AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers focused on enhancing the production of important pharmaceuticals, vinblastine and vincristine, in Madagascar periwinkle leaves using various treatments, including UV exposure.
  • A controlled LED environment was used to monitor metabolite changes without causing UV stress, and 64 vinca alkaloids were screened via advanced mass spectrometry techniques.
  • The study found that high blue light significantly increased the concentrations of key vinca alkaloids, achieving up to nine times higher levels compared to normal conditions, highlighting the effectiveness of light treatments in metabolite production.

Article Abstract

Enrichment of pharmaceutically important vinca alkaloids, vinblastine and vincristine, in the leaves of Madagascar periwinkle (Catharanthus roseus) plants through different pre- or postharvest treatments or cultivation conditions, e.g., exposing the plants to UV-irradiation, has been in focus for decades. Controlled LED environment in the visible light range offers the possibility of monitoring the changes in the concentration of metabolites in the vinca alkaloid-related pathway without involving UV-related abiotic stress. In the frame of our targeted metabolomics approach, 64 vinca alkaloids and metabolites were screened with the help of a UPLC-ESI-QTOF-MS instrumental setup from the leaf extracts of C. roseus plants grown in chambers under control (medium light), low light, and high blue / high red/ high far-red conditions. Out of the 14 metabolites that could be assigned either unambiguously with authentic standards or tentatively with high resolution mass spectrometry-based methods, all three dimer vinca alkaloids, that is, 3',4'-anhydrovinblastine, vinblastine and vincristine showed an at least nine-fold enrichment under high blue irradiation when compared with the control conditions: final concentrations of 961 mg kg dry weight, 33.8 mg kg dry weight, and 11.7 mg kg dry weight could be achieved, respectively. As supported by multivariate statistical analysis, the key metabolites of the vinca alkaloid pathway were highly represented among the metabolites that were specifically stimulated by high blue light application.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpba.2023.115611DOI Listing

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