Development of a simple HPLC method for determination of paeoniflorin-metabolizing activity of intestinal bacteria in rat feces.
A simple and reproducible HPLC method for the determination of paeoniflorin (PF)-metabolizing activity of intestinal bacteria in rat feces was developed and validated. Orally administered PF, a major active constituent of Paeoniae Radix, is metabolized into a bioactive compound, paeonimetabolin I (PM-I) by intestinal bacteria. Direct determination of the PF-metabolizing rate into PM-I is hard to achieve by HPLC due to the lack of intense chromophore in PM-I. However, when PF was incubated with Lactobacillus brevis, an intestinal bacterium, in the presence of phenylmercaptan, the metabolizing rate of PF into 8-phenylthio-paeonimetabolin I (PT-PM-I) was found to be equivalent to that of PF into PM-I. Thus, the PF-metabolizing activity of intestinal bacteria in rat feces was determined by measuring the rate of biotransformation of PF into PT-PM-I, which was detected by HPLC at 255 nm. This method can be utilized in the biopharmaceutical study of traditional Chinese formulations containing Paeoniae Radix.[1]References
- Development of a simple HPLC method for determination of paeoniflorin-metabolizing activity of intestinal bacteria in rat feces. He, J.X., Akao, T., Tani, T. Chem. Pharm. Bull. (2002) [Pubmed]
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