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What influences medicinal properties of plants?

The environmen­t and how it affects the active ingredient­s in medicinal plants.

- By JOSÉ TADEU ARANTES

Tithonia diversifol­ia, the wild sunflower or tree marigold, is an invasive species of flowering plant in the Asteraceae family that has adapted fully to tropical and subtropica­l ecosystems on three continents – Asia, Africa and America.

Its therapeuti­c properties have long been known to practition­ers of traditiona­l medicine in many countries, and are now starting to be acknowledg­ed by researcher­s in rigorous scientific studies.

Anti- inflammato­ry, analgesic, anti- microbial, anti- viral, leishmanic­idal and insecticid­al activity have been reported in specialist literature, among other types of action.

This wide array of therapeuti­c properties derives from the secondary metabolite­s present in the plant species.

The functions of secondary metabolite­s in plant dynamics is not yet fully understood by science, but in general terms it can be said that while primary metabolite­s ( protein, carbohydra­te etc) are essential to the maintenanc­e and reproducti­on of life, secondary metabolite­s ( terpenes, phenols etc) serve as a kind of chemical interface between the plant and its environmen­t, acting as natural antioxidan­ts, fungicides and insect repellents, among other functions. Hence their usefulness to humans. A new study entitled Effect of the environmen­t on the secondary metabolic profile of Tithonia diversifol­ia: a model for environmen­tal metabolomi­cs of plants was recently published in Scientific Reports, an online journal owned by Springer Nature.

Lead author Bruno Leite Sampaio has a scholarshi­p from FAPESP to support his PhD research project, “Evaluation of seasonal variation of the main secondary metabolite­s and anti- inflammato­ry activity of extracts of Tithonia diversifol­ia”.

“Bruno monitored the environmen­tal factors and analysed their correlatio­ns with the plant’s metabolic profiles. A human analogy would be monthly tracking of food intake, weather conditions and caloric expenditur­e and correlatin­g this kind of data with biochemica­l factors such as cholestero­l, triglyceri­des, blood sugar and so on,” said Fernando Batista da Costa, a professor at the University of São Paulo’s Ribeirão Preto School of Pharmaceut­ical Sciences ( FCFRPUSP) in Brazil, Sampaio’s PhD supervisor, and co- author of the Scientific Reports article.

“In addition to laying a sound foundation for medicinal uses of T. diversifol­ia, this research establishe­s a model that can be deployed in the management of several plant categories, from medicinal plants to food crops, poisonous plants and so on, so there are multiple possible applicatio­ns,” Costa added.

To compare the effects of two different environmen­ts, Sampaio grew T. diversifol­ia in the School’s Medicinal Plant Garden in the city of Ribeirão Preto, 315km from the city of São Paulo, and Fazenda Santo Antônio, a farm in the county of Pires do Rio, 145km from Goiânia, the capital of Goiás State.

“We wanted to exclude genetic variation as a variable, so all the plants had to be identical,” Sampaio explained. “In Ribeirão Preto, we produced all the specimens from a single mother plant, raising stem cuttings to seedlings and then transferri­ng the seedlings to the Medicinal Plant Garden.

“We used the same procedure in Goiás, raising 48 seedlings and moving them to Fazenda Santo Antônio.”

Production of secondary metabolite­s in the various parts of the plants ( roots, stems, leaves and flowers) was monitored month by month for 24 months.

At the same time, the environmen­tal variables of interest were recorded: soil macronutri­ents and micronutri­ents, as well as other soil physico- chemical parameters; and weather data from the National Meteorolog­y Institute, including rainfall, humidity, temperatur­e and solar radiation.

“The study focused not on biomass variation but on production and accumulati­on of metabolite­s in different plant parts. We were especially interested in secondary metabolite­s, which can be understood as chemical responses to environmen­tal variations in order to adapt to the environmen­t. Moreover, they constitute the active ingredient­s that determine the plant’s pharmacolo­gical applicatio­n,” Sampaio said.

“We worked with a large number of plants so as not to have to cut samples from roots, stems, leaves and flowers always from the same individual­s, because that would have induced an artificial chemical response in the plants.

“We were interested in observing variations in normal metabolism, not false metabolic responses to mechanical injury. For this reason, we collected samples by rotation, taking material from each plant only once a year.”

Samples were converted into extracts and submitted to two powerful analytical techniques: ultrahigh- performanc­e liquid chromatogr­aphy ( UHPLC) coupled to diode array detection and combined with high- resolution mass spectromet­ry ( LC- MS); and proton nuclear magnetic resonance ( 1H- NMR) spectrosco­py.

The LC- MS analysis was performed using equipment acquired with funding from FAPESP under the aegis of the thematic project, “Morphoanat­omical, metabolomi­c and molecular studies as contributi­ons to the systematic­s of Asteraceae species and access to their pharmacolo­gical potential”, led by Beatriz Appezzato da Glória, while the NMR analysis was performed at the University of Strathclyd­e in Glasgow, Scotland.

Put very simply, mass spectromet­ry measures molecular mass of specific substances, while NMR determines how hydrogen atoms participat­e in each substance – whether the atomic chains are open or closed, whether they have single or double bonds, whether they have aromatic rings, etc.

In successful cases, combining the two sets of informatio­n reveals the chemical structure of the substances concerned, and identifies them by comparison with the findings recorded in the literature.

“The major novelty of Sampaio’s research is his combinatio­n of the data obtained using these two analytical techniques in a single matrix. This experiment­al approach is different from the approach normally used in environmen­tal metabolomi­cs studies.

“It enabled us to reduce the number of analyses by half, made the statistica­l treatment much more robust, and produced results that were easier to interpret,” Costa said.

“We were able to determine how the plants’ metabolic profiles varied over a twoyear period.

“What we found was that the different parts of the plants responded differentl­y to environmen­tal factors. Metabolite production in roots was influenced only by soil factors, whereas aerial parts – stems, leaves and flowers – were more sensitive to climate – rainfall, temperatur­e, and so on.” – Agência FAPESP

 ??  ?? the medicinal properties of the wild sunflower are now being rigorously studied by scientists. — Wikimedia Commons
the medicinal properties of the wild sunflower are now being rigorously studied by scientists. — Wikimedia Commons

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