AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the flavonoids rhodiosin and herbacetin in roots and rhizomes of L. (Crassulaceae) as potential analytical markers for quality control.
  • Both flavonoids were extracted most effectively using 70-90% ethanol, with variations in drying conditions having no impact on their content.
  • Provenance differences were noted, showing a significant range in flavonoid content, and the results suggest rhodiosin and herbacetin could help ensure product consistency.

Article Abstract

L. (Crassulaceae) is well-known to contain flavonoids such as the herbacetin derivative rhodiosin. However, flavonoids are not typically used in quality control. This study analyses two flavonoids of rhizomes and roots for their potential as analytical markers. Two constituents were isolated from ethanolic extracts via HPLC, identified via NMR and quantified via RP-HPLC. Presence and content variation was investigated according to extraction (solvent and repetitions), drying (temperature and duration) and sample origin (homogenously cultivated plants of different provenance, commercial samples). Rhodiosin was identified as a main flavonoid, accompanied by 10-fold lower concentrated herbacetin. Both compounds were best extracted with 70-90% ethanol, but were also detectable in more aqueous extracts. Different drying conditions had no effect on the flavonoid content. These two flavonoids were consistently identified in rhizome and root extracts of over 100 samples. Rhizomes tend to contain less flavonoids, with average ratios of rosavins to flavonoids of 1.4 (rhizomes) and 0.4 (roots). Provenance differences were detected in the range (rhodiosin plus herbacetin) of 760-6300 µg/mL extract corresponding to a maximum of approximately 0.5-4.2% (w/w) in the dry drug. For the first time, two main flavonoids present in were quantified systematically. Rhodiosin and herbacetin can be detected simultaneously to phenylpropenoids or salidroside in authentic samples, influenced by the plant part examined and the plant origin. Rhodiosin and herbacetin may serve as additional marker to guarantee a consistent content of products.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6711108PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13880209.2019.1577460DOI Listing

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