Scientific Reports (Nov 2021)

A metabolomics approach to evaluate the effect of lyophilization versus oven drying on the chemical composition of plant extracts

  • Nancy A. ElNaker,
  • Mariane Daou,
  • Michael A. Ochsenkühn,
  • Shady A. Amin,
  • Ahmed F. Yousef,
  • Lina F. Yousef

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-02158-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Lyophilization is the “gold standard” for drying plant extracts, which is important in preserving their quality and extending their shelf-life. Compared to other methods of drying plant extracts, lyophilization is costlier due to equipment, material and operational expenses. An alternative method is post-extraction oven-drying, but the effects of this process on extract quality are unknown. In this study, crude extracts from Arthrocnemum macrostachyum shoots were compared using three post-extraction drying methods (lyophilization and oven drying at 40 and 60 °C) and two extraction solvents (water and aqueous 50% ethanol). Untargeted metabolomics coupled with chemometrics analysis revealed that post extraction oven-drying resulted in the loss of up to 27% of molecular features when compared to lyophilization in water extracts only. In contrast, only 3% of molecular features were lost in aqueous 50% ethanol extracts when subjected to oven drying. That is to say, ethanol used as a solvent has a stabilizing effect on metabolites and enhances their resistance to thermal transformation in the oven. Collectively, oven-drying of extracts was as effective as lyophilization in preserving metabolites in extracts only when 50% ethanol was used as a solvent. The results presented in this paper demonstrate the value of selecting solvent-appropriate post-extraction drying methods.