Agronomical and chemical studies aimed at turning Rhodiola rosea L. from Alps into a herbal medicine

The need to provide treatments for multifactorial diseases and the development of systems biology in life sciences prompted researchers to have a more holistic approach in pharmaceutical investigations. Therefore, studies in the field of medicinal plants have driven from searching for single bioacti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: D'Ambrosio, Michele, Guerriero, Antonio, A. Ciocarlan, A. Mari, N. Aiello, P. Egger, F. Scartezzini, C. Vender
Other Authors: A., Ciocarlan, A., Mari, N., Aiello, P., Egger, F., Scartezzini, C., Vender
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Academy of Sciences of Moldova 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11572/35151
Description
Summary:The need to provide treatments for multifactorial diseases and the development of systems biology in life sciences prompted researchers to have a more holistic approach in pharmaceutical investigations. Therefore, studies in the field of medicinal plants have driven from searching for single bioactive compounds, to use as drug lead, to synergistic multiple components intervention and multi-target based strategies. Current issues of herbal medicines can be identified in: cultivation, characterization and quantification of compounds, metabolic fingerprinting, standardization of herbal preparations, quality control, ADME properties, evaluation of synergetic curative effects and safety. As part of the project named "PARMA" (Edible, Aromatic and Medicinal Alpine Plants) we chose, among others, the plant Rhodiola rosea in order to bring it into cultivation and to characterize it in terms of genetic variability and content of active principles. We present here the results obtained by LC-MSn studies and the quantitative analyses carried out on the extracts of Rhodiola rosea roots cultivated in the Trentino county. The various roseroot species are spread over the sub-arctic areas and also the mountains of Central Europe. Owing to its commercial interest and worldwide growing industrial demand, a number of studies have dealt with field cultivation. The experimental field is located at Palù del Fersina, Trento province, at an altitude of 1265 m.a.s.l. facing south. Four accessions were cultivated: two of them coming from Trento province (‘Malga Bondolo’ and ‘Adamello’), the other two respectively from Lombardy (‘Passo Gavia’) and Val d’Aosta region (‘Paradisia’). Plantlets have been obtained from seeds starting from summer 2003. To assess the metabolite production of plants, in October 2005-07 six plants for each plot were harvested. 2.0 g of dried roots were milled and exhaustively extracted with hexane (50mL) and methanol (50mL) at ambient temperature. Samples were subjected to LC-ESI/MS analysis. The HPLC separation was ...