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1.
An analytical procedure was developed for the simultaneous determination of total hypericin (protopseudohypericin, pseudohypericin, protohypericin and hypericin) and hyperforin in Hypericum perforatum (St. John's wort) extracts and its preparations. The determination of total hypericin and hyperforin in one step was achieved by exposing the samples to artificial daylight in amber glass vials. This procedure allows both the photoconversion of the protoforms into the appropriate hypericins and the protection of the photosensitive hyperforin. For quantification, an HPLC method with electrochemical detection was applied. As an example of the application of the principle, two preparations containing St. John's wort were assayed.  相似文献   

2.
Investigations have been made to develop an efficient protocol for micropropagation allowing to improve hypericin and pseudohypericin productions in Hypericum perforatum L. in vitro cultures. The role of growth regulator treatments has been particularly studied. Three in vitro culture lines with different morphological characteristics were obtained during H. perforatum micropropagation and referred to shoots, calli and plantlets according to their appearance. Multiplication and callogenesis from apical segments from sterile germinated seedlings were obtained on solid MS/B5 culture medium in the presence of N6-benzyladenine (BA) (0.1-5.0 mg/l BA). Regenerative potential of shoots was assessed on medium supplemented with auxins (0.05-1.0 mg/l), indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) or indole-3-butyric acid (IBA). The main goal of the research was to summarize the influence of plant growth regulators on hypericin and pseudohypericin productions in in vitro cultures of Hypericum. A rapid method for naphtodianthrone quantification was developed. The use of a reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method with fluorescence detection was used. Identification of the compounds was confirmed by electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) with electrospray in negative ion mode [M-H] . Calli, shoots and plantlets of H. perforatum produced hypericin and pseudohypericin. The concentration range of BA from 0.1 to 2.0 mg/l improved the production of hypericin (25-50 microg/g dry mass (DM)) and pseudohypericin (170-350 microg/g DM) in shoots. In callus cultures, BA (4.0-5.0 mg/l) did not changed hypericin contents (15-20 microg/g DM) but influenced pseudohypericin productions (120-180 microg/g DM). In the presence of auxins (IAA and IBA), Hypericum plantlets produced hypericin (30-100 microg/g DM) and pseudohypericin (120-400 microg/g DM). The presence of IAA did not influence naphtodianthrone productions in plantlets, but IBA decreased hypericin and pseudohypericin amounts in plantlets. The specific accumulation of the naphtodianthrones in in vitro cultures was influenced by phytohormonal supplementation of the medium. Results indicated that the production of hypericin and pseudohypericin could be increased by carefully adapted in vitro cultures. Hypericum in vitro cultures represent promising systems for hypericin and pseudohypericin productions.  相似文献   

3.
Hypericum perforatum L. (St. John's Wort) has been used in modern medicine for treatments of depression and neuralgic disorders. An HPLC method with photodiode array detection for the rapid determination of the major active compounds, naphthodianthrones and phloroglucinols, has been developed. The method permits the determination of hypericin, protohypericin, pseudohypericin, protopseudohypericin, hyperforin and adhyperforin in an extract in less than 5 min. Good linearity over the range 0.5-200 microg/mL for hyperforin and 0.02-100 microg/mL for hypericin was observed. Intra-assay accuracy and precision varied from 0.1 to 17% within these ranges. Lower levels of quantitative determination were 2 microg/mL for hyperforin and 0.5 microg/mL for hypericin, while detection limits were 0.1 and 0.02 microg/mL, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
Representatives from eight wild populations ofHypericum perforatum L. were collected from Montana and Northern California at flowering, and subsequently analyzed for hypericin and pseudohypericin using HPLC analysis. Total individual plant concentrations in these wild populations were from 0.0003–0.1250% dry weight (DW) hypericin and 0.0019–0.8458% DW pseudohypericin. In general, hypericin concentrations were highest in the plant’s reproductive (flower and bud) tissues, followed by leaf and stem tissues, respectively. Hypericin and pseudohypericin concentrations were positively correlated in all samples, although the relative ratio of hypericin to pseudohypericin varied with site location.  相似文献   

5.
Shoot organ cultures were established from callus derived from anthers of Hypericum perforatum flowers and the effect of elicitors on hypericin and pseudohypericin production in shoot organ cultures was investigated. Mannan stimulated pseudohypericin production up to four fold (0.82 mg/g dry wt) and hypericin production up to two fold (0.04 mg/g dry wt.) beta-1,3-glucan and pectin slightly stimulated pseudohypericin production (ca. two fold), but had no effect on hypericin production. On the other hand, yeast extract showed no stimulatory effect, on either hypericin or pseudohypericin production.  相似文献   

6.
Hypericin and pseudohypericin were found in 27 of the 36 evaluated species from Hypericum L., belonging to 17 sections of the genus. Pseudohypericin is reported by us in 15 taxa for the first time. Most of the species contained both components and the amount of pseudohypericin usually exceeded that of hypericin. In H. hirsutum and H. empetrifolium only hypericin was found, whereas H. formosissimum yielded pseudohypericin only. The total content of hypericins varied widely from 0.009% in H. empetrifolium to 0.512% in H. boissieri and the largest amounts were established in taxa of sections Drosocarpium, Hypericum and Thasia. The distribution of hypericin and pseudohypericin in Hypericum species has an important taxonomic value for infrageneric classification of the genus. These components were not found in the primitive sections Ascyreia, Androsaemum, Inodora, Roscyna, Bupleuroides and Spachium but occur widely in Hypericum, Adenosepalum and the sections from Olympia group. Although the genera of subfamily Hypericoideae are characterized by the presence of anthrone derivatives, condensed anthrones such as hypericin and pseudohypericin have not been found in these genera and the remaining subfamilies of the Guttiferae.  相似文献   

7.
A spectrum of eight pharmacologically important secondary compounds, all putatively belonging to the polyketide pathway (hypericin, pseudohypericin, emodin, hyperforin, hyperoside, rutin, quercetin, and quercitrin) were analyzed in several hypericin-producing species of Hypericum by LC–MS/MS. Different organs such as leaves, stems and roots of wild-grown plants of Hypericum hirsutum L., Hypericum maculatum Crantz s. l., Hypericum montanum L., Hypericum tetrapterum Fr. collected in Slovakia and of Hypericum perforatum L. collected in India were examined individually. Highest contents of hypericin, pseudohypericin, and emodin were found in H. montanum, suggesting that there are alternative species to H. perforatum with high pharmaceutical value. Amounts of hyperforin and quercetin were highest in H. perforatum, whereas highest contents of hyperoside and quercitrin were found in H. maculatum. A significant positive correlation between hypericin and pseudohypericin as well as between hypericin and emodin was observed by Kruskal’s multidimensional scaling (MDS), indicating a parallel enhancement of emodin as a common precursor in the biosynthetic pathways of hypericin and pseudohypericin. Furthermore, MDS combined with principal component analysis (PCA) revealed strong correlations in the occurrence of pseudohypericin and emodin, pseudohypericin and quercitrin, hypericin and quercitrin, emodin and quercitrin, hyperoside and quercitrin, rutin and quercetin, and, hyperforin and quercetin. On the other hand, rutin showed a negative correlation with emodin as well as with quercitrin. Furthermore, hierarchical agglomerative cluster analysis (HACA) clustered hypericin and pseudohypericin, grouping emodin at equal distance from both. Considerable infraspecific variability in secondary compound spectrum and load of different populations of H. maculatum from Slovakia underscores the need for detailed studies of genotypic variation and environmental factors in relation to polyketide biosynthesis and accumulation.  相似文献   

8.
Direct enantiomer separation of hypericin, pseudohypericin, and protohypericin was accomplished by high‐performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) using immobilized polysaccharide‐type chiral stationary phases (CSPs). Enantioselectivities up to 1.30 were obtained in the polar‐organic elution mode whereby for hypericin and pseudohypericin Chiralpak IC [chiral selector being cellulose tris(3,5‐dichlorophenylcarbamate)] and for protohypericin Chiralpak IA (chiral selector being the 3,5‐dimethylphenylcarbamate of amylose) gave favorable results. Enantiomers were distinguished by on‐line electronic circular dichroism detection. Optimized enantioselective chromatographic conditions were the basis for determining stereodynamic parameters of the enantiomer interconversion process of hypericin and pseudohypericin. Rate constants delivered by computational simulation of dynamic HPLC elution profiles (stochastic model, consideration of peak tailing) were used to calculate averaged enantiomerization barriers (ΔG) of 97.6–99.6 kJ/mol for both compounds (investigated temperature range 25–45°C). Complementary variable temperature off‐column (i.e., in solution) racemization experiments delivered ΔG = 97.1–98.0 kJ/mol (27–45°C) for hypericin and ΔG = 98.9–101.4 kJ/mol (25–55°C) for pseudohypericin. An activation enthalpy of ΔH# = 86.0 kJ/mol and an activation entropy of ΔS# = ?37.7 J/(K mol) were calculated from hypericin racemization kinetics in solution, whereas for pseudohypericin these figures amounted to 74.1 kJ/mol and ?82.6 J/(K mol), respectively. Although the natural phenanthroperylene quinone pigments hypericin and pseudohypericin as well as their biological precursor protohypericin are chiral and can be separated by enantioselective HPLC low enantiomerization barriers seem to prevent the occurrence of an excess of one enantiomer under typical physiological conditions—at least as long as stereoselective intermolecular interactions with other chiral entities are absent. Chirality 2010. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
The content of hypericins (hypericin and pseudohypericin), hyperforin, and flavonoids (rutin, hyperoside, quercitrin, and quercetin) and genetic profiles of eight accessions of Hypericum perforatum L., collected from different locations in India, have been determined. The secondary metabolite content was determined using a highly selective LC/MS/MS method. Pearson and Spearman's correlation coefficient were used to investigate the relationships between the secondary metabolites and a significant positive correlation was found between hypericin and pseudohypericin contents. Genetic profiling was undertaken using the random amplification of polymorphic DNA (RAPD) and single sequence repeat (SSR) methods. Among the 49 random primers used for the initial screening, only nine yielded polymorphic RAPD profiles. The SSR analysis shows that seven out of the 11 primers were polymorphic. There exists only a partial correlation between the chemical content and genetic profiling data among the accessions under study.  相似文献   

10.
Hypericin and pseudohypericin are polycyclic–phenolic structurally related compounds found in Hypericum perforatum L. (St John's wort). As hypericin has been found to bind to LDL one may assume that it can act as antioxidant of LDL lipid oxidation, a property which is of prophylactic/therapeutic interest regarding atherogenesis as LDL oxidation may play a pivotal role in the onset of atherosclerosis. Therefore, in the present paper hypericin, pseudohypericin and hyperforin, an other structurally unrelated constituent in St John's wort were tested in their ability to inhibit LDL oxidation. LDL was isolated by ultracentrifugation and oxidation was initiated either by transition metal ions (copper), tyrosyl radical (myeloperoxidase/hydrogen peroxide/tyrosine) or by endothelial cells (HUVEC). LDL modification was monitored by conjugated diene and malondialdehyde formation. The data show that all compounds (hypericin, pseudohypericin and hyperforin) at doses as low as 2.5 μmol/l are potent antioxidants in the LDL oxidation systems used. The results indicate that the derivatives found in Hypericum perforatum have possible antiatherogenic potential.  相似文献   

11.
Hypericin and pseudohypericin are polycyclic-phenolic structurally related compounds found in Hypericum perforatum L. (St John's wort). As hypericin has been found to bind to LDL one may assume that it can act as antioxidant of LDL lipid oxidation, a property which is of prophylactic/therapeutic interest regarding atherogenesis as LDL oxidation may play a pivotal role in the onset of atherosclerosis. Therefore, in the present paper hypericin, pseudohypericin and hyperforin, an other structurally unrelated constituent in St John's wort were tested in their ability to inhibit LDL oxidation. LDL was isolated by ultracentrifugation and oxidation was initiated either by transition metal ions (copper), tyrosyl radical (myeloperoxidase/hydrogen peroxide/tyrosine) or by endothelial cells (HUVEC). LDL modification was monitored by conjugated diene and malondialdehyde formation. The data show that all compounds (hypericin, pseudohypericin and hyperforin) at doses as low as 2.5 μmol/l are potent antioxidants in the LDL oxidation systems used. The results indicate that the derivatives found in Hypericum perforatum have possible antiatherogenic potential.  相似文献   

12.
Cytosolic (TrxR1) and mitochondrial (TrxR2) thioredoxin reductases experience pronounced concentration- and time-dependent inhibition when incubated with the two naphthodianthrones hypericin and pseudohypericin. Pseudohypericin turned out to be a quite strong inhibitor of TrxR1 (IC50 = 4.40 ??M) being far more effective than hypericin (IC50 = 157.08 ??M). In turn, the IC50 values measured toward TrxR2 were 7.45 ??M for pseudohypericin and 43.12 ??M for hypericin. When compared to pseudohypericin, the inhibition caused by hypericin usually required significantly longer times, in particular on TrxR1. These important differences in the inhibitory potencies and profiles were analysed through a molecular modeling approach. Notably, both compounds were found to accommodate in the NADPH-binding pocket of the enzyme. The binding of the two naphthodianthrones to thioredoxin reductase seems to be particularly strong as the inhibitory effects were fully retained after gel filtration. Also, we found that TrxR inhibition by hypericin and pseudohypericin does not involve the active site selenol/thiol motif as confirmed by biochemical and modeling studies. The resulting inhibition pattern is very similar to that produced by the two naphthodianthrones on glutathione reductase. As the thioredoxin system is highly overexpressed in cancer cells, its inhibition by hypericin and pseudohypericin, natural compounds showing appreciable anticancer properties, might offer new clues on their mechanism of action and open interesting perspectives for future tumor therapies.  相似文献   

13.
In vitro shoot cultures of Hypericum perforatum derived from wild populations grown in Armenia have a wide variation of hypericin and pseudohypericin metabolite content. We found that a germ line denoted as HP3 produces six times more hypericin and fourteen times more pseudohypericin than a second line labeled HP1. We undertook a structural comparison of the two lines (HP1 and HP3) in order to see if there are any anatomical or morphological differences that could explain the differences in production of these economically important metabolites. Analysis by LM (light microscopy), SEM (scanning electron microscopy), and TEM (transmission electron microscopy) reveals that the hypericin/pseudohypericin-containing black glands located along the margins of the leaves consist of a peripheral sheath of flattened cells surrounding a core of interior cells that are typically dead at maturity. The peripheral cells of the HP3 glands appear less flattened than those of the HP1 glands. This may indicate that the peripheral cells are involved in hypericin/pseudohypericin production. Furthermore, we find that these peripheral cells undergo a developmental transition into the gland's interior cells. The fact that the size of the peripheral cells may correlate with metabolite production adds a new hypothesis for the actual site of hypericin synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Hypericin and pseudohypericin, bioactive constituents in St. John's Wort (Hypericum perforatum), have been determined in the soft tops of the plant that are most likely to be browsed by foraging livestock. In two consecutive seasons, the hypericin/pseudohypericin concentration in a broad leaf biotype varied from a winter minimum of less than 100 ppm to a summer maximum approaching 3000 ppm. In contrast the narrow leaf biotype increased from similar winter values to summer maxima approaching 5000 ppm. The latter biotype was slower in returning to low levels of hypericin/pseudohypericin.  相似文献   

15.
The present study was conducted to determine the variation in the content of several plant chemicals, namely hyperforin, hypericin, pseudohypericin, chlorogenic acid, rutin, hyperoside, isoquercetine, kaempferol, quercitrine and quercetine among ten Hypericum orientale L. populations from Northern Turkey. The aerial parts representing a total of 30 individuals were collected at full flowering and dissected into floral, leaf and stem tissues. After dried at room temperature, the plant materials were assayed for chemical contents by HPLC. The populations varied significantly in chemical contents. Among different plant parts, the flowers were found to be the principle organ for hyperforin, hypericin, pseudohypericin and rutin accumulations while the rest of the chemicals were accumulated mainly in leaves in all growing localities. The chemical variation among the populations and plant parts is discussed as being possibly the result of different genetic, environmental and morphological factors.  相似文献   

16.
Hypericin and hypericin-like substances are considered the main active compounds in Hypericum perforatum L. (Hypericaceae). In this work pseudohypericin and hypericin of H. perforatum collected in Lithuania were quantified. Studies on accumulation dynamics and between-accession variation of the contents of these secondary metabolites were carried out by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The data were statistically processed with ANOVA and PCA. Significant difference between pseudohypericin and hypericin content in floral budding and full flowering stages was detected. The highest amounts of the secondary metabolites were observed in the flowering stage. The study revealed evident within population variations in H. perforatum. Mean concentrations of pseudohypericin and hypericin among accessions varied from 3.45 to 6.82 mg/g and from 1.17 to 2.59 mg/g, respectively. Accessions of H. perforatum showed remarkable differences in chemical composition depending on the provenance of plants.  相似文献   

17.
Hypericum perforatum is a well known medicinal plant. The main pharmacological properties are due to the presence of naphtodianthrones such as hypericin and pseudohypericin. Unfortunately the levels of these compounds vary under different environmental conditions. Elicitation of in vitro cultures is a useful approach to enhance and extend production of desirable products. Therefore, the effects of salicylic acid were characterized on different explants of H. perforatum L. (cells, calli and shoots) cultured in vitro. It appears at first that salicylic acid did not affect growth and development of these explants. In addition, the production of both hypericin and pseudohypericin has doubled in elicited cell suspension cultures but not in the two other cultures. Furthermore, phenylpropanoids that are among the most frequently observed metabolites affected upon treatment of in vitro culture material with elicitors, were produced and the enzymatic activities of phenylalanine ammonia lyase and of chalcone isomerase were stimulated upon elicitation. These effects were dependant of the type of in vitro culture, the concentration of salicylic acid and the duration post-elicitation. The H. perforatum cells were globally more sensitive to salicylic acid elicitation when maintained in an undifferentiated state and particularly in cell suspension cultures. In the absence of glands considered as the sites of naphtodianthrones biosynthesis, cells and calli were capable of producing these compounds. This implies that salicylic acid could act at biosynthesis level but not for the accumulation of both hypericin and pseudohypericin. Consequently, the regulation of this process is more complex than cited in the literature involving the responsibility of only Hyp-1 gene, encoding a hypericin biosynthetic enzyme, cloned and characterized from H. perforatum.  相似文献   

18.
A selective and sensitive method for the simultaneous determination of hypericin and hyperforin--the two main active ingredients of St. John's Wort (SJW) extract--in human plasma depending on liquid/liquid-extraction and LC/MS/MS detection has been developed, validated after specifying the stability of the photosensitive hypericin in plasma samples during light exposure and applied to samples of a patient. After extraction with ethyl acetate/n-hexane in the darkness, sample extracts were chromatographed isocratically within 6 min on a Kromasil RP-18 column. The analytes were detected with tandem mass spectrometry in the selected reaction monitoring mode using an electrospray ion source. The limit of quantification was 0.05 ng/mL for hypericin and 0.035 ng/mL for hyperforin. The accuracy of the method varied between 101.9 and 114.2% and the precision ranged from 4.7 to 15.4% (S.D., batch-to-batch) for both analytes. The method was linear at least between 0.05 and 10 ng/mL for hypericin and between 0.035 and 100 ng/mL for hyperforin. Using this method hypericin and hyperforin were determined successfully in a patient over seven days following discontinuation of exposure with therapeutic doses of St. John's Wort extract.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The secondary metabolite contents and genetic profiles of six Hypericum species (H. barbatum Jacq., H. hirsutum L., H. linarioides Bosse, H. maculatum Crantz, H. rumeliacum Boiss. and H. tetrapterum Fries), collected from different locations in Serbia, have been analyzed. Methanol extracts of the aerial parts of the plants were obtained by accelerated solvent extraction (ASE) at 40 degrees C and 100 bar, and analyzed for five pharmacologically important standard constituents (hyperoside, quercitrin, pseudohypericin, hyperforin and hypericin) by LC-MS/MS. The highest content of hypericin and pseudohypericin was observed in the H. barbatum extract, while the highest content of hyperforin and quercitrin was found in the H. tetrapterum extract and the highest content of hyperoside in the H. maculatum extract. A literature survey shows that the above six Hypericum species, with the exception of H. maculatum, have not been previously genetically profiled. In order to correlate the chemical constituents of the species under investigation with their genetic factors, genetic profiling of these species was undertaken using the random amplification of polymorphic DNA (RAPD) and single sequence repeat (SSR) profiles of the above selected plants. Among the 52 random primers used for the initial screening, only 10 yielded polymorphic RAPD profiles. A total of 111 polymorphic markers were generated using these primers. The SSR analysis shows that 8 out of the 10 primers used were polymorphic. The correlation among the species under investigation using the two genetic markers was performed using Jaccuard's coefficients of similarity and a high correlation (r=0.99) was obtained. The main conclusion from the above data is that there exists a stronger correlation for secondary metabolite contents with RAPD data than with SSR data among the six Hypericum species from Serbia.  相似文献   

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