| Literature DB >> 29320456 |
Ningxuan Gao1, Yuehua Wang2, Xinyao Jiao3, Shurui Chou4, Enhui Li5, Bin Li6.
Abstract
The aim of this study was the purification process of polyphenols from Aronia melanocarpa (chokeberry), and the purification parameters were optimised by adsorption and desorption tests. By comparing adsorption and desorption ability of polyphenols from chokeberry on six kinds of macroporous resin, XAD-7 resin was selected. Experiments prove that the best purification parameters of static adsorption and desorption were sample pH = 4.0 with 4 h of adsorption; and desorption solvent is 95% ethanol (pH = 7.0) with 2 h of desorption. The best dynamic parameters were 9.3 bed volume (BV) of sample loading amount at a feeding flow rate of 2 BV/h, and washing the column with 5.8 BV of water, followed by subsequent elution with an eluent volume of 5.0 mL at an elution flow rate of 2 BV/h. Next the antioxidant and antiproliferative activity of polyphenols from chokeberry, blueberries, haskap berries was studied on HepG2 human liver cancer cells. The results show that polyphenol from chokeberry has a strong antioxidant effect. Taking into account the content of polyphenols in fruit, polyphenols from chokeberry represent a very valuable natural antioxidant source with antiproliferative products.Entities:
Keywords: Aronia melanocarpa; antioxidant; antiproliferative; polyphenols; purification
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29320456 PMCID: PMC6017104 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23010139
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Adsorption and desorption ratio of different macroporous resins for chokeberry polyphenols.
Figure 2Adsorption and desorption properties of XAD-7 resin: (a) shows the static adsorption curve; (b) shows the static desorption curve. (Q (mg/g) is the adsorption capacity (mg GAE/g, gallic acid equivalents); D (%) is the desorption ratio.).
Figure 3Static adsorption and desorption of XAD-7 resin: (a) is the effect of extract pH value on adsorption capacity; (b) is the effect of ethanol concentration on desorption ratio; (c) is the effect of eluent pH value on desorption ratio. (Q (mg/g) is the adsorption capacity; D (%) is the desorption ratio.).
Figure 4Dynamic breakthrough curves at different feed flow rates.
Figure 5Dynamic water flushing curve.
Figure 6Dynamic desorption curves at different elution flow rates.
CAA, EC50 and antiproliferative activities (IC50) of polyphenols from the three kinds of berries toward HepG2 cells.
| CAA (umol Q/100 ug) | EC50 (ug/mL) | IC50 (ug/mL) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chokeberry | 334.48 ± 29.57 | 0.069 ± 0.005 | 338.36 ± 23.17 |
| Blueberry | 357.64 ± 33.61 | 0.064 ± 0.006 | 359.74 ± 29.38 |
| Haskap | 252.87 ± 23.15 | 0.049 ± 0.003 | 552.07 ± 34.19 |
Figure 7Inhibition of HepG2 cell proliferation by polyphenols from chokeberry (a); blueberry (b); haskap (c) berries.
Figure 8Cytotoxicity of polyphenols from chokeberry (a); blueberry (b); haskap (c) berries.