Abstract
The novel alkaloid, oleracimine, presented remarkable anti-inflammatory bioactivity, and therefore, its pharmacokinetics was investigated in rat plasma after intravenous and oral administration by using a rapid ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) method with UV detection at 270 nm. The analysis was performed on a shim-pack ODS column (75 mm×2 mm, 1.6 µm particle size, Shimadzu, Japan) column using isocratic elution with a mobile phase consisting of methanol-water (62:38, v/v) within 3 min. The results indicated that oleracimine was rapidly distributed with Tmax for 11.7 min after oral administration, which presented the double-peak phenomenon in the pharmacokinetic profile with a higher oral absolute bioavailability of 55.1% ± 7.83%.
Keywords:
Portulaca oleracea L./Oleracimine; Ultra-High-Performance Liquid Chromatography/Rat plasma; Pharmacokinetics
Introduction
Portulaca oleracea L., a member of family Portulacaceae, is a warm climate, annual, green herb, with branched and succulent stems. As a widespread and abundant plant in the world, P. oleracea L. is used as a folk medicine in many countries. P. oleracea L. is a well-known traditional Chinese medicine and used as a treatment for removing heat, counteracting toxicity, cooling blood, hemostasia, and antidysentery (Pharmacopoeia of PRC, 2015). Previous studies reported that P. oleracea L. presented many pharmacological properties, such as antioxidant (Chen et al., 20123. Chen B, Zhou H, Zhao W, Zhou W, Yuan Q, Yang G. Effects of aqueous extract of Portulaca oleracea L. on oxidative stress and liver, spleen leptin, PAR and FAS mRNA expression in high-fat diet induced mice. Mol Biol Rep. 2012;39(8):7981-7988.), anti-inflammatory and analgesic (Chan et al., 20002. Chan K, Islam MW, Kamil M, Radhakrishnan R, Zakaria MN, Habibullah M, et al. The analgesic and anti-inflammatory effects of Portulaca oleracea L subsp. sativa (Haw.) Celak. J Ethnopharmacol. 2000;73(3): 445-451.), hypocholesterolemic (Movahedian, Ghannadi, Vashirnia, 20077. Movahedian A, Ghannadi A, Vashirnia M. Hypocholesterolemic effects of purslane extract on serum lipids in rabbits fed with high cholesterol levels. Int J Pharmacol. 2007;3(3):285-289.), neuroprotective effects (Abdel Moneim, 20131. Abdel Moneim, AE. The neuroprotective effects of purslane (Portulaca oleracea) on rotenone induced biochemical changes and apoptosis in brain of rat. CNS Neurol Disord Dr. 2013;12(6):830-841.), and antitumor (Zhao et al., 201316. Zhao R, Gao X, Cai YP, Shao XY, Jia GY, Huang YL, et al. Antitumor activity of Portulaca oleracea L. polysaccharides against cervical carcinoma in vitro and in vivo. Carbohydr Polym. 2013;96(2):376-383.). Until now, the active compounds including terpenes (Xin et al., 200813. Xin HL, Xu YF, Hou YH, Zhang YN, Yue XQ, Lu JC, et al. Two novel triterpenoids from Portulaca oleracea L. Helv Chim Acta, 2008;91:2075-80.), phenolic acids and coumarins (Cheng et al., 20124. Cheng ZZ, Xie M, Zhang WJ, Cheng L, Du Y, Wang YJ, et al. HPLC method for the simultaneous determination of four compounds in rat plasma after intravenous administration of Portulaca oleracea L. extract. Braz J Pharm Sci. 2012;48(1):163-70.), flavonoids (Xu, Yu, Chen, 200615. Xu XQ, Yu LS, Chen GN. Determination of flavonoids in Portulaca oleracea L. by capillary electrophoresis with electrochemical detection. J Pharmaceut Biomed. 2006;41(2):493-499.), and alkaloids (Jiao et al., 20156. Jiao ZZ, Yue S, Sun HX, Jin TY, Wang HN, Zhu RX, et al. Indoline amide glucosides from Portulaca oleracea: Isolation, structure, and DPPH radical scavenging activity. J Nat Prod. 2015;78(11):2588-2597.) were isolated from P. oleracea L., where the alkaloid has attracted many scholars’ attention because of its stronger bioactivity among natural products. Recently, five novel alkaloids, namely, oleracone, oleracone A, oleracimine, oleracimine A, and oleraciamide C have been isolated from P. oleracea L. in our laboratory, among which oleracimine presented remarkable anti-inflammatory effects on lipopolysaccharide-stimulated macrophages (Meng et al., 201611. Meng YH, Ying ZM, Xiang Z, Hao D, Zhang WJ, Zheng Y, et al. The anti-inflammation and pharmacokinetics of a novel alkaloid from Portulaca oleracea L. J Pharm Pharmacol. 2016;68(3):397-405.; Li et al., 20168. Li CY, Meng YH, Ying ZM, Xu N, Hao D, Gao MZ, et al. Three novel alkaloids from Portulaca oleracea L. and their antiinflammatory effects. J Agric Food Chem. 2016;64(29):5837-5844.; Xu et al., 2016). The results of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, Western blot, and real-time polymerase chain reaction showed that oleracimine remarkably inhibited nitric oxide production and could decrease the secretions of interleukin 6, tumor necrosis factor α, nitric oxide, and prostaglandin E2 in cell culture supernatants, as well as the mRNA of cyclooxygenase-2 and inducible nitric oxide synthase. Therefore, the pharmacokinetic profile of oleracimine is to be investigated by a rapid and specific ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) in rat plasma after intravenous and oral administrations, and the absolute bioavailability of oleracimine was also discussed.
Material and Methods
Material and reagents
The whole herbs of P. oleracea L. were collected in Shijiazhuang (Hebei, China) in June 2014. The plant was identified by Prof. Xixiang Ying. A voucher specimen (no. 20140312) was deposited at the School of Pharmacy, Liaoning University of Traditional Chinese Medicine. Oleracimine was isolated and purified in our laboratory (Li et al., 2017). For the internal standard (IS), bergapten was provided by Sichuan Weikeqi Biological Technology Co., Ltd (Chengdu, China) (Figure 1). Methanol and acetonitrile were all of HPLC grade provided by Damao Chemical Reagent Plant (Tianjin, China). All other reagents were of analytical grade and were purchased from Jinfeng Chemical Factory (Tianjin, China). Water was purified using Milli-Q® Biocel Ultrapure Water System (Millipore, Bedford, MA).
Chromatographic system and conditions
A Shimadzu UHPLC system (Japan) was equipped with a Solvent Delivery Pump (Shimadzu LC-30AD), a vacuum degasser (DGU-20A) a Shimadzu UV-VIS spectrophotometric detector (SPD-20A), and ChemStation software (Shimadzu). The analytical column was a shim-pack ODS column (75 mm × 2 mm; 1.6-µm particle size; Shimadzu, Japan). The mobile phase for UHPLC analysis consisting of methanol-water (62:38, v/v) were passed under vacuum through a 0.22-μm filter membrane and degassed by exposure to ultrasonic waves before use. UHPLC analysis with UV detection at 270 nm was performed at a flow rate of 0.3 mL/min, and the column temperature was 45°C. The sample injection volume was 3 µL.
Preparation of calibration standards and quality control (QC) samples
The stock solutions and IS were prepared by dissolving in methanol to yield concentrations of 144 µg/mL and 192 µg/mL respectively. The stock solution of IS was diluted with methanol to 3.84 µg/mL before use. Working standard solutions were freshly prepared by mixing and diluting the above mentioned stock solution with methanol at appropriate ratios to yield concentrations of 100.0, 16.0, 8.0, 4.0, 2.0, 1.0, 0.5, and 0.25 µg/mL of oleracimine. The stock solution and working standard solutions were stored in a refrigerator. QC samples prepared at 0.75, 7.5, and 75.0 µg/mL of oleracimine in bulk and aliquots were stored frozen before use.
Animals and blood sampling
Male Wistar rats (250 ± 20 g) were supplied by the Laboratory Animal Service Center of Dalian Medical University. They were kept in an environmentally controlled breeding room for 1 week before the experiments and were fed with regular chow with standard laboratory food and water ad libitum and fasted overnight before the experiment. All animal studies were performed according to the requirement of the National Act on the Use of Experimental Animal (China) that was approved by the Committee of Ethics of Animal Experimentation of Liaoning University of Traditional Chinese Medicine.
For the pharmacokinetics, the two groups of rat (five rats per group) were assigned to receive oleracimine solution via intravenous and oral administrations at a single dose of 2.5 mg/kg, respectively. Serial blood samples (0.3 mL) were obtained via the orbitalis vena at intervals of 2, 5, 10, 15, 20, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, 180, and 240 min after administration and were collected in heparinized centrifuge tubes. The blood samples were immediately centrifuged at 3,500 g for 15 min at room temperature. The plasma sample was stored at -20 ?Χ until analysis.
Plasma sample preparation
A 100-µL plasma, 20-µL IS (3.84 µg/mL), and 0.5-mL acetonitrile were added, followed by vortex mixing for 1 min and centrifuged at 3,500 g for 15 min to precipitate the protein. The supernatant was collected and evaporated to dryness at 40 °C under a gentle stream of nitrogen. The residue was reconstituted with 50 µL mobile phase, and centrifuged at 16,350 g for 5 min, and an aliquot (3 µL) of the supernatant was injected into the UHPLC system.
Method validation
Selectivity
The selectivity was determined by comparing chromatograms of blank plasma obtained from the rats before dosing with the corresponding standard plasma spiked with the compound and IS and samples from rats after administration of the compound.
Linearity, LOD, and LOQ
The linearity was evaluated over the concentration range of 0.05 to 20 μg/mL at eight levels of the compound. The peak area ratios of the analyte with IS were plotted against the standard concentrations to establish calibration curves for oleracimine. The regression equation was obtained by using the 1/X2 weighted least squares linear regression method. The LOD and LOQ were determined by stepwise dilution of the QC sample at a low concentration level, using a signal-noise ratio of 3 and 10, respectively, which gives an acceptable accuracy (RE) within ± 20% and a precision (RSD) that did not exceed 20%.
Precision and accuracy
The intraday and interday precisions and accuracy were, respectively, determined within 1 day and for three consecutive days by analyzing the QC samples at low, medium, and high concentrations. The intraday and interday precisions were defined as the relative standard deviation (RSD), and accuracy was determined by calculating the relative error (RE).
Extraction recovery
The RSD of each concentration was calculated to determine the precision of the method. The extraction recovery was determined in sets of five replicates of the QC samples by comparing the peak areas obtained for the QC samples at low, medium, and high concentrations, which were subjected to an extraction procedure with those obtained from blank plasma extracts that were spiked postextraction with the corresponding concentrations.
Stability
The stabilities were carried out by the QC samples at low, medium, and high concentrations. Short- and long-term stabilities were determined by analyzing the QC samples kept at ambient temperature (25 °C) for 4 h and stored at -20 °C for 1 month, respectively. Freeze-thaw stability was investigated after three freeze-thaw (-20 °C to room temperature) cycles. Then, the samples were processed and analyzed. The concentrations obtained were compared with the nominal values of the QC samples.
Pharmacokinetic study
Plasma data were subjected to analysis using both the statistical moment principle and the pharmacokinetic program, Version 1.0 (3p97) of the Chinese Society of Mathematical Pharmacology (Beijing, China). The maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) and the time to reach the maximum plasma concentration (Tmax) were obtained from 3p97 pharmacokinetic program. The compartmental parameters were generated by the pharmacokinetic program, including α half-life (t1/2α), β half-life(t1/2β), clearance rate (CL), and the area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC). The noncompartmental parameters and the area under the plasma concentration time curve (AUC0-t) were calculated using the statistical moment method. The total area under the plasma concentration-time curve from time zero to time infinity (AUC0-∞) was calculated as the sum of AUC0-t and Clast/K, where Clast represents the last quantifiable concentration, and K represents the terminal phase rate constant. The terminal half-life (t1/2) was calculated as 0.693/K, and the K was estimated by natural logarithms of linear regression on the last five points. Clearance (CL) after dosing was calculated as dose/AUC0-∞. The mean retention time (MRT) was calculated though AUMC/AUC. The absolute bioavailability (%F) was calculated using the following formula:
Results and Discussion
Method development and optimization
During method development, the mobile phase composition varied using different combinations of methanol, acetonitrile, and water. Here, the mobile phase of methanol-water (62:38, v/v) was chosen to achieve good peak shape, satisfactory resolution, and relatively short analysis time. The UV absorption spectra of oleracimine have a maximum absorption at 270 nm and that of IS at 254 nm. The interferences from endogenous substances in the plasma were observed when the wavelength was set at 254 nm. Therefore, the detection wavelength was set at 270 nm because no interference appeared, and it was found to be suitable for the analysis of oleracimine and IS. To improve the accuracy of the method and reduce the error during injection process, the internal standard (IS) was chosen to analyze oleracimine. Baicalein, bergapten, kaempferol, and chrysophanol were, respectively, selected as candidates of IS, and only bergapten and chrysophanol had the close retention time with analyte, whereas chrysophanol presented a low recovery ratio which may be reduced by a high protein binding ratio of 85.7% (Feng et al., 20135. Feng SX, Wu J, LI JS, Qu LB, Xu HP, Yang R, et al. Determination of the binding rate of rat plasma protein with five anthraquinones in rhubarb. Chin J Mod Appl Pharm. 2013;30:1-5.), bergapten was therefore chosen as the internal standard. To simultaneously acquire high extraction recovery of analytes and IS, several solvents, including acetonitrile, methanol, and their different ratios, were applied to precipitate protein, only the satisfactory recoveries of analytes and IS (81.9% and 86.3%) can be obtained simultaneously after acetonitrile was applied.
Method validation
The representative chromatograms of blank plasma, plasma samples spiked with analyte and IS, and a plasma sample obtained from a rat after the intravenous and oral administration of oleracimine (2.5 mg/kg) are shown in Figure 2, indicating a good baseline resolution of IS and analyte at retention times of approximately 2.4 min and 2.7 min, respectively. The total run time per sample was no more than 3 min, and there were no interfering peaks of endogenous compounds in the chromatographic determinations. The regression equation of the calibration curves was typically: y=0.936633x+0.00443, and the linear ranges for plasma were within 0.05 to 20 μg/mL with r> 0.9934. The LOD (S/N > 3) and the LOQ (S/N > 10) were, respectively, 0.017 and 0.05 μg/mL in plasma. The RSDs of precision and the REs of accuracy at low, medium, and high concentrations (0.15, 1.50, 15.0 μg/mL) were listed in Table I, and the results conform with the criteria for the analysis of biological sample according to the guidelines of USFDA (FDA, 2001). Mean extraction recovery at three concentration levels for oleracimine was 80.6 ± 4.3% with an RSD of 8.5%, suggesting negligible loss during extraction. The short-, long-term, and freeze-thaw stability of analytes in plasma ranged from 80.1% to 83.4%, indicating that no remarkable degradation occurred during chromatography, extraction, and storage processes for the plasma samples.
(A) - Representative chromatogram of blank plasma. (B) - Representative chromatogram of plasma sample 20 min after the intravenous administration. (C) - Representative chromatogram of oral administration of oleracimine at a dose of 2.5 mg/kg. (D) - Representative chromatogram of plasma spiked with oleracimine and IS. Peak 1: Internal standard; Peak 2: oleracimine.
Precisions and accuracies of oleracimine in rat plasma (intra-day: n = 5; inter-day: n = 3 days with 5 replicates per day)
Pharmacokinetics
The pharmacokinetic parameters were estimated by compartmental and noncompartmental analyses, and all the pharmacokinetic parameters are given in Table II . According to the AIC and R2, a two-compartment open model (weight = 1) gave the best fit to the plasma concentration-time curves obtained in rats. The mean plasma concentration-time curves of oleracimine in rat after oral and intravenous administrations at a dose of 2.5 mg/kg are shown in Figure 3, which showed that the concentration-time curves of oleracimine presented the double-peak phenomenon in the pharmacokinetic profile, and two mechanisms should be responsible for the phenomenon: (1) enterohepatic recycling, the cycle in which bile salts and drugs excreted by the liver are absorbed by the intestinal mucosa and returned to the liver via the portal circulation (Zhu et al., 201017. Zhu Z, Zhao L, Liu X, Chen J, Zhang H, Zhang G, et al. Comparative pharmacokinetics of baicalin and wogonoside by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry after oral administration of Xiaochaihu Tang and Radix scutellariae extract to rats. J Chromatogr B. 2010;878(24):2184-2190.). 2) For absorption difference, the lipophilic drug was rapidly distributed into the organs at first and was released to the plasma again after the metabolism of the drug has reached a certain degree, resulting in the appearance of double peaks (Ma, Sun, 199310. Ma YM, Sun RY. Second peak of plasma diazepam concentration and enterogastric circulation. Acta Pharmacol Sin. 1993;14(3):218-221.). Also, oleracimine was rapidly distributed and eliminated in rat plasma with a Tmax of 11.7 min and a T1/2 of 75.2 min after oral administration. AUC0→∞ was 76.2 ± 6.2 μg·min/mL intravenous route is larger than 38.9 ± 3.1 μg·min/mL oral route, suggesting that the intravenous route had higher absorption than oral route. Besides the apparent volumes of distribution after both administrations (intravenous: Vd= 1.09 ± 0.20 L/kg, oral: Vd= 2.08 ± 0.30 L/kg) were very small, showing that oleracimine distributed mainly in plasma. The CL of the intravenous route (9.8 ± 0.8 mL/min·kg) was smaller than that of the oral route (19.3 ± 1.4 mL/min·kg), indicating that oleracimine after intravenous administration eliminated slower in the blood than the oral administration, and oral administration would be better for the metabolic process of oleracimine in the body. In addition, oleracimine has a higher oral bioavailability of 55.1 ± 7.83, suggesting that oleracimine is of significance for the pharmaceutical industry because of its anti-inflammatory bioactivity and higher bioavailability.
Mean plasma concentration-time curves of oleracimine in rats (mean ± S.D., n = 5) after the intravenous and oral administrations at a dose of 2.5 mg·kg-1. These sampling points, which could not be detected, that is, plasma concentrations under the LOQ, were not included in the mean plasma concentration-time curves.
Conclusions
The pharmacokinetics of the novel alkaloid, oleracimine was investigated after intravenous and oral administrations using a rapid and specific UHPLC method for the first time. Oleracimine presented the double-peak phenomenon in the pharmacokinetic profile and a higher oral absolute bioavailability. Taken together, our study will provide reliable scientific data for its application as the leading compound to treat inflammatory diseases in clinical therapeutic approach in the future.
Acknowledgments
This study was supported by the Project of National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant 81573546) and the Natural Science Foundation of Liaoning Province (Grant 2015020699), China.
References
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2Chan K, Islam MW, Kamil M, Radhakrishnan R, Zakaria MN, Habibullah M, et al. The analgesic and anti-inflammatory effects of Portulaca oleracea L subsp. sativa (Haw.) Celak. J Ethnopharmacol. 2000;73(3): 445-451.
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3Chen B, Zhou H, Zhao W, Zhou W, Yuan Q, Yang G. Effects of aqueous extract of Portulaca oleracea L. on oxidative stress and liver, spleen leptin, PAR and FAS mRNA expression in high-fat diet induced mice. Mol Biol Rep. 2012;39(8):7981-7988.
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4Cheng ZZ, Xie M, Zhang WJ, Cheng L, Du Y, Wang YJ, et al. HPLC method for the simultaneous determination of four compounds in rat plasma after intravenous administration of Portulaca oleracea L. extract. Braz J Pharm Sci. 2012;48(1):163-70.
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5Feng SX, Wu J, LI JS, Qu LB, Xu HP, Yang R, et al. Determination of the binding rate of rat plasma protein with five anthraquinones in rhubarb. Chin J Mod Appl Pharm. 2013;30:1-5.
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6Jiao ZZ, Yue S, Sun HX, Jin TY, Wang HN, Zhu RX, et al. Indoline amide glucosides from Portulaca oleracea: Isolation, structure, and DPPH radical scavenging activity. J Nat Prod. 2015;78(11):2588-2597.
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10Ma YM, Sun RY. Second peak of plasma diazepam concentration and enterogastric circulation. Acta Pharmacol Sin. 1993;14(3):218-221.
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13Xin HL, Xu YF, Hou YH, Zhang YN, Yue XQ, Lu JC, et al. Two novel triterpenoids from Portulaca oleracea L. Helv Chim Acta, 2008;91:2075-80.
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15Xu XQ, Yu LS, Chen GN. Determination of flavonoids in Portulaca oleracea L. by capillary electrophoresis with electrochemical detection. J Pharmaceut Biomed. 2006;41(2):493-499.
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16Zhao R, Gao X, Cai YP, Shao XY, Jia GY, Huang YL, et al. Antitumor activity of Portulaca oleracea L. polysaccharides against cervical carcinoma in vitro and in vivo. Carbohydr Polym. 2013;96(2):376-383.
-
17Zhu Z, Zhao L, Liu X, Chen J, Zhang H, Zhang G, et al. Comparative pharmacokinetics of baicalin and wogonoside by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry after oral administration of Xiaochaihu Tang and Radix scutellariae extract to rats. J Chromatogr B. 2010;878(24):2184-2190.
Publication Dates
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Publication in this collection
08 Apr 2019 -
Date of issue
2018
History
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Received
26 Apr 2017 -
Accepted
2801 Apr 2018