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1.
Rev. bras. farmacogn ; 28(3): 261-266, May-June 2018. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-958879

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT Concepts of sustainability have received attention from people involved in investigation of nature-derived matrices. The effects of concomitant pollutant activities are cumulative and harmful to the environment from which these matrices are obtained. High performance liquid chromatography analyses generate millions of litters of chemical waste worldwide every year. Reduction of organic solvent consumption during the analyses and replacement of harmful solvents with greener options are the main approaches to mitigate this problem. This work explored the strategy of employing monolithic columns when the problematic acetonitrile is intended to be replaced with the greener but more viscous ethanol in fingerprinting a leaf extract of Lippia sidoides Cham., Verbenaceae, by high performance liquid chromatography. Two monolithic columns were coupled in series to test a more critical backpressure condition while doubling the number of theoretical plates, which can be useful to separate the hundreds of compounds present in plant extracts. All work was conducted by employing design of experiments. A mathematical model indicated an optimum point in which ethanol was the only organic solvent of the mobile phase. However, the use of a proper metric, which considered environmental parameters together with separation parameters, evidenced that an experimental condition of the original central composite design should be preferred over the former even if containing 20% acetonitrile in the organic modifier mixture. Flow rates of up to 3 ml/min were accommodated with two coupled monolithic columns without exceeding 250 bar. These findings reinforced that no state-of-the-art instruments are needed to shift from traditional harmful solvents to greener ones, but only require a shift in researchers' approach toward sustainability.

2.
An. acad. bras. ciênc ; 71(2): 181-7, jun. 1999. tab, ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-234512

ABSTRACT

Bioactivity-guided fractionation of several bioactive exttracts obtained from Cerrado and Atlantic Forest plant species led to the isolation of potent DNA-damaging piperidine 1-5 and guanidine alkaloids 6-9 from Cassia leptophylla and Pterogyne nitens respectively, two common Leguminosae from Atlantic Forest. By means of biotechnological approach on Maytenus aquifolium, a species from Cerrado, moderate DNA-damaging sesquiterpene pyridine alkaloid 10-11 was isolated. Bioassay-guided fractionation on Casearia sylvestris, a medicinal plant species found in Cerrado and Atlantic Forest, led to the isolation of clerodane diterpenes 12-13 which showed effect on DNA. In addition, we have reported several interesting potent antifungal iridoids: 1beta-hydroxy-dihydrocornin (14), 1alpha-hydroxy-dihydrocornin (15), alpha-gardiol (16), beta-gardiol (17), plumericin (18), isoplumericin (19), 11-O-trans-caffeoylteucrein (20); ester derivative:2-methyl-4-hydroxy-butyl-caffeoate (21), amide N-[7-(3ï, 4ï-metrylenedioxyphenyl)-2Z, 4Z-heptadienoyl] pyrrolidine (22) and triterpene viburgenin (23).


Subject(s)
Antifungal Agents , Antineoplastic Agents , Plants, Medicinal , Brazil , DNA Damage , Plant Extracts/therapeutic use
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