4.5 Article

Quantification by LC-MS/MS of astragaloside IV and isoflavones inAstragali radixcan be more accurate by using standard addition

Journal

PHYTOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 466-473

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pca.2994

Keywords

astragaloside; Astragalus; isoflavone; LC-MS; MS; standard addition

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Astragali radix, a traditional Chinese medical herb, contains bioactive components such as astragalosides that require accurate measurement. The study found that LC-MS/MS quantification using standard addition is a powerful approach for measuring phytochemicals, overcoming ion suppression effects caused by sample matrix.
Introduction Astragali radix(AR), the root ofAstragalus, is an important medical herb widely used in traditional Chinese medicine. Bioactive components include isoflavones and a unique class of triterpenoid saponins (named astragalosides). Objectives Accurate measurement of bioactive components, especially astragaloside IV, is necessary for confirming AR authenticity, quality control and future medical research. Methodology Liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) is a suitable technique but suffers from ion suppression effects due to sample matrix. This can be corrected by using isotopic labelled internal standards, but these are not available for many phytochemicals. We explored the use of standard addition to circumvent this issue. Results LC-MS/MS and liquid chromatography coupled with ultraviolet (LC-UV) detection provided linear calibration curves (R-2> 0.99). LC-MS/MS provided superior selectivity and detection limits below 10 ng/mL, which was 2-3 magnitudes lower than LC-UV detection. Precision and accuracy were overall improved by using LC-MS/MS with diluted sample extracts, resulting in an inter series coefficient of variation (CV) of 12% or less and mean recovery estimates in the 85-115% range. LC-MS/MS quantification by standard addition resulted in significantly higher concentrations of astragaloside IV measured in the samples. Concentrations calculated by standard addition were unaffected by large variation in signal response caused by matrix effects, independent of variation in slope of the standard addition curves. Conclusion Sample dilution was helpful but not sufficient for reducing effects of ion suppression. We have shown that LC-MS/MS quantification by standard addition can be a powerful approach for accurate measurement of phytochemicals in the absence of isotopic labelled internal standards.

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