16:00 - 18:00
Room: San Francisco
Poster session
Phytochemical and biological research on Herniaria hirsuta
Peeters Laura, Bijttebier Sebastiaan, Foubert Kenn, Van der Auwera Anastasia, Pieters Luc
Natural products & Food Research and Analysis (NatuRA), Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium

Urinary stone disease is considered as an important healthcare problem which affects 10–15% of the population. In the absence of prophylactic therapies, recurrence rates are as high as 50% within 10 years. An aqueous extract of the aerial parts of Herniaria hirsuta (Caryophyllaceae) is a widely used herbal medicine. Despite its proven activity against urolithiasis, little is known about the active compounds and the mechanism of action. (1,2) Previous phytochemical research on Herniaria species revealed a limited amount of compounds including saponins, flavonoids and coumarins. (2)

As a first step in the quest for the active constituents, phytochemical research on the aerial parts of the dried herb was performed, using a comprehensive extraction. (3) An aliquot was analysed with ultra-high performance liquid chromatography-photodiode array-high resolution mass spectrometry (UHPLC-PDA-HRMS). Multiple flavonoids and saponins were (tentatively) identified with analytical standards or based on spectral and chromatographic data. Besides the known saponins, 7 new saponins were tentatively identified as glycosides of acetylated medicagenic acid, zanhic acid and medicagenic acid.

It is suggested that gastro-intestinal and/or hepatic metabolites of phytochemicals present in H. hirsuta (most likely saponin metabolites) are responsible for the beneficial effects. (2) An in vitro gastro-intestinal model will be used to simulate the biotransformation of the extracts in the stomach, small intestine and colon, to avoid extensive in-vivo studies. The well-characterized metabolised extract will be evaluated in vitro for its activity against urinary stones.

References:

1. Atmani F, Slimani Y, et al. Effect of aqueous extract from Herniaria hirsuta L. on experimentally nephrolithiasic rats. J Ethnopharmacol. 2004;95(1):87-93.

2. van Dooren I, Foubert K, et al. Saponins and Flavonoids from an Infusion of Herniaria hirsuta. Planta Med. 2016;82(18):1576-83.

3. Bijttebier S, Van der Auwera A, et al. Bridging the gap between comprehensive extraction protocols in plant metabolomics studies and method validation. Analytica chimica acta. 2016;935:136-50.


Reference:
Mo-Poster Session 1-PO-165:
Session:
Poster Session 1
Presenter/s:
Laura Peeters
Presentation type:
Poster presentation
Room:
San Francisco
Date:
Monday, 4th September, 2017
Time:
16:00 - 18:00
Session times:
16:00 - 18:00