4.7 Article

Metabolite Profiling and Classification of DNA-Authenticated Licorice Botanicals

Journal

JOURNAL OF NATURAL PRODUCTS
Volume 78, Issue 8, Pages 2007-2022

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jnatprod.5b00342

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [P41 GM068944]
  2. NIGMS/NIH
  3. NCCIH [P50AT000155]
  4. ODS [P50AT000155]
  5. NCCIH of the NIH [RC2AT005899]

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Raw licorice roots represent heterogeneous materials obtained from mainly three Glycyrrhiza species. G. glabra, G. uralensis, and G. inflata exhibit marked metabolite differences in terms of flavanones (Fs), chalcones (Cs), and other phenolic constituents. The principal objective of this work was to develop complementary chemometric models for the metabolite profiling, classification, and quality control of authenticated licorice. A total of 51 commercial and macroscopically verified samples were DNA authenticated. Principal component analysis and canonical discriminant analysis were performed on H-1 NMR spectra and area under the curve values obtained from UHPLC-UV chromatograms, respectively. The developed chemometric models enable the identification and classification of Glycyrrhiza species according to their composition in major Fs, Cs, and species specific phenolic compounds. Further key outcomes demonstrated that DNA authentication combined with chemometric analyses enabled the characterization of mixtures, hybrids, and species outliers. This study provides a new foundation for the botanical and chemical authentication, classification, and metabolomic characterization of crude licorice botanicals and derived materials. Collectively, the proposed methods offer a comprehensive approach for the quality control of licorice as one of the most widely used botanical dietary supplements.

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