Comparative analysis of lycorine in wild plant and callus culture samples of hymenocallis littoralis by HPLC-UV method

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Abstract

The Hymenocallis littoralis, an ornamental and medicinal plant, had been traditionally used for wound healing. In the present study, an analytical method using HPLC with ultraviolet detection was developed for the quantification of lycorine in the extracts of different parts of wild plant and tissue culture samples of H. littoralis. The separation was achieved using a reversed-phase column. The method was found to be accurate, repeatable, and sensitive for the quantification of minute amount of lycorine present in the samples. The highest lycorine content was found in the bulb extract (2.54 ± 0.02 μg/mg) whereas the least was in the root extract (0.71 ± 0.02 μg/mg) of the wild plants. Few callus culture samples had high content of lycorine, comparable to that of wild plants. The results showed that plant growth regulators, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) alone at 4.5 μM (2.58 ± 0.38 μg/mg) or a combination of 2,4-D at 9.00 μM with 4.5 μM of 6-benzylaminopurine (BAP), were the optimum concentrations for the production of high lycorine (2.45 ± 0.15 μg/mg) content in callus culture. The present analytical method could be of value for routine quantification of lycorine in the tissue culture production and standardization of the raw material or extracts of H. littoralis. © 2014 Sreeramanan Subramaniam et al.

Figures

  • Figure 1: Chromatograms from the analysis of lycorine in H. littoralis. (a) Standard lycorine 6.25 𝜇g/mL. (b) Anther extract at 400 𝜇g/mL. (c) Extract of callus culture obtained with 4.5 𝜇M 2,4-D and 0 𝜇MBAP at 1000 𝜇g/mL. Column: Eclipse Plus reversed-phase C-18 (250mm × 4.6mm i.d., 5𝜇m); mobile phase: acetonitrile-1% aqueous ammonium acetate buffer (15 : 85 v/v); flow rate: 1.0mL/min; wavelength: 325 nm.
  • Table 1: Within-day and between-day precision and accuracy values for lycorine obtained from HPLC-UV analysis.
  • Table 2: Content of lycorine (dry weight) in the extracts of different parts of H. littoralis wild plant.
  • Table 3: Content of lycorine (dry weight) in the extracts of H. littoralis callus samples.

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APA

Subramaniam, S., Sundarasekar, J., Sahgal, G., & Murugaiyah, V. (2014). Comparative analysis of lycorine in wild plant and callus culture samples of hymenocallis littoralis by HPLC-UV method. Scientific World Journal, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/408306

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