Cumulative CAMAG Bibliography Service CCBS

Our CCBS database includes more than 11,000 abstracts of publications. Perform your own detailed search of TLC/HPTLC literature and find relevant information.

The Cumulative CAMAG Bibliography Service CCBS contains all abstracts of CBS issues beginning with CBS 51. The database is updated after the publication of every other CBS edition. Currently the Cumulative CAMAG Bibliography Service includes more than 11'000 abstracts of publications between 1983 and today. With the online version you can perform your own detailed TLC/HPTLC literature search:

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      130 013
      Characterization of natural herbal medicines by thin-layer chromatography combined with laser ablation-assisted direct analysis in real-time mass spectrometry
      Y. CHEN (Chen Yilin), L. LI (Li Linnan)*, R. XU (Xu Rui), F. LI (Li Fan), L. GU (Gu Lihua), H. LIU (Liu Huwei), Z. WANG (Wang Zhengtao), L. YANG (Yang Li)** (*Shanghai Key Laboratory of Compound Chinese Medicines, and Institute of Chinese Materia Medica, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai, China; **Institute of Interdisciplinary Integrative Medicine Research, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai, China; *linnanli@shutcm.edu.cn, **yl7@shutcm.edu.cn)

      J Chromatogr A, 1625, 461230 (2020). Samples were extracts of Chinese plants: Acorus tatarinowii (= Acorus calamus var. angustatus) rhizomes (Araceae / Acoraceae) (1), Angelica sinensis roots (Apiaceae) (2), Gynura japonica rhizomes (Asteraceae) (3), Phellodendron chinense bark (Rutaceae) (4), Picrasma quassioides twigs and leaves (Simaroubaceae) (5), Rheum sp. roots and rhizomes (R. palmatum, R. tanguticum and/or R. officinale) (Polygonaceae) (6), Sophora flavescens roots (Fabaceae) (7), Dendrobium stems (D. aphyllum, D. aurantiacum var. dennaeanum, D. chrysanthum, D. chrysotoxum, D. gratiosissimum, D. hercoglossum, D. thyrsiflorum, D. trigonopus and D. williamsonii) (Orchidaceae) (8). Standards were: gigantol (from D. sonia); methoxycarbonyl-β-carboline (MCC from (5)); caffeic acid, emodin; senecionine and β-asarone; crategolic acid (= maslinic acid), corosolic acid, oleanic acid, ursolic acid; sesquiterpenoids (atractylenolides I – III) from Atractylodes macrocephala (Asteraceae); flavonoids (baicalein, baicalin, daidzin, hesperidin, wogonin) from Scutellaria baicalensis roots (Lamiaceae). HPTLC on silica gel with 10 mobile phases, depending on the samples. Detection under UV 254 nm and white light. For (3), derivatization with Dragendorff’s reagent (bismuth potassium iodide solution) for visualization of alkaloids. Zones of interest on underivatized plates were identified by a triple-quadrupole ­– linear ion-trap MS, the compounds being removed from the layer by a continuous-wave (445 nm) diode laser pointer through a DART interface (Direct Analysis in Real-Time, helium as gas for plasma-based ambient ionization, discharge needle voltage 1.5 kV, grid voltage 350 V, capillary temperature 300 °C and voltage 40 V, full scan in positive ionization mode in m/z range 150-800). Pigment standards were used for validation of this laser-assisted HPTLC-DART-MS method: malachite green, crystal violet, chrysoidin, auramine O, rhodamine B, Sudan red I – IV, Sudan red G, dimethyl yellow. Afterwards, the same HPTLC-MS method was applied to the origin / species determination of Dendrobium samples, based on the presence of four bibenzyl compounds erianin, gigantol, moscatilin, tristin. Erianin was present only in D. chrysotoxum, whereas none of these were detected in D. hercoglossum. Several components of the extracts were thus identified: asarone (a phenylpropanoid) in (1); phthalide lactones (butenylphthalide, ligustilide and chuanxiong lactone) in (2); co-eluting pyrrolizidine alkaloids (senecionine and seneciphylline) in (3); benzylisoquinoline alkaloid berberine in (4); alkaloids (canthinone alkaloids and MCC) in (5); anthraquinones (rhein, aloe-emodin, emodin, emodin methyl ether, chrysophanol) and (in negative mode) caffeic acid (a hydroxycinnamic acid) and corosolic, maslinic and oleanic acids (triterpenoids) in (6); quinolizidine alkaloids (matrine, oxymatrine, oxysophocarpine, sophoridine) in (7).

      Classification: 4e, 7, 8a, 8b, 15a, 22, 32e
      130 027
      Thin-layer chromatographic quantification of magnolol and honokiol in dietary supplements and selected biological properties of these preparations
      E. LATA, A. FULCZYK, P.G; OTT, T. KOWALSKA, M. SAJEWICZ, Ágnes M. MÓRICZ* (*Plant Protection Institute, Centre for Agricultural Research, 1022 Budapest, Hungary; moricz.agnes@agrar.mta.hu)

      J Chromatogr A, 1625, 461230 (2020). Samples were methanolic extracts of commercial supplements containing Magnolia sp. bark (Magnoliaceae), as well as honokiol (1) and magnolol (2) (biphenyl neolignans) as separated or mixed standards. TLC and HPTLC on silica gel with n-hexane – ethyl acetate – ethanol 16:3:1. Visualization under UV 254 nm. Quantification of (1) and (2) by densitometric scanning in absorbance mode at 290 nm (hRF were 34 and 39, LOQ 200 ng and 280 ng/spot, respectively). Variability between samples from the same brand supplement was also determined, as well as extraction yields. Effect-directed analysis with 3 assays: A) to detect radical scavengers, immersion into DPPH• 0.02 % solution; B) to detect activity against Gram-negative bacteria, immersion into Aliivibrio fischeri suspension, followed by recording the bioluminescence; C) to detect activity against Gram-positive bacteria, immersion into Bacillus subtilis, followed by incubation 2 h at 28 °C and immersion into MTT 1 g/L. Compounds (1) and (2) were active in all assays. Identification of zones of interest by eluting with methanol from untreated TLC layer through the oval elution head of a TLC-MS interface directly to a single Quadrupole MS (electrospray ionization, interface temperature 350°C, heat block temperature 400°C, desolvation line temperature 250°C, detector voltage 4.5kV). Full mass scan spectra were recorded in the positive and negative ionization modes in m/z range 150–800. Other molecules (from other ingredients) were identified: piperine (alkaloid) and/or its geometrical isomers (active on A, hRF 29-30); and daidzein (active on A and B, hRF 18), isoflavone from Pueraria montana root (Fabaceae). Stability was assessed through 2D-HPTLC, by repeating the same development method in the orthogonal direction 4 h or 20 h after the first separation. Degradation products of (1) and (2) appeared after 20 h (but not at 4 h), including a honokiol dimer (formed in tracks of (1) and of (2)).

      Classification: 4e, 7, 8a, 22, 32e
      130 144
      Combining multivariate image analysis with high-performance thin-layer chromatography for development of a reliable tool for saffron authentication and adulteration detection
      A. AMIRVARESI, M. RASHIDI, M. KAMYAR, M. AMIRAHMADI, B. DARAEI, H. PARASTAR* (*Department of Chemistry, Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran; h.parastar@sharif.edu)

      J Chromatogr A, 1628, 461461 (2020). Samples were hydro-methanolic extracts of 100 genuine saffron samples (Crocus sativus stigmata, Iridaceae) from South Khorasan (SK) and Razavi Khorasan (RK) provinces (Iran), pure or mixed in several proportions with common vegetal adulterants: C. sativus style, Calendula officinalis petals (Asteraceae, Asteroideae), Carthamus tinctorius petals (Asteraceae, Carduoideae), Rubia tinctorum rhizomes (Rubiaceae). Commercial saffron samples (containing artificial adulterants) were also tested. TLC on silica gel with ethyl acetate – methanol – water – acetic acid 66:23:11:1. Evaluation at 254 nm, 366 nm, and 440 nm. Crocin (carotenoid, hRF 38) was used for optimization of extraction (parameters being first calculated by chemometry), using multilinear regression and ANOVA. Image data (pixel intensities and colors of each sample under the three selected wavelengths) were unfolded into a data matrix and transformed into a vector, used for multivariate image analysis of the chromatogram fingerprints. This allowed: A) separation of genuine samples by principal component analysis (PCA) into 2 clusters according to origin (cold climate in Northern half of RK vs. warm climate in SK and Southern part of RK) with 92 % prediction accuracy; B) separation of samples according to purity / vegetal adulterant groups by partial least squares – discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) with 98 % accuracy (if 10 µL extract applied); C) separation with 100 % prediction accuracy by PCA between genuine, mixed, and commercial samples.

      Classification: 4c, 4e, 8b, 14, 32e
      130 142
      Bioassay-guided identification of α-amylase inhibitors in herbal extracts
      Snezana AGATONOVIC-KUSTRIN*, E. KUSTRIN, V. GEGECHKORI, D. W. MORTON (*Department of Pharmaceutical and Toxicological Chemistry, Institute of Pharmacy, Sechenov University, Moscow, Russia, and School of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, La Trobe Institute for Molecular Sciences, La Trobe University, Bendigo, Australia; s.kustrin@latrobe.edu.au)

      J Chromatogr A, 1620, 460970 (2020). Samples were ethyl acetate extracts of Lavandula angustifolia herb and flowers and of aerial parts of other Lamiaceae (Ocimum basilicum, Origanum vulgare, Thymus vulgaris, Rosmarinus officinalis, Salvia officinalis), as well as standards. HPTLC on silica gel (pre-washed with methanol and heated 30 min at 105 °C) with n-hexane – ethyl acetate – acetic acid 70:27:3. Documentation at UV 254 nm and 365 nm and white light before and after A) derivatization with anisaldehyde – sulfuric acid reagent, followed by 10 min heating at 110 °C; B) spraying with DPPH• (0.2 % in methanol), followed by 30 min incubation in the dark; C) α-amylase inhibition assay by immersion into enzyme solution, incubation 30 min at 37 °C, immersion into substrate solution (starch 1 % in water), incubation 20 min at 37 °C and immersion into Gram’s iodine solution for detection (inhibition zones appear blue on white background). Quantification was performed on pictures using image processing software, and expressed as equivalents to the respective standards used for calibration curves: A) β-sitosterol (LOQ 1.5 µg/band), B) gallic acid (LOQ 60 ng/band), C) acarbose (LOQ 8 µg/band). An amylase inhibiting zone (hRF 68) present in all samples (except L. angustifolia), scraped from untreated plates and washed with ethyl acetate, was tentatively identified by ATR-FTIR analysis as oleanolic acid (pentacyclic triterpene).

      Classification: 4e, 15a, 32e
      130 005
      Multiobjective optimization of microemulsion – thin layer chromatography with image processing as analytical platform for determination of drugs in plasma using desirability functions
      Noura H. ABOU-TALEB*, D. T. EL-SHERBINY, N. M. EL-ENANY, H. I. EL-SUBBAGH (*Medicinal Chemistry Department, Faculty of Pharmacy, Mansoura University, Mansoura, Egypt; nourahemdan@yahoo.com)

      J Chromatogr A, 1619, 460945 (2020). Samples were lamotrigin as standard, or extracted with an oil-in-water microemulsion (10 µL butyl acetate, 4 mL n-butanol, 925 mg sodium dodecyl sulphate, 8.6 mL water) either from patients’ raw plasma (for separation from blood proteins) after spiking, or from commercial tablets dissolved in methanol. TLC on silica gel with a water-in-oil microemulsion of 9 mL butyl acetate, 1 mL n-butanol, 250 mg sodium dodecyl sulphate, 250 µL water. Both optimal microemulsions were predicted using Taguchi orthogonal array and Plackett-Burman design. Evaluation in UV 254 nm, quantification from the digital picture using four image processing software programs. For lamotrigin (hRF 24), limits of quantification were 170 ng for pure drug and 10 ng for spiked plasma. Linearity (in range 20–200 ng/spot) was directly obtained for the calibration curve in spiked plasma; however, for pure drug, linearity was obtained only when using log values of the calculated densities (300–3000 ng/spot).

      Classification: 3a, 3d, 5c, 23e, 32c
      130 006
      Thin-layer chromatography with eutectic mobile phases – preliminary results
      Danuta RAJ* (*Department of Pharmacognosy and Herbal Medicines, Wroclaw Medical University, Wroclaw, Poland; danuta.raj@umed.wroc.pl)

      J Chromatogr A, 1621, 461044 (2020). Samples were five isoquinoline alkaloids (berberine, chelerythrine, chelidonine, coptisine, sanguinarine) either as standard mixture or present in a Chelidonium majus (Papaveraceae) herb extract obtained with HCl 0.05 M in methanol. Separation on TLC and HPTLC silica gel layers with a screening of mobile phases consisting of eutectic mixtures of chemicals and/or phytochemicals. These homogenous stable liquids called DES (deep eutectic solvents) were obtained either simply by mixing, or by mixing followed by heating at 50°C, or by mixing with water for dissolution followed by dehydratation through rotary evaporation. For polarity adjustment, the DES phases were tested pure or diluted with acetone, chloroform, diethyl ether, methanol, or water. Visualization under UV 366 nm. The best separation was obtained with menthol – phenol in equimolar mixture, with 35 % methanol added (hRF values of the selected alkaloids were 33, 39, 79, 20 and 52, respectively).

      Classification: 22, 32e
      130 008
      High performance thin-layer chromatography–mass spectrometry methods on diol stationary phase for the analyses of flavan-3-ols and proanthocyanidins in invasive Japanese knotweed
      V. GLAVNIK, Irena VOVK* (*National Institute of Chemistry, Ljubljana, Slovenia; irena.vovk@ki.si)

      J Chromatogr A, 1598, 196-208 (2019). Samples were acertone – water 7:3 extracts of Reynoutria japonica (= Fallopia japonica = Polygonum cuspidatum) rhizomes (Polygonaceae) as well as flavanols (catechin, epicatechin, epicatechin gallate, epigallocatechin gallate) and procyanidins (A1, A2, B1–B3 and C1) as standards. HPTLC on diol silica gel with: (MP1) acetonitrile; (MP2) ethyl acetate; (MP3) ethyl acetate – formic acid 90:1; or (MP4) toluene – acetone – formic acid 3:6:1. Prewashing of the plates with mobile phase was needed only with MP1. After drying under hot air stream, derivatization by automated immersion into DMACA (dimethylaminocinnamaldehyde) – HCl solution (60 mg in 13 mL HCl + 187 mL ethanol), followed by 2 min drying under warm air stream. Visualization under UV 366 nm and white light, densitometry in absorption/reflectance mode at 280 nm (before derivatization) or 655 nm (10 min after derivatization). Bands of interest were eluted from layer with acetonitrile – methanol 2:1 through the oval elution head of a TLC-MS interface pump, into a RP18 liquid chromatography guard column, followed by a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer. Full scan mass spectra (m/z 150–2000) were recorded in negative mode using electrospray ionization (spray voltage 4 kV, capillary temperature 200◦C, capillary voltage -38.8 V). Monomer gallates to hexamer gallates were detected, separated with MP1, MP2 or MP4; monomers and oligomers (not gallates) were separated with MP3 (up to hexamers) and with MP1 and MP4 (up to decamers). Moreover, enhanced absorption of standards was also studied for influence of mobile phases, of layers (diol silica gel vs. classical silica gel vs. cellulose) and of luminosity (light vs. dark).

      Classification: 4e, 8a, 8b, 32e
      130 007
      Planar chromatography-bioassays for the parallel and sensitive detection of androgenicity, anti-androgenicity and cytotoxicity
      C. RIEGRAF, A.M. BELL, M. OHLIG, G. REIFFERSCHEID, S. BUCHINGER* (*Federal Institute of Hydrology, Koblenz, Germany; buchinger@bafg.de)

      J Chromatogr A, 1684, 463582 (2022). Samples were concentrated filtrates of leachates of waste deposition sites, as well as testosterone, flutamide, bisphenol A (BPA) and nitroquinoline oxide (NQO) as standards. Automated Multiple Development on HPTLC silica gel (prewashed with methanol and dried 30 min at 110 °C) with 1) methanol up to 20 mm; 2A) chloroform – ethyl acetate –petroleum ether 11:4:5 or 2B) ethyl acetate – n-hexane 1:1 for flutamide and testosterone, up to 90 mm. Effect-directed analysis was performed by automated spraying 3 mL suspension of BJ1991 yeast (transfected Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain, pure for androgenic activity, with 50 ng/mL testosterone for anti-androgenic assay), followed by 20 h incubation at 30 °C in a closed chamber (90 % relative humidity), by 5 min drying under cold air stream, by spraying 2.5 mL MUG solution (4-methylumbelliferyl-galactopyranoside) and by 15 min incubation at 37 °C in an open chamber. Agonistic and antagonistic activities were detected qualitatively under UV 366 nm (light or dark blue bands, respectively, on blue background) and quantitatively documented using automated scanning at excitation wavelength 320 nm (deuterium lamp), with cut-off filter at 400 nm. Dose-response curves for model compounds were established by regression analysis. Anti-androgenic effective doses at 10 % were 28 ng/zone for flutamide and 20 ng/zone for BPA, without toxicity for the yeast. To exclude cytotoxicity where anti-androgenic activity was observed, the HPTLC layers (either without or after the spraying with MUG) were sprayed with 3 mL resazurin solution (0.01 % in water) and incubated 30 min at 30 °C and 90 % humidity. Cytotoxicity bands appeared as pink zones of resorufin on a colorless background (dihydroresorufin) under white light. Densitometric evaluation in absorption mode at 575 nm (under deuterium and halogen-tungsten lamps, no filter applied). NQO was cytotoxic at its lowest tested dose (1 ng/zone).

      Classification: 4b, 4e, 32d, 37c, 37d
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