1. Introduction
Mentha species are commonly used in food and as traditional herbal medicine all over the world, and many different varieties are considered of high value both for culinary and therapeutic uses.
Mentha longifolia L. (Lamiaceae (Labiatae)), referred to as wild mint or horse mint, is widely diffused in Europe, Asia and non-tropical areas of Africa [
1,
2,
3]. In Italy, it can be found in many regions, mostly in the alpine part in the area from 900 to 2000 mt. Related to the ethnomedicinal uses, the species is mostly used for treatment of gastrointestinal, respiratory and inflammatory diseases, as well as menstrual pain [
1]. All these uses are common in different cultures all over the world, indicating the potential medicinal usefulness of its constituents. Phytochemical composition of the plant is well-studied and shows the presence of ceramides, cinnamate, flavonols, monoterpene and sesquiterpene [
1,
2]. Nutraceuticals have been proposed as key tools for the prevention of some degenerative diseases and especially for health promotion [
4,
5,
6], and there is a large interest among consumers, especially thanks to the claimed versatility of natural compounds in maintaining health status. Nowadays, red yeast rice, berberine, plant sterols, dietary fibers, grape and other vegetable are considered the most important studied supplements with properties of lipid control [
5]. Indeed, lifelong exposure to high blood cholesterol levels has been found to be the leading culprit for atherosclerotic CVD (ASCVD) onset and progression [
7], nowadays recognized as the leading cause of death worldwide. The possibility of implementing a non-pharmacologically based treatment for hypercholesterolemia is thus getting increasing attention, and it is considered to be an important preventive action to take when hypercholesterolemia is mild or moderate. Such an opportunity can be valuable when low and/or moderate risk factors for ASCVD development are present, or when the patient shows drug intolerance [
8]. Furthermore, the possibility of using nutraceuticals in this area can be valuable, especially in cases when the patient fails to reach the total cholesterol (TC) and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (LDL-C) targets despite the maximal tolerated dose of the most widespread hypocholesterolemic drugs, such as statins and ezetimibe [
9]. The significant role of the cholesterol-lowering nutraceuticals can be referred to the presence of statin-like products based on red yeast rice; nevertheless, the possibility of significant side effects raises questions on the doses to be used in food supplements and nutraceuticals. The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) opinion on the safety of red yeast rice indicates an uncertainty about the definition of a dietary intake that does not give rise to concerns about potential harmful effects [
10].
The statin-based treatments are largely diffused, and risks and side effects are present and can be relevant, reducing compliance and treatment efficacy. Based on these premises, there is an urgent need to develop more effective hypolipidemic agents that originate from natural products, and the nutraceuticals in this field are growing at a high-speed, influencing marketing and consumer choices.
Essential oils from various sources have been studied for their effects in cardiovascular diseases, including improvements in lipid balance, liver and endothelial functions and reductions in blood pressure, oxidative stress, thrombosis and inflammation. Some reports indicate that some essential oils promote vascular relaxation and inhibit diabetes development and angiogenesis. Therefore, essential oils and their active components may be promising therapeutic agents for CVDs [
11]. Thus, the search for new lipid-lowering agents can start from essential oils. As an example lemon and lime were studied
in vivo models for their cholesterol-lowering properties [
12,
13]. Also, eugenol, one of the most diffused compounds in several essential oils, was studied for its lipid-lowering effects and results indicated that eugenol does not inhibit β-hydroxy β-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase but rather induces its action by interaction with TRPV1 channels [
13].
Essential oils are complex mixtures of volatile constituents, in many cases composed of monoterpenes and sesquiterpene, which can be found in diffused vegetable and spice [
11]. Such mixtures are usually extracted by hydro-distillation. In the development of new ingredients, supercritical CO
2 (SCO
2) extraction can be a valuable alternative technique for the extraction of such compounds because it presents advantages compared to hydro-distillation due to lower temperature operation, and it is safer compared to other extraction approaches because it avoids the use of solvents. SCO
2 extraction can be considered a strategy to extract natural compounds with environmental friendliness. In fact, it is a green extractive approach that avoids the use of solvents that lead to extracts that present different compositions compared to traditional hydroalcoholic or aqueous extraction, such as maceration or infusion/decoction. Furthermore, the technique has allowed the extraction of lipophilic fractions in mild temperature conditions [
14].
To our knowledge, no information is available related to the possible effects of M. longifolia L. extracts as active ingredients in nutraceuticals for their cholesterol-lowering effects. This plant can be a good candidate in the search of compounds with cholesterol-lowering activities due to its complex phytochemical composition and common use in traditional medicine and as a food, suggesting its safety.
The aim of this study was the evaluation of the SCO
2 extract of
M. longifolia L. as a novel nutraceutical ingredient with potential effects on cholesterol. Furthermore, the detailed phytochemical compositions of two different extracts were obtained by combining various analytical techniques. Extracts were tested in two key targets players, LDL receptor (LDLR) and proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9), in two human hepatoma cell lines (Huh7 and HepG2), to investigate the
in vitro ability to modulate cholesterol metabolism [
15,
16]. To assess the potential role of the main constituent, piperitone oxide was isolated and tested in the same cellular model.
3. Discussion
M. longifolia L. possesses a rich phytocomplex characterized by monoterpene and sesquiterpenoids, and SCO
2 extraction represents an innovative strategy to obtain extracts enriched with bioactive compounds. In this study, two different extracts were obtained using SCO
2 from the aerial parts of
M. longifolia. The two extracts presented different physical appearance, the first being an oil and the second a semisolid residue. The composition of the extracts was studied using different approaches, namely NMR, GC-MS and LC-MS, allowing complete phytochemical characterization. The NMR data agree with the GC-MS results (
Table 2), indicating piperitone oxide, piperitenone oxide, thymol, eucalyptol and germacrene D as the most abundant terpenoid constituents in the extracts.
SCO
2 extraction is a technology that allows extraction of a wide range of diverse compounds from a variety of plant matrices. It is suitable for extraction with many non-polar to moderately polar compounds. Supercritical fluid extraction is considered helpful due to its improved speed and selectivity and the mild temperature condition preserves thermolabile compounds and product characteristics [
14]. The two obtained fractions, ML-SCO
2 and MLW-SCO
2, were formed of lipophilic and volatile constituents of the plant. To our knowledge, limited information is available related to SCO
2 extraction of
M. longifolia. Thus, for comparison purposes, we considered the literature related to the essential oil composition of
M. longifolia. A previous paper reported the chemical characterization of essential oil obtained by distillation and the main volatile constituents were menthone (19.31%), pulegone (12.42%), piperitone (11.05%) and dihydrocarvone (8.32%) [
3]. Other work reported results similar to our data, finding that the major compounds in essential oil were
cis-piperitone epoxide (from 7.8% to 77.6%), and piperitenone oxide (from 1.5% to 49.1%) [
20]. A previous paper described supercritical extraction from
Mentha spicata species and concluded that SCO
2 can be selectively used to efficiently extract oil, with extracts containing higher amounts of carvone compared to hydro-distillation [
21]. More recently, a comparison of SCO
2 extraction, steam distillation and solvent extraction was performed on
M. longifolia collected in China. Volatile constituents were assessed and the main compounds were found to be limonene and carvone [
22]
, thus demonstrating a strong difference in composition from our sample.
With regard to the fatty acid composition, palmitic (2.84%) and linoleic (2.18%) acids were the most abundant fatty acids in ML-SCO
2, while alpha-linolenic (9.39%), palmitic (3.68%) and linoleic (2.81%) acids were the most abundant in MLW-SCO
2. The amount of β-sitosterol was 0.31 mg/g and 5.6 mg/g in ML-SCO
2 and MLW-SCO
2, respectively. SCO
2 extraction can be used to obtain an enriched phytosterol fraction, as was demonstrated by the fact that the phytosterol concentration in MLW-SCO
2 was 18 times higher than that inn ML-SCO
2. Campesterol, stigmasterol and β-Sitosterol were previously reported in
M. longifolia in petroleum ether extract [
2]. The wax fraction MLW-SCO
2 presented 0.75% total phytosterols while the oil fraction ML-SCO
2 presented a much lower concentration.
The identification of phytosterol in
M. longifolia extracts in the present study can be considered valuable due to the description of the activity of these compounds as cholesterol-lowering agents and for cardiovascular disease prevention. Thus, the supercritical extracts obtained from
M. longifolia could be a good starting material to produce novel nutraceutical formulations due to their unsaturated fatty acid, phytosterol and terpenoid contents. Such ingredients may be useful in lipid metabolism due to the mechanism of action claimed for phytosterols; that is, their possible competition with intestinal cholesterol for incorporation into micelles. Phytosterols may act as effective triglyceride-lowering agents in hypertriglyceridemic subjects and have cholesterol-lowering capabilities [
23]. The absolute effectiveness of phytosterol-mediated cholesterol lowering is affected by a variety of factors including dose, intake frequency and individual baseline cholesterol concentrations. Clinical trials have usually been performed with the administration of 0.6 to 3 g per day of phytosterols. With regard to the possible use of
Mentha extracts as nutraceuticals, the presence of this active compound in lipid control could contribute to helping and explaining different mechanisms of action. One study reported an investigation into the interaction of phytosterols with the hepatic LDL receptor in
apolipoprotein E-knockout mice in comparison with wild-type mice, and it was found that treatment did not alter receptor function. Phytosterols significantly increased fecal sterol excretion and decreased hepatic cholesterol concentrations [
24]. Due to the higher phytosterol content, MW-SCO
2 can be considered a valuable nutraceutical source of phytosterols.
Overall, the present study suggests the potential usefulness of M. longifolia supercritical extracts, paving the way for in-depth analyses aimed at developing their use as a new natural extract with hypocholesterolemic properties, an effect that needs to be confirmed in vivo.
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Plant Material
The plant material was collected in the fields of S.A.M. srl, located in Sospirolo Belluno (Italy), in summer 2019. Taxonomic identification was performed by one of the authors (N.De Zordi) and a voucher specimen was deposited at the Natural Product Lab of the Department of Pharmaceutical and Pharmacological Sciences, Padova University (ML2020A). The aerial part materials were dried in a cool desiccator (NWT-35, Italy). After drying at 35 °C until the mint reached 5.5% of the residual humidity, the plant materials were stored in shade at 20 °C.
4.2. Supercritical CO2 (SCO2) Extraction
Supercritical extraction of
M. longifolia L. was performed with a TH22-10 x2 supercritical CO
2 extraction apparatus (Toption Instrument Co. Ltd, YanTa District, Xi’an, China), depicted in
Figure 9. Briefly, the plant was equipped with two extraction vessels of 10 L and two separators of 5 L. The carbon dioxide (Siad SpA, Trieste, Italy; 99.99% purity, food grade) was carried with a high-pressure liquid pump (Toption Instrument Co. Ltd YanTa District, Xi’an, China).
First, 2.9 kg of milled M. longifolia (≤40 mesh) was weighed into the stainless-steel extraction basket, which was loaded onto the jacketed extraction vessel. The flow rate of supercritical solvent was set at 1 L/min in all experiments. The extraction pressure was set to 150 bar, while the extraction temperature was set at 40 °C. The first separator was operated at 70 bar and 45 °C and the second one at 45 bar and 40 °C. The extraction was carried on until the amount of extract collected over 1 h decreased to under 0.1% of the raw material. During the supercritical carbon dioxide extraction, water (bound moisture from plant material) was co-extracted, then decanted, and the crude extract was collected and stored. The crude extracts were weighed, and the yield was calculated as g extract/100 g dry material (d.m.).
The extraction pressure and the flow were maintained constant using a backpressure regulator. The extraction led to two different extraction yields, indicated as MLW-SCO2 and ML-SCO2, of 4 and 2% based on material collected from separators 1 and 2, respectively.
4.3. NMR Analysis of Extracts
One-dimensional and two-dimensional NMR spectra were obtained with a Bruker Avance III 400 Ultrashield spectrometer with a 400 MHz magnet. NMR spectra were acquired in deuterated chloroform (Sigma-Aldrich, Milan, Italy) with TMS as an internal standard. Duran® 4.95 mm NMR tubes (Duran Group, Milan, Italy) were used. Chemical shifts are expressed in δ values in ppm. 1H-NMR, HSQC-DEPT, HMBC, COSY and 13C-NMR experiments were undertaken using standard Bruker sequences measuring p1 and d1 for each acquired sample. ML-SCO2 and MLW-SCO2 were dissolved (30 mg) in chloroform (1.5 mL) and used for NMR measurements.
4.4. Characterization of Volatile Constituents
The gas chromatographic analysis of the essential oils was performed with a Varian 3900 series gas chromatograph, fitted with a Saturn 2100T Ion Trap Mass spectrometer using a DB-5MS column (30 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 μm). The instrument operated in electron impact mode at an ionization voltage of 70 eV. The injector temperature was set at 235 °C and the detector temperature at 230 °C, working in full scan mode. The oven temperature was initially programmed at 55 °C (isothermal for 5 min) and then increased to 250 °C at 4 °C/min and finally to 290 °C at 20 °C/min (isothermal for 5 min). The carrier gas was helium (99.9% purity) at a flow rate of 1 mL/min. Samples were dissolved in n-hexane and nonanol was added as internal standard (IS). To perform quantitative analysis, calibration curves were created mixing standard solutions of monoterpere (eucalyptol, thymol) and sesquiterpene (germacrene D) as reference compounds. Calibration curves were created plotting the amount of reference compound/amount of IS versus the area reference compound/area IS. The calibration curves were Y= 0.822x + 0.0324 for eucalyptol, Y= 0.782x + 0.0221 for thymol and Y= 0.7982x + 0.0108 for germacrene D. For quantification, a weighed amount of sample (50 mg exactly weighed) was diluted in 20 mL of n-hexane containing 100 ug/mL of nonanol. Solutions were injected with the split ratio 1/50. The identification of the essential oil constituents was performed by combining a comparison of mass spectral fragmentation patterns with those reported in NIST library, visual interpretation of the mass spectra and retention indices determined by reference to a homologous series of n-alkanes. Confirmation through injection of the reference standard was also performed when available. The identified constituents are listed in their order of elution in
Table 1.
4.5. Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS) Analysis of Fatty Acid Methyl Esters
For GC-MS analysis of the fatty acids content, ML-SCO2 and MLW-SCO2 were derivatized with MeOH in the presence of H2SO4, leading to the esterification of fatty acids to fatty acid methyl esters, which offer excellent stability for GC analysis. Then, 150 mg of each extract was added to 15 mL of MeOH, 1 mL of CH2Cl2, 3 drops of H2SO4 and 25.7 mg of methylpentadecanoate (Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA), used as internal standard. The mixture was heated under reflux for 1 h and then cooled in an ice bath. A liquid/liquid partition was performed with 10 mL of water and 5 mL of diethyl ether, then the organic phase was collected and dried. The residue was re-dissolved with 1.5 mL of diethyl ether and put in a vial. GC-MS analysis was performed with an Agilent 7820A coupled to an Agilent 5977B MSD single quadrupole mass spectrometer, using an HP88 (60 m × 0.25 mm, 0.2 µm film thickness) as the stationary phase. Helium was the carrier gas with a column head pressure of 14.1 psi. The flow rate through the column was 1.19 mL/min. The injector was set at 300 °C with a split ratio of 20:1, the split flow was 23.9 mL/min and 1 µL injections were made. The temperature gradient started with an initial temperature of 120 °C before a linear increase to 240 °C at 3 °C/min. The total run time was 55 min. MS spectra were recorded in the range of m/z 40–650 using an EI ion source operating in positive ion mode.
4.6. Liquid Chromatography Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization Mass Spectrometry (LC-APCI-MS) of Phytosterols
Quali-quantitative analysis of phytosterol derivatives was obtained by liquid chromatography atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry (LC-APCI-MS
n) using a previously published method [
17]. The measurements were performed with an Agilent 1260 chromatograph (Santa Clara, CA, USA) and a Varian MS-500 ion trap as detector. Separation was achieved using an Agilent Eclipse XDB C-8 (3.0 × 150 mm, 3.5 μm) as the stationary phase. The mobile phases were water (0.1%), formic acid (A) and acetonitrile (B). The elution gradient started at 90% A then decreased to 0% over 30 min; the flow rate was 0.5 mL/min. As reference compounds, beta sitosterol and stigmasterol were used, and standard solution was prepared at concentrations of 102.5 and 185 ug/mL in methanol. The sample injection volume was 10 µL. MS spectra were recorded in negative mode in the 50–2000 Da range, using an APCI ion source. Fragmentation of the main ionic species was obtained by the turbo data depending scanning (TDDS) function. Identification of compounds was obtained basing on fragmentation spectra as well as through the comparison of fragmentation patterns with data from the literature and injection of reference compounds. Quantification of phytosterols was obtained with the calibration curve method: beta sitosterol, y = 2.42 × 10
6x − 1.16 × 10
7, R² = 0.997; stigmasterol, y = 1.34 × 10
6x + 1.42 × 10
7, R² = 0.996.
4.7. Chromatographyc Isolation of Piperitone Oxide
A total of 300 mg of ML-SCO
2 was diluted in 5 mL of ethyl acetate. Purification of piperitone oxide was performed by preparative TLC (silica gel 60 F254 on aluminum plate) with a mobile phase of n-exane/ethyl acetate of 1:2. Plates were developed, and spots were observed under an UV lamp. Relevant bands (F1–F6) were scrapped from the plate and compounds were eluted using methanol. Solutions were dried under nitrogen flow and fractions were analyzed with NMR. Band F-5 (20.5 mg) was identified as piperitone oxide on the basis of comparison of NMR spectra with data from the literature [
25] while other fractions were mixtures of compounds.
4.8. In Vitro Experiments
4.8.1. Reagents
Eagle’s minimum essential medium (MEM), trypsin-EDTA, penicillin, streptomycin, sodium pyruvate, L-glutamine, nonessential amino acid solution, fetal calf serum (FCS), plates and Petri dishes were purchased from EuroClone S.p.A. (Pero, Milan, Italy). Simvastatin was dissolved in physiological solution at 50 mM, filtered through a 0.22 µM filter and stored at −20 °C. Mint oil and mint wax were dissolved in 400 mg/mL of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO, Sigma-Aldrich Merck, Milan, Italy) as stock solution. Piperitone oxide was dissolved in DMSO to the final concentration of 80 mM. Simvastatin (Sigma-Aldrich Merck, Milan, Italy) was dissolved to a stock concentration of 50 mM in 0.1 M NaOH, and the pH was adjusted to 7.2 according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The solution was then sterilized by filtration.
4.8.2. Cell Cultures
Human hepatic cancer cells Huh7 and HepG2 were cultured in MEM supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS), 1% L-glutamine 200 mM, 1% sodium pyruvate 100X, 1% nonessential amino acids 100X and 1% penicillin/streptomycin solution (10.000 U/mL and 10 mg/mL, respectively) at 37 °C in a humidified atmosphere of 5% CO2 and 95% air. For the experiments, cells were incubated with indicated final concentrations in MEM/0.4%FBS. The final concentration of solvent (DMSO) did not exceed 0.5% v/v and the same amount was added to all of the experimental points in each assay.
4.8.3. Cell Viability Assay
Cells were seeded in MEM/10% FBS in a 96-well tray at a cellular density of 8000 cells/well. The day after, cells were washed once with sterile phosphate buffered saline (PBS) and incubated with treatments (five experimental points for each compound; mint oil and wax: 62.5 µg/mL ÷ 1mg/mL, piperitone oxide: 12.5 µM ÷ 200 µM) for 72 h, after which the cell viability was evaluated by the sulforhodamine assay (SRB) according to a previously published protocol [
26].
4.8.4. Western Blot Analysis
Cells were seeded in MEM/10% FBS in a 6-well tray at a cellular density of 400,000 cells/well. The day after, cells were washed once with sterile PBS and incubated with the compounds at the indicated concentrations in DMEM/0.4% FBS. After 72 h of incubations, intracellular protein content was extracted in lysis buffer (50 mM Tris pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl and 1% Nonidet-P40, containing 1% v/v of protease and phosphatase inhibitor cocktails). Protein samples (20 µg) and a molecular mass marker (Thermo Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) were separated using 4–20% SDS-PAGE (Bio-Rad) under denaturation and reduction conditions. The protein samples were then transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane using the Trans-Blot® Turbo™ Transfer System (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA) and nonspecific binding sites were blocked with a 5% nonfat dried milk Tris-buffered tween 20 (TBS-T20) solution, under agitation for 60 min at room temperature. The blots were incubated overnight at 4 °C with a diluted solution (5% nonfat dried milk) of anti-LDLR (rabbit polyclonal antibody, GeneTex GTX132860; dilution 1:1000), anti-PCSK9 (rabbit polyclonal antibody, GeneTex GTX129859; dilution 1:1000), anti-α-tubulin (mouse monoclonal antibody, clone DM1A, Sigma T6199; dilution 1:2000) and anti-GAPDH (rabbit polyclonal antibody, GeneTex GTX100118; dilution 1:3000). The membranes were washed with TBS-T20 and exposed for 90 min at room temperature to a diluted solution (5% nonfat dried milk) of the secondary antibodies (peroxidase-conjugate goat anti-rabbit and anti-mouse, Jackson ImmunoResearch, dilution 1:5000, cod. 111-036-045 and 115-036-062, respectively). Immunoreactive bands were detected by exposing the membranes to ClarityTM Western Enhanced ChemiLuminescence (ECL) chemiluminescent substrates (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA) for 5 min, and images were acquired with an Azure c400 Imaging System (Aurogene, Rome, Italy). The densitometric readings were evaluated using ImageLabTM software (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA).
4.8.5. ELISA
Conditioned media were cleared by centrifugation (13,000 rpm for 10 min at 4 °C) and stored at −20 °C. The amount of PCSK9 was then quantified by using ELISA assays (R&D Systems, Minnesota, USA) according to the manufacturer’s instructions and as previously described [
27].
4.8.6. Statistical Analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using Prism statistical analysis package, version 5.01 (GraphPad Software, San Diego, CA, USA). When possible, p-values were determined by Student’s t-test. A probability value of p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
5. Conclusions
The extraction of M. longifolia leaves with supercritical fluid made it possible to obtain two different types of extracts, both of which were characterized for their chemical content in terms of fatty acids, phytosterols and terpenoids. MLW-SCO2 presented high amounts of unsaturated lipids (linoleic and alpha-linolenic acids at 2.8 and 9.4 mg/g, respectively) and phytosterols, with beta-sitosterol as the major component of these latter (5.6 mg/g). The extract also contained a significant amount of terpenoids. The ML-SCO2 fraction presented a limited amount of phytosterols but contained higher levels of terpenoids, with piperitone oxide being 26% on the basis of weight.
In vitro assays showed that ML-SCO2 induced a positive modulation of LDLR expression at a dose of 60 ug/mL, while MLW-SCO2 was inactive at the same concentration. The MLW-SCO2 extract at doses of 30 and 60 ug/mL completely inhibited PCSK9 expression. For this reason, the activity of isolated piperitone oxide was measured, and this compound was found to be a strong inhibitor of PCSK9 expression at doses of 12.5, 25 and 50 µM. The results suggested that the observed activity of the ML-SCO2 was not only related to piperitone oxide but that it was modulated by other phytoconstituents.
Overall, the outcome of the present study showed that supercritical fluid extraction of M. longifolia leaves results in a potential nutraceutical ingredient thanks to the presence of unsaturated fatty acids, phytosterols and terpenoids. Furthermore, significant activity was observed in the in vitro model used, demonstrating the ability of ML-SCO2 to modulate LDLR and PCSK9. Piperitone oxide was here reported for the first time as a significant inhibitor of PCSK9. Further investigations are needed on other monoterpenoids and related compounds to evaluate a possible new class of compounds with activity on PCSK9.