TitleInfluence of alternative liquid chromatography techniques on the chemical complexity and bioactivity of isolated proanthocyanidin mixtures.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsAlwerdt, JL, Seigler, DS, de Mejia, EGonzalez, Yousef, GG, Lila, MAnn
JournalJ Agric Food Chem
Volume56
Issue6
Pagination1896-906
Date Published2008 Mar 26
ISSN0021-8561
KeywordsChromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Chromatography, Liquid, Enzyme Inhibitors, Humans, Plant Extracts, Proanthocyanidins, Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization, Topoisomerase II Inhibitors
Abstract

<p>Extracts rich in proanthocyanidins, which are implicated in multiple human health benefits, were comparatively separated using alternative separation methods [vacuum or open column liquid chromatography], separation matrices [Toyopearl, Sephadex, or silica gel], and degrees of subfractionation [8 or 12 subfraction series], to evaluate the influence of separation technique on the resolution of the chemical composition and the biological activity of separated proanthocyanidin mixtures in individual subfractions. Bioactivity was assessed using a DNA human topoisomerase II bioassay and structural composition by acid thiolysis (average degree of polymerization, DP) and HPLC-ESI/MS. The amount of parent fraction needed to inhibit 50% of topoisomerase II was 3.38 ng/mL with an average DP of 25.5. A 2(3) factorial analysis revealed that the vacuum and open column strategies for separation, when individually considered, did not yield significantly different results in terms of mass recovery, DP, or bioactivity; however, interactions with other factors such as matrix or subfraction series resulted in distinctive shifts in fraction profiles and biological activity. In general, Sephadex as a matrix permitted elution and separation of discrete, polymerized subfractions with potent inhibition against human topoisomerase II. Sephadex vacuum chromatography, Toyopearl open column chromatography, and Toyopearl vacuum chromatography separation techniques eluted highly polymerized proanthocyanidin mixtures, but the inhibitory bioactivity was attenuated as compared to the parent fraction, whereas Sephadex open column chromatography eluted highly polymerized subfraction mixtures that retained bioactive potential.</p>

DOI10.1021/jf073001k
Alternate JournalJ Agric Food Chem
PubMed ID18284202
Grant ListU01 TW006674 / TW / FIC NIH HHS / United States