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1.
Drug Test Anal ; 14(4): 604-612, 2022 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34750996

ABSTRACT

Recently, there has been an increase in the recreational abuse of several psychoactive plants, resulting in the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime creating a list of "plants of concern." One such material is Sceletium tortuosum and products derived from it. Regulation of these materials is challenging because of their innocuous appearance, the cumbersome sample preparation steps required to render the material into a form amenable to analysis by conventional techniques, the requirement for nuanced sample analysis protocols, and lengthy analysis times. It is demonstrated here that direct analysis in real time-high-resolution mass spectrometry (DART-HRMS) can be used to not only identify S. tortuosum material based on the detection of characteristic biomarkers including hordenine and several mesembrine alkaloids, but also quantify the amount of hordenine present. Using hordenine-d6 as an internal standard, a protocol, validated according to US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Guidelines for the Development and Validation of Bioanalytical Methods, was devised for the quantification of the psychoactive component hordenine. The method was then applied to the quantification of hordenine in six commercially available products derived from the foliage and stems of S. tortuosum. By this method, the lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) was found to be 1 µg/ml. Observed hordenine concentrations ranged from 0.02738 to 1.071 mg of hordenine per gram of plant material. The developed technique provides an effective and quick means for the detection and quantification of hordenine in S. tortuosum, which can be extended to analysis of other hordenine-containing products.


Subject(s)
Plant Extracts , Tyramine , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Plant Extracts/chemistry , Tyramine/analogs & derivatives
2.
Anal Chem ; 90(21): 12802-12809, 2018 11 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30222323

ABSTRACT

Several plants of agricultural and medicinal importance utilize defense chemistry that involves deployment of highly labile, reactive, and lachrymatory organosulfur molecules. However, this chemistry is difficult to investigate because the compounds are often short-lived and prone to degradation under the conditions required for analysis by common analytical techniques. This issue has complicated efforts to study the defense chemistry of plants that exploit the use of sulfur in their defense arsenals. This work illustrates how direct analysis in real time-high resolution mass spectrometry (DART-HRMS) can be used to track organosulfur defense compound chemistry under mild conditions. Petiveria alliacea was used as a model plant that exploits the enzyme alliinase to generate induced organosulfur compounds in response to herbivory. Tracking of the organosulfur compounds it produces and quantifying them by DART-HRMS using isotopically labeled analogues revealed a feedback inhibition loop through which the activities of the alliinase are stymied shortly after their activation. The results show that the downstream thiosulfinate products petivericin (100 µM) and pyruvate (8.4 mM) inhibit alliinase activity by 60% and 29%, respectively, after 1 h, and a mixture of the two inhibited alliinase activity by 65%. By 2 h, alliinase activity in the presence of these alliinase-derived products had ceased completely. Because thiosulfinate, pyruvate, and lachrymatory sulfine compounds are produced via the same alliinase-derived sulfenic acid intermediate, the inhibition of alliinase activity by increasing concentrations of downstream products shows how production of these defense compounds is modulated in real time in response to a tissue breach. These findings provide a framework within which heretofore unexplained phenomena observed in the defense chemistry of P. alliacea, onion, garlic, and other plants can be explained, as well as an approach by which to track labile compounds and enzymatic activity by DART-HRMS.


Subject(s)
Carbon-Sulfur Lyases/physiology , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Phytolaccaceae/physiology , Carbon-Sulfur Lyases/antagonists & inhibitors , Carbon-Sulfur Lyases/isolation & purification , Cysteine/analogs & derivatives , Cysteine/metabolism , Feedback, Physiological , Kinetics , Phytolaccaceae/enzymology , Plant Roots/enzymology , Plant Roots/physiology , Pyruvic Acid/analysis , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Sulfinic Acids/analysis , Sulfinic Acids/metabolism
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