posted on 2015-05-22, 00:00authored byNiels Guldbrandsen, Sarantos Kostidis, Hartmut Schäfer, Maria De Mieri, Manfred Spraul, Alexios-Leandros Skaltsounis, Emmanuel Mikros, Matthias Hamburger
Isatis tinctoria is an ancient dye and medicinal
plant with potent anti-inflammatory and antiallergic properties. Metabolic
differences were investigated by NMR spectroscopy of accessions from
different origins that were grown under identical conditions on experimental
plots. For these accessions, metabolite profiles at different harvesting
dates were analyzed, and single and repeatedly harvested plants were
compared. Leaf samples were shock-frozen in liquid N2 immediately
after being harvested, freeze-dried, and cryomilled prior to extraction.
Extracts were prepared by pressurized liquid extraction with ethyl
acetate and 70% aqueous methanol. NMR spectra were analyzed using
a combination of different methods of multivariate data analysis such
as principal component analysis (PCA), canonical analysis (CA), and
k-nearest neighbor concept (k-NN). Accessions and harvesting dates
were well separated in the PCA/CA/k-NN analysis in both extracts.
Pairwise statistical total correlation spectroscopy (STOCSY) revealed
unsaturated fatty acids, porphyrins, carbohydrates, indole derivatives,
isoprenoids, phenylpropanoids, and minor aromatic compounds as the
cause of these differences. In addition, the metabolite profile was
affected by the repeated harvest regime, causing a decrease of 1,5-anhydroglucitol,
sucrose, unsaturated fatty acids, porphyrins, isoprenoids, and a flavonoid.