Molecules (Aug 2020)

Chemical Fingerprinting and Biological Evaluation of the Endemic Chilean Fruit <i>Greigia sphacelata</i> (Ruiz and Pav.) Regel (Bromeliaceae) by UHPLC-PDA-Orbitrap-Mass Spectrometry

  • Ruth E. Barrientos,
  • Shakeel Ahmed,
  • Carmen Cortés,
  • Carlos Fernández-Galleguillos,
  • Javier Romero-Parra,
  • Mario J. Simirgiotis,
  • Javier Echeverría

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25163750
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 16
p. 3750

Abstract

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Greigia sphacelata (Ruiz and Pav.) Regel (Bromeliaceae) is a Chilean endemic plant popularly known as “quiscal” and produces an edible fruit consumed by the local Mapuche communities named as “chupón”. In this study, several metabolites including phenolic acids, organic acids, sugar derivatives, catechins, proanthocyanidins, fatty acids, iridoids, coumarins, benzophenone, flavonoids, and terpenes were identified in G. sphacelata fruits using ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography-photodiode array detection coupled with a Orbitrap mass spectrometry (UHPLC-PDA-Orbitrap-MS) analysis for the first time. The fruits showed moderate antioxidant capacities (i.e., 487.11 ± 26.22 μmol TE/g dry weight) in the stable radical DPPH assay, 169.08 ± 9.81 TE/g dry weight in the ferric reducing power assay, 190.32 ± 6.23 TE/g dry weight in the ABTS assay, and 76.46 ± 3.18% inhibition in the superoxide anion scavenging assay. The cholinesterase inhibitory potential was evaluated against acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE). From the findings, promising results were observed for pulp and seeds. Our findings suggest that G. sphacelata fruits are a rich source of diverse secondary metabolites with antioxidant capacities. In addition, the inhibitory effects against AChE and BChE suggest that natural products or food supplements derived from G. sphacelata fruits are of interest for their neuroprotective potential.

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