AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding the metabolites in herbal medicine is crucial for identifying their pharmacological effects, but detecting low-content secondary metabolites poses challenges.
  • A new strategy was developed to predict herb-derived metabolites by analyzing structural characteristics and fragmentation patterns of chemical compounds in Corydalis Rhizoma.
  • This method, which included high dose herbal extract analysis and cross-mapping of biological samples, significantly improved the detection of metabolites, identifying 44 additional compounds in clinical doses compared to previous methods.

Article Abstract

Deciphering the metabolites of multiple components in herbal medicine has far-reaching significance for revealing pharmacodynamic ingredients. However, most chemical components of herbal medicine are secondary metabolites with low content whose in vivo metabolites are close to trace amounts, making it difficult to achieve comprehensive detection and identification. In this paper, an efficient strategy was proposed: herb-derived metabolites were predicted according to the structural characteristics and metabolic reactions of chemical constituents in Corydalis Rhizoma and chemical structure screening tables for metabolites were conducted. The fragmentation patterns were summarized from representative standards combining with specific cleavage behaviors to deduce structures of metabolites. Ion abundance plays an important role in compound identification, and high ion abundance can improve identification accuracy. The types of metabolites in different biological samples were very similar, but their ion abundance might be different. Therefore, for trace metabolites in biological samples, we used the following two methods to process: metabolites of high dose herbal extract were analyzed to characterize those of clinical dose herbal extracts in the same biological samples; cross-mapping of different biological samples was applied to identify trace metabolites based on the fact that a metabolite has different ion abundance in different biological samples. Compared with not using this strategy, 44 more metabolites of clinical dose herbal extract were detected. This study improved the depth, breadth, and accuracy of current methods for herb-derived metabolites characterization.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8264384PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpha.2020.03.006DOI Listing

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