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Metabolites rapid-annotation in mice by comprehensive method of virtual polygons and Kendric mass loss filtering: A case study of Dendrobium nobile Lindl.

Authors :
Wu, Xingdong
Fan, Qingjie
Gao, Chunxue
Wu, Jiajia
Wu, Di
Hu, Enming
Tan, Daopeng
Zhao, Yongxia
Li, Xiaoshan
Yang, Zhou
Qin, Lin
He, Yuqi
Source :
Journal of Pharmaceutical & Biomedical Analysis. Jun2024, Vol. 243, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

With significant advancements in high-resolution mass spectrometry, there has been a substantial increase in the amount of chemical component data acquired from natural products. Therefore, the rapid and efficient extraction of valuable mass spectral information from large volumes of high-resolution mass spectrometry data holds crucial significance. This study illustrates a targeted annotation of the metabolic products of alkaloid and sesquiterpene components from Dendrobium nobile (D. nobile) aqueous extract in mice serum through the integration of an in-houses database, R programming, a virtual metabolic product library, polygonal mass defect filtering, and Kendrick mass defect strategies. The research process involved initially establishing a library of alkaloids and sesquiterpenes components and simulating 71 potential metabolic reactions within the organism using R programming, thus creating a virtual metabolic product database. Subsequently, employing the virtual metabolic product library allowed for polygonal mass defect filtering, rapidly screening 1705 potential metabolites of alkaloids and 3044 potential metabolites of sesquiterpenes in the serum. Furthermore, based on the chemical composition database of D. nobile and online mass spectrometry databases, 95 compounds, including alkaloids, sesquiterpenes, and endogenous components, were characterized. Finally, utilizing Kendrick mass defect analysis in conjunction with known alkaloids and sesquiterpenes targeted screening of 209 demethylation, methylation, and oxidation products in phase I metabolism, and 146 glucuronidation and glutathione conjugation products in phase II metabolism. This study provides valuable insights for the rapid and accurate annotation of chemical components and their metabolites in vivo within natural products. [Display omitted] • PMDF and virtual metabolic products library were used to screening of potential metabolites in serum. • Targeted characterization metabolites in vivo were conducted using Kendrick mass defect strategies. • Totally 95 exogenous and endogenous components were annotated from mice serum by LC-MS/MS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07317085
Volume :
243
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Pharmaceutical & Biomedical Analysis
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176390296
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpba.2024.116106