| Literature DB >> 32784618 |
Sylwia Zielińska1, Magdalena Dziągwa-Becker2, Ewelina Piątczak3, Anna Jezierska-Domaradzka1,4, Malwina Brożyna5, Adam Junka5, Mariusz Kucharski2, Serhat Sezai Çiçek6, Christian Zidorn6, Adam Matkowski1,4.
Abstract
Corydalis and Pseudofumaria are two closely related genera from the Papaveraceae subfamily Fumarioideae with Corydalis solida (C. solida) and Pseudofumaria lutea (P. lutea) as two representative species. Phytochemical analysis revealed significant differences in the quality and quantity of isoquinoline alkaloids, phenolic compounds and non-phenolic carboxylic acids between aerial and underground parts of both species. Using the Liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS/MS) technique, 21 compounds were identified: five protoberberine derivatives, three protopine derivatives, four phenanthridine derivatives, as well as three carboxylic acids, two hydroxycinnamic acids, one chlorogenic acid, one phenolic aldehyde, and two flavonoids. Moroever, significant differences in the content of individual compounds were observed between the two studied species. The phytochemical profile of C. solida showed a higher variety of compounds that were present in lower amounts, whereas P. lutea extracts contained fewer compounds but in larger quantities. Protopine was one of the most abundant constituents in C. solida (440-1125 µg/g d.w.) and in P. lutea (1036-1934 µg/g d.w.). Moreover, considerable amounts of coptisine (1526 µg/g) and quercetin (3247 µg/g) were detected in the aerial parts of P. lutea. Extracts from aerial and underground parts of both species were also examined for the antimicrobial potential against S. aureus, P. aeruginosa and C. albicans. P. lutea herb extract was the most effective (MIC at 0.39 mg/L) against all three pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: Corydalis solida; Pseudofumaria lutea; protoberberine derivatives; protopine; quercetin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32784618 PMCID: PMC7464254 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25163591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
The content (µg/g d.w. ± SD) of quantitated compounds in aerial parts of C. solida and P. lutea.
| No | Compound | Parent Ion ( | Product Ion ( | Ion Mode | Content Mean ± SD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALKALOIDS |
|
| ||||
| 1 | protopine derivative | 354 | 320, 260, 196 |
| p | p |
| 2 | allocryptopine | 369 | 352, 188, 290 |
| 328 ± 13.99 * | LOD |
| 3 | coptisine | 320 | 292, 204, 262 |
| 154 ± 7.42 * | 1526 ± 24.12 |
| 4 | berberine | 336 | 320, 292, 321 |
| 128 ± 6.79 * | 197 ± 12.10 |
| 5 | chelidonine derivative | 370 | 356, 339 |
| p | nd |
| 6 | chelidonine | 354 | 275, 189, 247 |
| 58 ± 3.67 * | 3 ± 0.69 |
| 7 | chelerythrine | 348 | 332, 304, 333 |
| 18 ± 1.31 * | 4 ± 0.26 |
| 8 | tetrahydroberberine | 340 | 176, 149 |
| p | p |
| 9 | tetrahydrocoptisine | 324 | 176, 149 |
| p | p |
| 10 | coptisine derivative | 324 | 190 |
| p | p |
| 11 | sanguinarine | 332 | 274, 317, 246 |
| 35 ± 2.78 * | 12 ± 0.89 |
| 12 | protopine | 320 | 303, 107, 124 |
| 440 ± 16.10 * | 1036 ± 30.62 |
| Other Compounds | ||||||
| 13 | malic acid | 133 | 115, 71 |
| LOQ | LOQ |
| 14 | 173 | 85, 129 |
| LOQ | LOQ | |
| 15 | quinic acid | 191 | 85, 93 |
| LOQ | LOQ |
| 16 | 179 | 135, 134, 89 |
| 21 ± 1.52 * | 32 ± 4.90 | |
| 17 | chlorogenic acid | 353 | 191, 85, 93 |
| 1 ± 0.13 * | 32 ± 1.51 |
| 18 | 163 | 119, 93, 117 |
| 28 ± 1.71 * | 16 ± 1.85 | |
| 19 | vanillin | 151 | 136, 92, 108 |
| 11 ± 0.93 | 13 ± 1.69 |
| 20 | quercetin | 301 | 151, 65, 121 |
| 177 ± 9.67 * | 3247 ± 66.43 |
| 21 | rutin | 609 | 300 | - | LOQ | LOQ |
p—present, identification was based on mass spectra with no reference substances; nd—not detected; LOD—limit of detection; LOQ—limit of quantification; means marked with an asterisk (*) within lines differ at significance level p ≤ 0.05 in a Mann–Whitney U test.
The content (µg/g d.w. ± SD) of quantitated compounds in underground parts of C. solida and P. lutea.
| No | Compound | Parent Ion ( | Product Ion ( | Ion Mode | Content Mean ± SD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALKALOIDS |
|
| ||||
| 1 | protopine derivative | 354 | 320, 260, 196 |
| p | p |
| 2 | allocryptopine | 369 | 352, 188, 290 |
| 516 ± 21.52 * | 6 ± 1.37 |
| 3 | coptisine | 320 | 292, 204, 262 |
| 233 ± 5.13 * | 307 ± 17.36 |
| 4 | berberine | 336 | 320, 292, 321 |
| 78 ± 3.58 * | 326 ± 8.40 |
| 5 | chelidonine derivative | 370 | 356, 339 |
| p | nd |
| 6 | chelidonine | 354 | 275, 189, 247 |
| 1 ± 0.05 * | 5 ± 0.20 |
| 7 | chelerythrine | 348 | 332, 304, 333 |
| 7 ± 0.37 * | 6 ± 0.12 |
| 8 | tetrahydroberberine | 340 | 176, 149 |
| p | p |
| 9 | tetrahydrocoptisine | 324 | 176, 149 |
| p | p |
| 10 | coptisine derivative | 324 | 190 |
| p | p |
| 11 | sanguinarine | 332 | 274, 317, 246 |
| 8 ± 0.28 * | 36 ± 3.53 |
| 12 | protopine | 320 | 303, 107, 124 |
| 1125 ± 32.63 * | 1934 ± 25.98 |
| Other Compounds | ||||||
| 13 | malic acid | 133 | 115, 71 |
| LOQ | LOQ |
| 14 | 173 | 85, 129 |
| LOQ | LOQ | |
| 15 | quinic acid | 191 | 85, 93 |
| LOQ | LOQ |
| 16 | 179 | 135, 134, 89 |
| nd | nd | |
| 17 | chlorogenic acid | 353 | 191, 85, 93 |
| 6 ± 1.26 * | nd |
| 18 | 163 | 119, 93, 117 |
| LOD | nd | |
| 19 | vanillin | 151 | 136, 92, 108 |
| nd | nd |
| 20 | quercetin | 301 | 151, 65, 121 |
| 19 ± 2.88 * | 76 ± 4.64 |
| 21 | rutin | 609 | 300 | - | nd | nd |
p—present, identification was based on mass spectra with no reference substances; nd—not detected; LOD—limit of detection; LOQ—limit of quantification; means marked with an asterisk (*) within lines differ at significance level p ≤ 0.05 in a Mann–Whitney U test.
Figure 1Isoquinoline alkaloids (a) and phenolic compounds (b) proportions in aerial parts of P. lutea and C. solida.
Figure 2Isoquinoline alkaloids (a) and phenolic compounds (b) proportions in underground parts of P. lutea and C. solida.
Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) [mg/L] of water–methanolic extracts from S. solida and P. lutea herb and underground parts.
| Plant Material |
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.56 | 0.39 | 0.39 | |
| 1.56 | 0.39 | 0.39 | |
| 0.39 | 0.39 | 0.39 | |
| 1.56 | 0.39 | 0.39 | |
| Octenisept (method suitability control) | 0.0001 | 0.00152 | 0.0001 |