Supercritical fluid extraction and liquid chromatography-electrospray mass analysis of vinblastine from Catharanthus roseus

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Abstract

Supercritical fluid extraction using carbon dioxide modified with methanol, methanol-diethylamine, or methanol-triethylamine was used to extract vinblastine from the aerial portions of Catharanthus roseus. An HPLC-electrospray ionization (ESI)/MS analysis method was also developed to quantify the alkaloids in these extracts. Of the supercritical solvents evaluated, carbon dioxide-methanol-triethylamine (80 : 18 : 2) at 80°C and 34.0 MPa greatly improved the supercritical fluid extraction (SFE) yield of vinblastine by as much as 76.4% over methanol extraction, while the other solvent conditions extracted the compound at yields less than 25% that of a methanol extraction. These results were confirmed by the robust HPLC-ESI/MS analytical method developed in this study. © 2002 Pharmaceutical Society of Japan.

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Choi, Y. H., Yoo, K. P., & Kim, J. (2002). Supercritical fluid extraction and liquid chromatography-electrospray mass analysis of vinblastine from Catharanthus roseus. Chemical and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 50(9), 1294–1296. https://doi.org/10.1248/cpb.50.1294

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