical assessment of opercula from Muricidae, based on several traditional preparation procedures. Chemical analysis of opercula smoke revealed aromatic phenols, which act as fragrance stabilisers and produce a "medicinal" odour. Analysis of lipid extracts revealed pharmaceutically active compounds, including brominated indoles, choline esters and adenosine, consistent with their traditional medical applications. Depending on the preparation procedures, toxic pyridine was also detected. ICP-MS analysis of muricid opercula shows the presence of essential macro and microelements, as well as metals, some of which exceed the recommended safe levels for human use. Nevertheless, these findings support the Muricidae as an historically important marine resource, providing Biblical dyes, medicines and perfume. The opercula contains biologically active compounds and produces smoke containing volatile scent compounds, consistent with their identification as the most likely source of onycha, a controversial ingredient in sacred incense.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29234065 PMCID: PMC5727037 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-17551-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Muricid operculum uses and analysis. (A) Muricid opercula (B) high priest attire in the Temple of Jerusalem showing robe dyed with Tekhelet blue and the Ephod and breast plate made of woven Shellfish Purple, Tekhelet blue and red dyed yarn. (Modified from Baruch Sterman). (C) Demonstration of Sudanese women undertaking a smoke bath. (D) Dicathais orbita sample (Scale bar = 1 cm). (E) Operculum smoke analysis with apparatus used for collecting the volatile compounds from opercula smoke, with the help of a blue butane flame applied to the outer surface of a glass pipette.
Ancient and current traditional medicinal uses of Muricidae opercula.
| Country/Ancient Scholar | Source species# | Preparation | Pharmaceutical properties (Treatment/curing) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ancient Greece/Dioscorides and Galen |
| Crushed and mixed with oil and vinegar | Hearing loss, swollen spleen, depression, menstrual cycle abnormalities and after labour for placenta removal |
[ |
| Medieval Eastern Mediterranean Genizah |
|
| Rheumatism or arthritis, stomach ulcer, skin diseases, teeth problems, eye and ear diseases, tumors, epilepsy, paralysis, purgative and treatment of uterine diseases. |
[ |
| Kingdom of Bahrein. Ahmad Ibn Muhammad al-Ghafiqi |
| Fumigation. Smell the smoke produced while placing the operculum on slowly burning charcoal. | Atresia of the uterus |
[ |
| Central Europe and Middle East |
| 1) Fumigation. 2) Ashes of opercula. 3) Operculum medicine ( | 1) Dislodge the placenta after labour. 2) Wound healing. 3) Reduced swollen spleen |
[ |
| Chinese traditional medicine |
| Decoct* the operculum (10–20 g) and ingest; Ustulate$ the shell, grind into powder and apply externally. | Clear heat, expel toxins, remove dampness through diuresis, used to treat strangury (painful & frequent urination), swelling and ulcers on the body surface, hepatic coma, eye diseases and dysentery. |
[ |
| Southern India ancient Sanskrit medical texts | Muricidae opercula | “Nakhi” used in incense and medicinal oil heated in clarified butter or cooked with honey | Destroys poison, destroys certain types of skin diseases, remove phlegm. When used in incense it is said to be like a “prostitute” or “market place charmer” |
[ |
| Modern India | Muricidae opercula | Opercula oil “Choya Nakh”. Dry distillation of the roasted opercula mixed with a base oil, usually cedarwood oil | Mix a few drops of opercula oil with other incense ingredients. Inhalation of incense smoke to cure stomach pain, liver ailments, epilepsy and irregular menses. |
[ |
#Accepted names are provided according to the World Register of Marine Species[76] with the alternative names in the original source in brackets, *decoct is to extract by boiling; $ustulate is to blacken or scorch.
Volatile compounds detected by GCMS from the muricid Dicathais orbita opercula smoke after different preparation treatments.
| Compound | Structure# | Retention time (min) | Major ion m/z | Relative abundance (% compound ± SD)$ | Permissible exposure limit (ppm) | Bioactive properties or uses | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Untreated opercula | 70% Ethanol soaked | 5% Acetic acid soaked | ||||||
| Pyridine |
| 3.29 | 79 | 39.21 (±3.09) | ND | ND | 15[ | toxic compound[ |
| Acetamide |
| 4.38 | 59, 44 | ND | 2.66 (±0.25) | ND | NA | skin and hair cosmetic ingredient[ |
| Chloro-phenol* |
| 9.4 | 130, 128, 100 | 25.14 (±0.38)* | 47.08 (±1.28)* | 37.07 (±1.09) * | odour quality described as ‘medicinal’[ | |
| Phenol* |
| 9.45 | 94 | 5[ | fragrances and as an antioxidant[ | |||
| Para cresol |
| 11.2 | 107, 90 | 21.08 (±0.83) | 35 (±1.58) | 42.56 ± 1.04) | 5[ | ingredient in fragrances and an antioxidant[ |
| Chloro-methylphenol |
| 11.52 | 144, 142, 107 | 4.89 | 5.08 (±0.39) | 4.99 (±0.27) | NA | estrogen receptor binding activity[ |
| Dichloro- phenol |
| 13.3 | 166, 164, 162 | traces | 2.93 (±0) | 3.36 (±0) | NA | odour quality described as ‘medicinal’[ |
#Representative structures only, the specific isomers have not been positively identified for the relevant phenols.
*Although 2-chlorophenol eluted slightly earlier than phenol, due to the relatively large amount of phenol, these compounds co-eluted as overlapping peaks in most of the samples. Therefore, the relative abundance for phenol and 2-chlorophenol have been quantified together by integrating the combined area under the curve. It is estimated that approximately 80% of this combined area is due to phenol based on the peak profiles of the mass ions for m/z 94 vs m/z 128 for chlorophenol.
$The total relative abundance for the compounds presented here does not add up to 100% due to the presence of other unidentified compounds in the extracts. ND – Not detected over the minimum detection level (<0.1%), traces refers compounds that can be confirmed by MS but with a relative abundance of 0.1–0.5% in the GC, NA- Not Available.
Figure 2Analysis of the opercula smoke extracts. (A) GC-MS of the smoke extracts of Dicathais orbita opercula showing total ion current chromatograms overlaid for three different opercula preparations, untreated (orange line), soaked in 5% acetic acid (blue line) or soaked in 70% ethanol (purple line). (B) Preliminary LC-MS comparison of opercula smoke extracts from Chicoreus ramosus (black line) and D. orbita (red line), to reference standards for phenol and para-cresol (green line). The HPLC chromatograms are presented from the diode array detected at 210 nm. The X axis represents the retention time (minutes) and Y axis represents the absorbance units (mAU) from the diode array. Phenol and cresol can not be detected in the total ion current (Supplementary Fig. S2A), but the retentions times (phenol r.t 5.48 min and cresol r.t 7.17 min), UV-Vis spectra and selected ion monitoring (Supplementary Figure S2) correspond to synthetic reference standards. A dichlorophenol is tentatively identified in the extracts (r.t. 3.021 min) by the mass spectra (inset, UV-Vis in Supplementary Figure S2 B, C). Due to a very limited number of C. ramosus opercula, these samples were much more dilute than D. orbita. Compound structures are representative of possible isomers for the phenols.
Figure 3Chemical analysis of D. orbita opercula hexane extract showing. (A) Liquid chromatogram at 280 nm. The X axis represents the retention time (minutes) before the compounds were detected by the diode array. Y axis represents the absorbance units (mAU) from the diode array. The resulting peaks are identified by mass spectrometry and UV-Vis spectra as (B) i Tyrindoleninone. (C) ii Tyriverdin (Na+ adduct).
Figure 4Chemical analysis of D. orbita opercula methanol extract showing. (A) Liquid chromatogram at 280 nm. The X axis represents the retention time (minutes) in the C18 column before the compounds were detected by the diode array. Y axis represents the absorbance units (mAU) from the diode array. The resulting peaks are identified by MS (left) and UV-Vis spectra (right) by comparison to pure reference standards as (B) iii choline and urocanic acid fragment ions (C) iii* Murexine (D) iv Adenosine, (E) v Tryptophan, and (F) iv Tyrindoxyl sulfate.
Trace element composition of the muricid (Dicathais orbita) opercula.
| Element (mg/Kg) | Opercula Powder (mg/kg) |
|---|---|
| Calcium | 6356 |
| Sulfur | 6300 |
| Sodium | 3597 |
| Potassium | 1614 |
| Magnesium | 918 |
| Phosphorus | 689 |
| Iron | 311.0 |
| Silicon (acid soluble) | 289 |
| Aluminium | 40.3# |
| Total arsenic^ | 25.7# |
| Selenium | 23.3# |
| Boron | 16.7# |
| Zinc | 14.4 |
| Copper | 6.0 |
| Chromium | 3.1# |
| Manganese | 2.8 |
| Vanadium | 2.0# |
| Lead | 0.3 |
| Molybdenum | 0.3 |
| Barium | 0.2 |
| Cadmium | 0.2 |
| Silver | 0.2 |
| Cobalt | 0.1 |
| Mercury | 0.002 |
#Element > 10x maximum tolerable limit[70,85].
^1 mg/kg inorganic arsenic permitted in Mollusc.