posted on 2013-04-26, 00:00authored bySandipan Datta, Yu-Dong Zhou, Dale G. Nagle
Natural product drug discovery programs
often rely on the use of
silica (Si) gel, reversed-phase media, or size-exclusion resins (e.g.,
RP-C18, Sephadex LH-20) for compound purification. The
synthetic polymer-based sorbent Diaion HP20SS (cross-linked polystyrene
matrix) is used as an alternative to prepare purified natural product
libraries. To evaluate the impact of chromatographic media on the
isolation of biologically active, yet chromatographically unstable
natural products, Diaion HP20SS was evaluated side-by-side with normal-phase
sorbents for irreversible binding of extract constituents and their
effects on bioactivity. An array of chemically diverse natural product-rich
extracts was selected as a test panel, and a cell-based reporter assay
for hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) was employed to monitor potential
change(s) in bioactivity. Silica gel caused significant irreversible
binding of three out of 10 extracts. Curcuma longa, Saururus cernuus, and Citrus reticulata extracts showed decreased HIF-1 inhibitory activity after elution
through Si gel. An additional nonpolar column wash of HP20SS with
EtOAc retained considerable bioactivities of active extracts. In general,
Si gel produced the greatest loss of bioactivity. However, HP20SS
elution reduced significantly HIF-1 inhibitory activity of certain
extracts (e.g., Asimina triloba).