Valérie
Bardot
a,
Anaïs
Escalon
a,
Isabelle
Ripoche
b,
Sylvain
Denis
c,
Monique
Alric
c,
Sandrine
Chalancon
c,
Pierre
Chalard
b,
César
Cotte
a,
Lucile
Berthomier
b,
Martin
Leremboure
b and
Michel
Dubourdeaux
*a
aPiLeJe Industrie, Naturopôle Nutrition Santé, Les Tiolans, F-03800 Saint-Bonnet-de-Rochefort, France. E-mail: m.dubourdeaux@pileje.com
bUniversité Clermont Auvergne, CNRS, SIGMA Clermont, Institut de Chimie de Clermont Ferrand, BP 10448, F-63000 Clermont Ferrand, France
cUniversité Clermont Auvergne, INRA, UMR454 MEDIS, F-63000 Clermont Ferrand, France
First published on 8th January 2020
The objective of this study was to evaluate the benefits of a new extraction process, the ipowder® technology, applied to Melissa officinalis L. Compared to M. officinalis ground dry leaves, the ipowder® had a similar phytochemical fingerprint but contained twice the concentration of rosmarinic acid (by HPTLC and HPLC) and had a two-fold greater antioxidant activity (DPPH* method). In vitro digestion experiments (TIM-1 model) showed better availability of rosmarinic acid for intestinal absorption with the ipowder® than with ground dry leaves, manifested by a three-fold reduction in the quantity of ingested product needed for delivery of the same amount of rosmarinic acid into the upper gastro-intestinal tract. This study shows that the ipowder® technology preserves all the original plant compounds intact while making some active ingredients more accessible and available to exert their effects. To obtain a given effect, the amount of ipowder® extract to ingest will therefore be lower; a reduction in the daily dosage will be more convenient for the patient and will improve patient compliance with supplementation.
Medicinal plants are used either directly as dry plant powder or as liquid or dry formulations of their active ingredients extracted by various methods. The amount of dry plant powder to be ingested in order to achieve a physiological effect is generally relatively high, especially since the bioavailability of the active compounds is usually low. Moreover, in the case of an extract, its quality depends greatly on the extraction method. According to the method used, different active compounds will be extracted, at varying concentrations.
Loss and degradation of certain plant ingredients often occur during the preparation of extracts and as a result, their phytochemical composition differs from that of the totum, defined as the entire set of active compounds contained in the part of the plant used for extraction. A fundamental principle of phytotherapy is that of synergy, according to which the activity of the totum is more than the sum of the effects of the individual active ingredients taken separately. It is therefore essential to design new processes for the preparation of plant extracts that preserve intact in the finished product all the active substances contained in the original medicinal plant while increasing their availability. The ipowder® technology was developed for this purpose.
The ipowder® process consists of three essential steps, namely contact between the plant material and a solvent, at least one step of extraction of the active compounds, and finally spray-drying of the resulting extract on to the same plant material as that used to produce the extract.3 This plant material is then crushed to form the ipowder®. The spray-drying procedure yields a final product enriched in active substances and also guarantees the presence of all the active compounds contained in the original plant material used. In contrast, the composition of dry plant extracts prepared by conventional methods generally differs from the totum because these extracts are dried on an inert support (such as maltodextrin, starch etc.) or without using any support.
The objective of this study was to show that the ipowder® technology: (1) concentrates certain active ingredients while preserving all the active compounds contained in the original plant material without altering these; (2) enhances their biological effects; and (3) increases the availability of the active compounds for intestinal absorption during digestion. For this purpose, we applied the process to leaves of Melissa officinalis L., also known as lemon balm, a medicinal plant that has long been used in traditional medicine. M. officinalis has sedative, spasmolytic, and hypotensive properties, as well as fever-reducing, thyroid-related, antiviral and antioxidant activities, and has been shown to be of benefit against asthma, heart failure, ulcers and wounds.4–6M. officinalis is also used for the symptomatic treatment of mild gastro-intestinal complaints, including bloating and flatulence,7 and for the symptomatic treatment of digestive disorders such as minor spasms.8 Extracts of M. officinalis leaves contain substances belonging to various chemical classes, such as triterpenes, flavonoids and polyphenolic compounds.9 The major compound present in leaf extracts, identified as rosmarinic acid (RA), is commonly used as a marker.9
To show the benefits of the ipowder® technology, we determined the phytochemical fingerprint of the M. officinalis ipowder® (hereafter referred to as ipowder®), RA concentration, antioxidant activity and release of RA during in vitro digestion (using the TIM-1 model that mimics the human digestion process), and compared the characteristics and properties of this ipowder® to those of M. officinalis ground dry leaves.
The extract of M. officinalis tested (Lemon balm ipowder®, PiLeJe Industrie, France3) is obtained by extraction of 1 kg of M. officinalis cut dry leaves in 10 L of water at 85 °C for 30 minutes. After filtration, the resulting extract is concentrated under vacuum (native extract ratio [NER]: 5 to 7:1), then fixed and dried on 0.5 kg of M. officinalis cut dry leaves (impregnation support) under reduced pressure (drug extract ratio [DER]: 2 to 4:1). The enriched plant material is finally crushed to form the ipowder® and filled into capsules.
Samples were obtained from the analytical extraction of 1 g of M. officinalis ground dry leaves or ipowder® in 100 mL of different solvents (water, ethanol/water: 50/50 v/v [50% ethanol] or methanol). After a 15 min sonication at room temperature, the samples were filtered. The RA standard solution was prepared from 10 mg of RA in 200 mL of 50% ethanol and sonicated for 5 min.
Test solutions (10 μL) and RA standard solution (8 μL) were applied on 8 mm bands, 8 mm from the lower edge of the plate. The mobile phase was a mixture of ethyl acetate, water, acetic acid and formic acid (100/27/11/11). Plates were developed over a distance of 70 mm from the lower edge using a twin trough glass chamber saturated for 20 min with the mobile phase under controlled humidity (RH: 33%). After development, plates were dried under a stream of cool air for 10 min. The plates were heated at 100 °C for 3 min then immersed in Natural Product (NP) reagent (1 g of 2-aminoethyl diphenylborinate in 200 mL of ethyl acetate) at a speed of 5 cm s−1 with an immersion time of 0 s, then dried under a stream of cool air. The plates were immersed in polyethylene glycol (PEG) reagent (10 g of PEG 400 in 200 mL of dichloromethane) at the same speed and immersion time then dried. Digital images were taken at 366 nm.
The same HPTLC conditions were used to detect antioxidant activity. After development, the plate was immersed in a 0.5 mM methanolic 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) solution with a speed of 3 cm s−1 and an immersion time of 5 s. The plate was dried at room temperature in the dark for 90 s and then heated for 30 s at 60 °C. The chromatogram was analysed under white light (reflectance mode).
Chromatographic analyses using ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) were performed on an Ultimate 3000 RSLC UHPLC system (Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., MA, USA) coupled to a quaternary rapid separation pump (ultimate autosampler) and a rapid separation diode array detector. Compounds were separated on an Uptisphere Strategy C18 column (250 × 4.6 mm, 5 μm, Interchim, France), controlled at 30 °C. The mobile phase was a mixture of 0.1% (v/v) formic acid in water (phase A) and 0.1% (v/v) formic acid in acetonitrile (phase B). The gradient of phase A was 100% (0 min), 80% (10 min), 73% (35 min), 0% (40–50 min) and 100% (51–60 min). The flow rate was 0.8 mL min−1, and the injection volume was 5 μL. The UHPLC system was connected to an Orbitrap (Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., MA, USA) mass spectrometer, operated in the negative electrospray ionization mode. Source operating conditions were: 3 kV spray voltage; 320 °C heated capillary temperature; 400 °C auxiliary gas temperature; sheath, sweep and auxiliary gas (nitrogen) flow rate 50, 10 and 2 arbitrary units, respectively; and collision cell voltage between 10 and 50 eV. Full scan data were obtained at a resolution of 70000 whereas MS2 data were obtained at a resolution of 17500. Data were processed using Xcalibur software (Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., MA, USA).
The RA standard solution was prepared from 22.4 mg of RA in 50 mL of a mixture of 50% ethanol and 50% water, acidified by the addition of 2% glacial acetic acid (ethanol/acidified water). The mixture was then sonicated for 5 min. The RA calibration curve was obtained by analysing samples containing 25 to 400 mg L−1 of RA in the same solvent. The solutions were filtered through a 0.45 μm PTFE membrane filter prior to injection. All assays to determine the quantity of RA in the ground dry leaves and ipowder® were carried out in triplicate.
For sample preparation, 0.5 g of M. officinalis ground dry leaves or ipowder® were extracted with 45 mL of 50% ethanol, under sonication for 30 min at room temperature. The extracts were then filtered, the volume was completed to 50 mL and finally diluted 75 times with the same solvent. Standard solutions of Trolox (2.35 to 150 μM) were prepared in methanol.
Aliquots of the standard or sample solutions (50 μL) were introduced into the wells with 250 μL of DPPH* solution (79 μM in methanol). The plates were kept for 30 min in the dark at room temperature. The absorbance (Abs) was measured at 515 nm and converted into the percentage of inhibition of DPPH* radical using the following formula:
A DPPH* solution (100 μL) in methanol (100 μL) was used as the control (Abs control). All assays were performed in triplicate and results were reported as the mean ± standard deviation (SD). DPPH* scavenging activities were expressed as mg of Trolox equivalents per g of samples using a linear regression curve.
Compartment | Volume (mL) at initial time | pH/time (min) | Secretions | T (min); β coefficienta |
---|---|---|---|---|
a Mathematical modelling of gastric and ileal deliveries with power exponential equation was used for the computer control of chyme transit: f = 1–2−(t/T)↑β where f represents the fraction of the meal delivered, t the time of delivery, T the half-time of delivery and β a coefficient describing the shape of the curve. | ||||
Stomach | 10 gastric residue | 1.8/0; 6.0/1; 3.2/10; 2.4/20; 1.8/40; 1.6/60; 1.5/240 | Pepsin: 130 IU min−1 | 20; 1 |
200 water | Lipase: 7.5 IU min−1 | |||
0.5 M HCl when necessary | ||||
Duodenum | 50 | Maintained at 6.4 | Bile extract (porcine): 40 mg min−1 on 0–25 min, then 20 mg min−1 | |
Pancreatin 4USP: 22.3 mg min−1 | ||||
0.5 M NaHCO3 when necessary | ||||
Jejunum | 130 | Maintained at 6.9 | 0.5 M NaHCO3 when necessary | |
Jejunal dialysis | 10 mL min −1 | 5 mM K-phosphate buffer pH 6.9; NaCl 5 g L −1 ; CaCl 2 , 2H2O 0.2 g L−1 | ||
Ileum | 130 | Maintained at 7.2 | 0.5 M NaHCO3 when necessary | 150; 2.4 |
Ileal dialysis | 10 mL min −1 | 5 mM K-phosphate buffer pH 7.2; NaCl 5 g L −1 ; CaCl 2 , 2H2O 0.2 g L−1 |
In this model, we compared the amount of RA released from a specified quantity of ipowder® with that released from the total quantity of ground dry plant leaves required to produce this quantity of ipowder®. As described in section 2.1, the ipowder® is produced by spray-drying of an extract obtained from two parts of M. officinalis leaves on one part of M. officinalis leaves meaning that one part of ipowder® is obtained from three parts of raw plant material. HydroxyPropylMethylCellulose (HPMC) capsules size 00 were filled with 300 mg of M. officinalis ground dry leaves or ipowder®. One capsule of ipowder® or three capsules of leaves were digested with 200 mL of mineral water (Volvic®, Volvic, France) in the TIM-1 system, in triplicate. During digestion, cumulated dialysis fluids (jejunal and ileal dialysates) and cumulated ileal effluents were regularly collected. Volumes were measured and samples were stored at −20 °C for downstream analysis of RA concentration. After 4 h, the final gastro-intestinal contents of the four compartments of the TIM-1 system were pooled and a sample was also frozen for analysis.
Fig. 1 (a) and (b) Chromatographic fingerprint of analytical extracts of M. officinalis ground dry leaves (lanes 2–4) and ipowder® (lanes 5–7) with three extraction solvents (water: lanes 2 and 5; 50% ethanol: lanes 3 and 6; methanol: lanes 4 and 7) at 366 nm (a) and with DPPH* method (b). Lane 1: rosmarinic acid standard. (c). LC/MS spectrum of ipowder® (see Table 2 for signal identification). |
The immersion of a second HPTLC plate in DPPH* (Fig. 1b) showed that both ground dry leaves and ipowder® have anti-oxidant activities with RA as the major marker of this activity (upper white spots on lanes 1, 3, 5, 6, 7). HPTLC analysis showed the presence of various polyphenol derivatives including RA. As previously described, RA was the major compound detected in the extracts of M. officinalis analysed.9,14,15
The phytochemical profile of ipowder® was determined by LC/MS analyses in the negative ionization mode using the optimal extraction solvent (i.e. 50% ethanol; Fig. 1c and Table 2). The LC/MS spectrum showed the presence of RA (Fig. 1c, signal 11; rt: 26.38 min M–H: 359.0773). Other compounds identified included RA derivatives such as danshensu (Fig. 1c, signal 5, M–H: 197.0450), and 3′-O-(8′′-Z-caffeoyl) rosmarinic acid (Fig. 1c, signal 12, M–H: 537.1042) and flavones such as luteolin 3′-O-β-D-glucuronide (Fig. 1c, signal 9, M–H: 461.0732).
Peak | Retention time (min) | Molecular ion [M–H]− (m/z) | Formula | MS2 (m/z) | Compounds | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 3.68 | 149.0076 | C4H6O6 | 149/87/72/59/103 | Tartaric acid | Standard |
2 | 3.91 | 191.0549 | C7H12O6 | 191/85/127 | Quinic acid | Standard |
3 | 6.86 | 191.0192 | C6H8O7 | 111/87/85/191 | Citric acid | Standard |
4 | 7.64 | 117.0182 | C4H6O4 | 73/117/99 | Succinic acid | 16 |
5 | 10.49 | 197.0450 | C9H10O5 | 72/135/123/179 | Danshensu | 17 |
6 | 12.00 | 311.0411 | C13H12O9 | 149/179/135/87 | Caftaric acid | 18 |
7 | 14.82 | 179.0341 | C9H8O4 | 135 | Caffeic acid | Standard |
8 | 16.04 | 537.1046 | C27H22O12 | 295/179/135/121/493 | Lithospermic acid A | 19 |
9 | 19.47 | 461.0732 | C21H18O12 | 285 | Luteolin 3′-O-β-D-glucuronide | 20 |
10 | 22.29 | 719.1618 | C36H32O16 | 161/359/197/179/135/341/133 | Sagerinic acid | 21 |
11 | 26.38 | 359.0773 | C18H16O8 | 161/197/179/135 | Rosmarinic acid | Standard |
12 | 30.22 | 537.1042 | C27H22O12 | 161/135/359/179/197 | 3′-O-(8′′-Z-Caffeoyl) rosmarinic acid | 22 |
M. officinalis leaves | ipowder® | |
---|---|---|
mg of RA per 100 mg of dried raw material | ||
Measured by HPTLC | 1.45 ± 0.10 | 2.62 ± 0.05 |
Measured by HPLC | 1.34 ± 0.07 | 2.76 ± 0.05 |
% scavenging activity | 21.6 ± 0.6 | 44.9 ± 1.8 |
Trolox equivalent (mg g −1 sample) | 291 ± 10 | 618 ± 23 |
Both HPTLC and HPLC analyses showed that the ipowder® contained a higher concentration of RA than the ground dry leaves. The concentration of RA detected in the ipowder® was 2.62 ± 0.05 mg of RA per 100 mg of dried raw material by HPTLC and 2.76 ± 0.05 mg by HPLC. These concentrations were almost twofold higher than in the ground dry leaves (1.45 ± 0.10 mg of RA per 100 mg of dried raw material by HPTLC and 1.34 ± 0.07 mg by HPLC). It is worth noting that the two quantification methods resulted in the detection of similar concentrations of RA. The ratio of 1.8 between the RA concentrations in the ipowder® and in the ground dry leaves detected with HPTLC was equivalent to the ratio of 2.1 obtained with HPLC.
The ipowder® exhibited a scavenging activity that was twofold greater than that of the ground dry leaves (Table 3). A similar result was obtained for the Trolox equivalent.
Altogether these results showed that the antioxidant activity of ground dry leaves and ipowder® was correlated with the concentration of RA: with a RA concentration twice as high as in ground dry leaves, the ipowder® had a scavenging activity two-fold greater.
RA release and dialysis from the two preparations were similar as no difference in the kinetic profiles and total quantities dialysed were observed (Fig. 2 and Table 4). This observation is not due to system saturation since other studies have shown that higher amounts of solubilized substances can be dialysed in the TIM-1 model.24 Moreover, we observed in a preliminary digestion on a dry extract of M. officinalis leaves (60–80% native extract, 30% ethanol) that about 12 mg of RA for an ingested quantity of 13.3 mg was solubilized and dialysed in the TIM-1 system (data not shown). One capsule of ipowder® (300 mg) therefore released the same amount of RA as three capsules containing M. officinalis ground dry leaves (900 mg in total). This result is of great interest as it shows that the novel ipowder® extraction process will enable reduction of the recommended daily intake of this herbal product.
M. officinalis ground dry leaves (3 capsules) | ipowder® (1 capsule) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Total RA ± SD (mg) | % of intake ± SD | Total RA ± SD (mg) | % of intake ± SD | |
a Statistically significant difference between ipowder® and ground dry leaves (student t-test, with a probability level of P < 0.05 considered to be statistically different). | ||||
Intake | 12.44 ± 0.02 | 100 | 7.79 ± 0.10a | 100 |
Cumulated dialysates | 7.5 ± 0.7 | 60.0 ± 5.3 | 6.6 ± 0.4 | 85.3 ± 4.8a |
Cumulated ileal effluents | 0.07 ± 0.02 | 0.6 ± 0.2 | 0.18 ± 0.06a | 2.3 ± 0.7a |
Final GIT content | 0.27 ± 0.04 | 2.2 ± 0.3 | 0.25 ± 0.24 | 3.2 ± 3.1 |
Total release | 7.8 ± 0.6 | 62.7 ± 5.1 | 7.1 ± 0.5 | 90.8 ± 6.5a |
In both cases, RA was mainly delivered in the proximal part of the GIT since 83 and 84% of RA from the ground dry leaves and the ipowder®, respectively, were recovered in the jejunal dialysates (data not shown). Only a small quantity of free RA was recovered in the cumulative ileal effluents during the 4 h of digestion, and at the end of digestion in the residual contents of the TIM-1 compartments, suggesting that RA was rapidly released from both formulations during digestion (Table 4).
However, compared to the total amount of RA contained in each product ingested, the percentage of recovery of the free biomarker was significantly higher for the ipowder® than for the ground dry leaves (90.8 ± 6.5% for ipowder® vs. 62.7 ± 5.1% for the leaves). RA therefore seems to be more easily released from the ipowder® than from ground dry leaves during digestion and consequently more available for intestinal absorption. This is most likely due to the pre-extraction of RA (and other active compounds) in the case of the ipowder®. It should be noted that other compounds, in particular caffeic acid and danshensu with a chemical structure similar to that of RA, were also detected in the dialysates (data not shown).
Altogether, this study shows that the ipowder® technology preserves all the original plant compounds intact (nonselective extraction) while making some active compounds more accessible and available to exert their effects. The quantity of ingested product required to obtain the same amount of RA available for absorption was reduced by a factor of three. To obtain a given effect, the amount of M. officinalis ipowder® extract to be ingested will therefore be lower than in the case of ground dry leaves. The consequent reduction in daily dosage will result in greater convenience for the patient and will improve patient compliance with supplementation.
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020 |