On-line Identification of Minor Flavones from Sugarcane Juice by LC / UV / MS and Post-Column Derivatization

Este trabalho apresenta a identificação “on line” de flavonas minoritárias do suco da cana-deaçúcar (Saccharum officinarum), por cromatografia líquida de alta eficiência com detector UV acoplada à espectrometria de massas (CL/UV/EM) com ionização química à pressão atmosférica, dissociação induzida por colisão (IQPA-DIC-EM/EM) e derivatização pós-coluna utilizando reagentes de deslocamento de UV. As análises CLAE-UV com reagentes de deslocamento forneceram informações sobre a posição da substituição no esqueleto dos flavonóides e, em combinação com dados de EM, estas técnicas permitiram a identificação “on-line” de cinco flavonas da garapa: luteolina-8-C-glucosil-7-O-glucuronídeo; tricina-7-O-neoesperosideo-4’O-ramnosídeo; tricina-7-O-metilglucuronato-4’-O-ramnosídeo; tricina-7-O-metilglucuronídeo; swertisina; e outras quatro substâncias foram parcialmente identificadas como flavonas glicosiladas. Somente a swertisina (7-O-metilapigenina-6-C-glicosídeo) foi anteriormente descrita no bagaço da cana-de-açúcar.


Introduction
Hyphenated techniques such as liquid chromatography with UV photodiode array detection (HPLC-UV) and on-line liquid chromatography-ultraviolet detection-mass spectrometry (HPLC-UV-MS) are powerful techniques for the structural identification of compounds found in extracts prepared from very small amounts of plant material. In the case of plant polyphenolic compounds such as flavonoids and xanthones, the possibility of obtaining on-line UV data by a combination with the post-column addition of UV shift reagents is a very important step to validate the structure assignments proposed for the position of oxygenated groups on the polyphenolic skeleton. 1 Recently, HPLC-UV-MS and post-column UV-derivatization were employed in the study of Trifolium extracts containing clovamides, flavonoids and isoflavonoids and their UV data were discussed in detail. 2 Hyphenated techniques may be the technique of choice in studies requiring analyses of several plant samples, as in metabolomic studies. 1 Strategies such as metabolite profiling and metabolomic analysis 3 require appropriate analytical methods for the precise and reproducible determination of the plant metabolites that usually occur in complex mixtures containing hundreds of compounds and that are sometimes obtained from very small amounts of plant material (e.g., from test-tube cultures). Besides the study of important biological functions, metabolomic analysis has a great potential for application in the assessment of safety and biological equivalence of genetically modified organisms, including transgenic plants.
Several flavonoids from Saccharum species were reported in a previous literature review. 4 More recently, sugarcane cultivated commercially in Brazil (Saccharum officinarum L.) is under systematic investigation due to the potential role of this plant as a dietary source of flavonoids with antioxidant properties. 5,6 Our investigation into the flavonoid composition of Brazilian sugarcane also takes into account recent studies suggesting the potential role of this plant as a dietary source of antioxidant flavonoids due to the in vivo antioxidant activity of a sugarcane phenolic extract, 7 since the consumption of sugarcane juice as an "energetic drink" thanks to its high sugar content is very popular in Brazil. Moreover, the increasing importance of sugarcane for the production of 'green' fuels, in addition to its traditional use in tropical countries as the most important raw material for the production of sugar and byproducts, highlights the need to develop new commercial varieties with higher sugar content and greater resistance to Brazil's major sugarcane pest, the sugarcane borer Diatraea saccharalis Fabricius (Lepidoptera: Crambidae). In this context, transgenic sugarcane is being studied 8 and preliminary results of other studies of genetically modified sugarcane plants have indicated the relevance of the minor components in chemometric analyses of sugarcane HPLC chromatograms. 9 Therefore, this article reports the identification of additional minor flavones from sugarcane juice by HPLC-UV-MS techniques.

Preparation of samples
Samples of sugarcane juice, obtained by crushing cleaned and peeled sugarcane stems, were purchased from various suppliers in São Carlos, SP, Brazil. Juice samples were transferred to plastic bottles and frozen at ca. -10 o C for storage: immediately prior to sample preparation, the samples were thawed and homogenized. Sugarcane juice samples (10 mL) were sonicated with 10 mL of methanol for 1.5 min at room temperature, the extract was filtered, mixed with 2.0 mL water, reduced in volume to 2 mL on a rotary evaporator and purified by solid-phase extraction (SPE) using Oasis HLB cartridges (3 cc, 60 mg; 30 µm particle size; Waters, Milford, MA, USA) pre-conditioned with 1 mL of methanol and 1 mL of water. The interfering compounds were eluted with 3 mL of water, whilst the flavonoids were obtained by elution with 3 mL of methanol. Purified flavonoid extracts were filtered through 0.5 µm Fluorpore membranes (Millipore) prior to injection into the HPLC system.

HPLC-MS analysis
Analysis were performed using a Finnigan MAT LCQ (San Jose, CA, USA) ion trap mass spectrometer equipped with an atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) interface operated under the following conditions: positive ion mode; capillary voltage, 11 V; capillary temperature, 150 o C; source voltage, 5 kV; vaporizer temperature, 450 o C; corona needle current, 5 mA; sheath gas, nitrogen at 60 psi. Analyses were made in the full scan mode (150-800 u). The CID-MS/MS analyses were also made in a Finnigan MAT LCQ using helium as collision gas, and collision energy was set at 40 eV.

HPLC-UV/PAD analysis with post-column addition of shift reagents
The reagents used in the post-column derivatization system were: aqueous sodium hydroxide (0.01 mol L -1 ); aqueous aluminium chloride (0.3 mol L -1 ) and aqueous sodium acetate (0.5 mol L -1 ). The reaction was performed at room temperature except with aluminium chloride where the reaction coil was heated to 60 o C. The classical shift reagents were prepared according to the literature. 10 The solvent delivery system comprised two M-6000 pumps, a M-720 gradient controller and a U6K injector (Waters). The photodiode array detector HP-1040A (Hewlett-Packard) coupled with an HP-85 personal computer (Hewlett-Packard) was used for recording chromatograms and UV-Vis spectra. For post-column derivatization, an Eldex Model A-30-5-2 (Eldex Labs., Menlo Park, CA, USA) pump and a reaction coil were employed. Shift reagents were added to the eluent at a flow rate of 0.3 mL min -1 . were also reported previously, they had been found only in sugarcane leaves or bagasse. 12 The structural elucidation of the five additional minor flavones from sugarcane juice ( Figure 2) is discussed below, and the HPLC-APCI-CID-MS and on-line UV data of these compounds are shown in Table 1. Some of the identifications and discussions are also based on the comparison of data herein shown with those obtained in a study using exact mass measurement for unequivocal elucidation of isomeric sugarcane flavones. 13 The APCI spectrum of compound 4 presented an 383; 353, 329, 311 and 299, which are characteristic of the C-glucoside fragmentation pathway ( Figure 2) and are identical to those described for luteolin-8-C-glucoside (orientin). 16 The position of the glucuronic acid and glucose moieties was also consistent with the data from the UV analysis with post-column addition of shift reagents: the addition of sodium acetate showed a shoulder in band I, indicating a free OH group at 4', while the absence of shift to band II indicated a substituted 7-OH group. On the other hand, the addition of aluminum chloride led to a shift of On-line Identification of Minor Flavones from Sugarcane Juice by LC/UV/MS J. Braz. Chem. Soc. 1578 71 nm, indicating a free 5-OH group and the presence of the ortho-dihydroxyl group. Therefore, the glucuronic acid moiety was attributed to the 7-position, also considering that CID-MS/MS data and 0,2 X ion 16 (Figure 2) pointed to an 8-C-glucoside.

Results and Discussion
The compound 8 was identified as being swertisin (7-O-methylapigenin-6-C-glucoside), reported previously in sugarcane molasses and also in other plant sources. 4,14 This proposition is confirmed by the [M+H] + ion at m/z 447 and by the peak at m/z 327, which indicates a loss of 120 u ( 0,2 X ion, 16 Figure 2) from the [M+H] + ion, a characteristic feature of a C-glucoside flavonoid. 16 The CID-MS/MS data also indicated a fragmentation pathway of a C-linked glucose moiety (Figure 2; m/z 429, 411, 393, 381, 351, 327 and 297), and analysis of 0,2 X ion indicated an 6-C-glucoside. 16 The UV analysis with postcolumn addition of sodium acetate showed the absence of a bathochromic shift of band I, confirming the presence of a blocked 7-OH group and showed also a shoulder in band II indicating a free OH group in position 4'. The UV spectrum obtained with aluminum chloride, while confirming a free 5-OH group, also reveals the absence of ortho-dihydroxyl groups.
For compound 10, identified as tricin-7-O-neohesperoside-4'-O-rhamnoside, the MS and CID-MS/MS analyses showed respectively the [M+H] + ion at m/z 785 and the fragments at m/z 639, 493 and 331. These fragments have already been described for tricin 7-O-neohesperidoside (compound 11) 11 and were also studied by exact mass measurement. 13 The fragment at m/z 639 [M+H-146] + indicated loss of a rhamnose moiety. 14,17 The UV data obtained with sodium acetate showed positions 7, 3' and 4' blocked, while the 5-OH group was free.
In the case of compound 17, the peak at m/z 667  17). The UV analysis with shift reagents indicated the free 4' position, due to the presence of a shoulder in band I resulting from the addition of sodium acetate, while the absence of a shift in band II indicated a substituted 7-OH group.
The identity of the compounds corresponding to peaks 6, 7, 13 and 14 was not fully elucidated, but some partial propositions about their structure were deduced from their HPLC-UV-MS data ( Table 1). All these compounds are glycosilated flavones but the full identification of the nature and position of the substituent groups was not achieved.
is described in the literature, 4 but this is the first report of the triglycosilated flavone 10 in sugarcane. Three other compounds were partially identified as tricin derivatives. Several tricin derivatives have already been described in Saccharum species. 5,11,12,20 The hyphenated HPLC-UV-MS technique proved to be a very important tool for the on-line recording of structural information about minor compounds in a complex matrix such as that of sugarcane juice. Therefore, the on-line structural elucidation of components can offer valuable contributions to the scope of the analytical chemistry (scientific studies or technological applications such as quality assessment) of extracts of plant foods such as sugarcane and its derivatives.