Cytotoxicity of hydroxydihydrobovolide and its pharmacokinetic studies in Portulaca oleracea L. extract

Authors

  • Liang Xu Liaoning University of Traditional Chinese Medicine; School of Pharmacy
  • Xiaojun Tao Liaoning University of Traditional Chinese Medicine; School of Pharmacy
  • Yucong Gao Liaoning University of Traditional Chinese Medicine; School of Pharmacy
  • Wenjie Zhang Liaoning University of Traditional Chinese Medicine; School of Pharmacy
  • Yihan Meng Liaoning University of Traditional Chinese Medicine; School of Pharmacy
  • Cuiyu Li Liaoning University of Traditional Chinese Medicine; School of Pharmacy
  • Mingyue Jiang Liaoning University of Traditional Chinese Medicine; School of Pharmacy
  • Ying Xixiang Liaoning University of Traditional Chinese Medicine; School of Pharmacy

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/s2175-97902017000216093

Keywords:

Portulaca oleracea L./hydroxydihydrobovolide, Portulaca oleracea L./hydroxydihydrobovolide/cytotoxicity, Portulaca oleracea L./hydroxydihydrobovolide/pharmacokinetics, Hydroxydihydrobovolide/Ultra-high performance liquid chromatography

Abstract

Hydroxydihydrobovolide (HDB) was for the first time isolated from Portulaca oleracea L. and then its cytotoxicity against SH-SYTY cells was studied. Moreover, a rapid and sensitive ultra-high performance liquid chromatographic (UHPLC) method with bergapten as internal standard (IS) was developed and validated to investigate the pharmacokinetics of HDB in rats after intravenous and oral administrations of extract (POE). The UHPLC analysis was performed on a Diamonsil C18 analytical column, using acetonitrile-water (35:65, v/v) as the mobile phase with UV detection at 220 nm. The calibration curve was linear over the range of 0.2-25 µg/mL in rat plasma. The average extraction recovery was from 90.1 to 98.9%, and the relative standard deviations (RSDs) of the intra- and inter-day precisions were less than 4.7 and 4.1%, respectively. The results showed that 50 µM HDB had significant cytotoxicity on the SH-SY5Y cells, which was rapidly distributed with a Tmax of 11 min after oral administration and presented a low absolute bioavailability, 4.12%.

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Published

2017-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Cytotoxicity of hydroxydihydrobovolide and its pharmacokinetic studies in Portulaca oleracea L. extract. (2017). Brazilian Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 53(2), e16093-. https://doi.org/10.1590/s2175-97902017000216093