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Efficient extraction and purification of benzo[ c ]phenanthridine alkaloids from Macleaya cordata (Willd) R. Br. by combination of ultrahigh pressure extraction and pH‐zone‐refining counter‐current chromatography with anti‐breast cancer activity in vitro
Author(s) -
Ali Iftikhar,
Li Jingchao,
Cui Li,
Zhao Hongwei,
He Qiuxia,
Wang Daijie
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
phytochemical analysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.574
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1099-1565
pISSN - 0958-0344
DOI - 10.1002/pca.2990
Subject(s) - chemistry , phenanthridine , sanguinarine , chelerythrine , chromatography , extraction (chemistry) , protopine , solid phase extraction , alkaloid , stereochemistry , organic chemistry , protein kinase c , enzyme
Macleaya cordata (Willd) R. Br. (Papaveraceae family) is a well‐known traditional Chinese medicine used to treat muscle pain, inflamed wounds, and bee bites. Benzo[ c ]phenanthridine alkaloids are the main active ingredients in M. cordata . In this work, sanguinarine and chelerythrine were efficiently extracted and purified by ultrahigh‐pressure extraction (UHPE) technique and pH‐zone‐refining counter‐current chromatography (PZRCCC) from M. cordata . Objective To develop an efficient UHPE method followed by an efficient separation technique using PZRCCC for benzo[ c ]phenanthridine alkaloids from the study plant species, and to evaluate the study samples for anti‐breast cancer activity. Methodology The optimal extraction conditions were optimised as extraction pressure 200 MPa, extraction solvent 95% ethanol, solid–liquid ratio 1:30 (g/mL) and extraction time 2 min. A two‐phase n ‐hexane/ethyl acetate/ i‐ propanol/water (1:3:1.5:4.5, v/v ) solvent system was optimised with 10 mmol triethylamine in the upper phase and 10 mmol trifluoroacetic acid in lower phase in PZRCCC. The sample loading was optimised as 2.50 g. Moreover, the samples were evaluated for anti‐breast cancer activity later on. Results The 2.50 g sample loading yielded 0.45 g of sanguinarine and 0.59 g chelerythrine in one‐step separation using PZRCCC. The anti‐breast cancer activities of sanguinarine and chelerythrine were found stronger than positive control (vincristine 5.04 μg/mL) with half‐maximal inhibitory concentration values of 0.96 and 3.00 μg/mL, respectively. Conclusion This study showed that the established methods were efficient in extraction (UHPE) and separation (PZRCCC) of the sanguinarine and chelerythrine from M. cordata .