2. Results and Discussion
Compound 1, : −0.5° (c = 0.1, CHCl3), was isolated as yellowish needles (acetone). The molecular formula of 1 was determined to be C20H20O4 (11 degrees of unsaturation) on the basis of its HRESIMS (m/z 323.1287 [M-H]−, calcd. for C20H19O4−, 323.1283). The UV spectrum of compound 1 showed absorption bands (229, 243, 268, 430 nm), which are characteristic of an aromatic moiety. The IR spectrum showed absorption peaks at 1690 cm−1 (carbonyl group) and 1675 and 1625 cm−1 (p-quinone moiety).
The
1H and
13C NMR spectra of
1 showed the presence of four methyls [δ
H 1.51 (3H,
d,
J = 6.2, H-17), 1.87 (3H, s, H-18), 1.88 (3H, s, H-19), 1.48 (3H, s, H-20)], three methylenes [δ
H 3.21 (1H,
d,
J = 15.2,10.1, H-15α), δ
H 2.68 (1H,
m, H-15β), δ
H 1.58 (1H,
m, H-1α), δ
H 2.74 (1H,
dd,
J = 16.5,7.6, H-1β), δ
H 2.22 (1H,
m, H-2β)], δ
H 2.68 (1H,
m, H-2β)], two methines [δ
H 6.37 (1H,
s, H-6), 5.10(1H,
m, H-16)]. The
13C NMR spectroscopic data of
1 displayed resonance for 20 carbons, which was confirmed by the DEPT and HSQC experiments to be 4 methyl groups, 3 methylenes, 2 methines, and 11 quaternary carbons. The three quaternary carbon signals at δ
C 183.9, 182.6, and 180.9 (C-7, C-11, and C-14, respectively) indicated the presence of three carbonyl groups, including a quinone moiety. Four downfield carbon signals at δ
C 130.6 (C-8), 153.3 (C-9), 157.6 (C-12), and 121.2 (C-13) were assignable to olefinic carbon atoms as members of the
p-benzoquinone moiety, which was also supported by the germinal coupling constant of the C-15 methylene protons (
J = 17.2 Hz). All these spectral data suggested the presence of an abietane diterpenoid. Our assignments were supported by HMBC data (See
Supplementary Materials), which showed correlations from H-17 (δ
H 1.51) to C-15 (δ
C 34.3) and C-16 (δ
C 83.1), from H-15(δ
H 3.21 and 2.68) to C-12 (δ
C 157.6), and C-13 (δ
C 121.2). For biosynthetic considerations, Me-17 and Me-20 of compound
1 are expected to be β-oriented. The negative cotton effect at 307 nm in the CD spectrum indicated that the structure had the same abietane absolute configuration as mandarone A (Fan et al., 1999). All the above data established the structure of compound
1 as (10
S,16
S)-12,16-epoxy-17(15→16)-abeo-3,5,8,12,-abietatetraen-7,11,14-trione.
Compound 2, : −18.1° (c = 0.1, CHCl3), was isolated as yellowish needle crystals (CHCl3). The molecular formula of 2 was determined to be C22H28O7 (9 degrees of unsaturation) on the basis of its HRESIMS (m/z 403.1761 [M-H]−, calcd. for C22H27O7−, 403.1757). The UV spectrum of compound 2 showed absorption bands (230, 280, 335 nm) that are characteristic of a benzene and a ketone. The IR spectrum showed absorption peaks at 1715 and 1650 cm−1 (two carbonyl signals) and 1620, 1610, and 1575 cm−1 (aromatic moiety).
The
1H and
13C-NMR spectra (
Table 1) showed the presence of four methyls [δ
H 1.28 (3H, d,
J = 6.1 Hz, H-17), δ
H 1.50 (3H, s, H-18), δ
H 1.56 (3H, s, H-19), and δ
H 1.45 (3H, s, H-20)], two pairs of doublet doublets at δ
H 1.85 (m, 1H), 2.71 (m, 1H), 2.73 (m, 1H), and 3.32 (m, 1H) corresponding to two methylene groups and one methine group at δ
H 4.17 (1H, m, H-16) together with two methoxyls [δ
H 3.88 and δ
H 3.85]. Additionally, strong chelation to a carbonyl at δ
H 13.35 (s) and one hydroxyl group at δ
H 5.85 (s) were also observed. Two ketone groups were observed at δ
C 213.7 (C-3) and δ
C 186.3 (C-7), and six aromatic C-atom signals at δ
C 115.5, 138.8, 131.9, 152.2, 119.0, and 155.5. All the above data, together with other spectroscopic characteristics, suggested that
2 was a diterpenoid [
4].
The coupling system of the β-hydroxypropyl group [δ
H 2.86 (1H, overlapping, H-15α), 3.32 (1H, overlapping, H-15β), 4.17 (1H, m, H-16), 1.28 (3H, d,
J = 6.1 Hz, H-17)] was determined based on its
1H-
1H COSY spectrum, and this group was connected at C-13 based on HMBC correlations from the H-15 and 16 resonances with C-13 (δ
C 119.0),which suggested that the oxygenated substituent was placed at the C-16 position (–CH
2CH(OH)CH
3), and the side chain of 1 is not an isopropyl but rather a 2-hudroxy-
n-propyl group (CH
3-17 shifted to C-16 from C-15). The O-methyl proton resonance at δ
H 3.76 (3H, s) as well as the H-14, H-15α, and H-15β proton resonances exhibited long-range coupling with C-12 (δ
C 152.2) in the HMBC spectrum, which suggested the presence of a methoxy group at C-12. The
1H,
13C long-range correlations between OCH
3 (δ
H 3.88) and C-6 (δ
C 146.4) suggested the presence of a methoxy group at C-6. Therefore, compound
2 possesses an abeo-abietane diterpenoid framework with two OCH
3 groups on C-6 and C-12. The absolute configuration of C-16 in the β-oxypropyl group was determined by a modified Mosher’s method, using C
5D
5N-
d5 as the reagents. The treatment of
2 with (
R)-(−)-MTPA and (
S)-(+)-MTPA chlorides gave the 11,16-O-di-(
S)-MTPA ester (a) and (
R)-MTPA ester (b) of
2, respectively. The value of the
1H -NMR differences [δ (ppm) = δa−δb] between the esters indicated that the absolute configuration of C-16 is
S. Thus, the structure of
2 was elucidated as 11,14,16-trihydroxy-6,12-dimethoxy-17(15→16)-abeo-5,8,11,13- abietatetraen-3,7-dione (
Figure 1).
The structures of the known compounds were established by comparison of their physicochemical and spectral data with reported data, and they were identified as 6,12-dihydroxyabieta-5,8,11,13-teraen-7-one (
2) [
5], 11,14-dihydroxy-8,11,13-abietatrien-7-one (
3) [
6], crolerodendrum A (
4) [
7], cyrtophyllone A (
5) [
8], and (10
R,16
S)-12,16-epoxy-11,14-dihydroxy-6-methoxy-17(15→16)-
abeo-abieta-5,8,11,13-tetraen-3,7-dione (
6) [
9], respectively.
The antioxidant and cytotoxic activities of
1–
7 were evaluated and are bsummarized in
Table 2. The cytotoxic activities of the isolated compounds
1–
7 were evaluated against two cell lines, and compounds
1 and
2 demonstrated cytotoxic activities against the HL-60 tumor (IC
50 21.22 ± 2.41 and 10.91 ± 1.62 μM) and A549 cell lines (IC
50 13.71 ± 1.51 and 18.42 ± 0.76 μM), respectively. Compound
2 also showed an IC
50 value of 23.23 ± 2.10 and 15.67 ± 1.89 μg/mL for scavenging DPPH and ABTS
+, respectively.
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. General Methods
Optical rotations were obtained using a Perkin–Elmer 241 automatic polarimeter (Perkin Elmer, Waltham, MA, USA), Absorption spectra were recorded by an ultraviolet-visible (UV-vis) light spectrophotometer (Lambda 35, PerkinElmer, Norwalk, CT, USA), Electronic Circular dichroism (CD) spectra were recorded on a Brighttime Chirascan spectrometer (Applied Photophysics Ltd., Leatherhead, UK); FTIR spectra were obtained by using a FTIR spectrometer (PerkinElmer, Norwalk, CT, USA); NMR spectra were taken on a Bruker AVANCE III 500 spectrometer (Bruker, Bremen, Germany); HRESIMS data were carried out on an Agilent 6210 ESI-TOF mass spectrometer (Agilent, Santa Clara, CA, USA); Silica gel (Qingdao Haiyang Chemical Group Co., Qingdao, China) and Sephadex LH-20 (Amersham Biosciences, Chicago, IL, USA) were used for column chromatography, Waters 1525 semi-preparative HPLC (Waters, MA, USA) coupled with a Waters 2996 photodiode array detector. A Kromasil C18 preparative HPLC column (250 mm × 10 mm, 5 μm) was used. Thin layer chromatographies (TLCs) (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany) were performed on silica-gel F254 plates and visualized under UV light, and by heating after spraying with 10% aq. H2SO4.
3.2. Plant Material
Woody branches and healthy stems of C. bracteatum were collected in July 2014 from the mountain of Dulongjiang, Yunnan Province, People’s Republic of China. The plant was identified by Dr. Chunhui Dai in Zhejiang Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine. A voucher specimen (201418) has been deposited in the Key Laboratory for Genetic Improvement and Quality Control of Medical Plants of Zhejiang Province, Hangzhou Normal University.
3.3. Extraction and Isolation
Cut and air-dried stems (9 kg) of C. bracteatum were extracted under reflux with 90% ethanol (3 × 90 L) at 70 °C. The ethanol extracts were combined and evaporated to dryness under vacuum at 50 °C to afford a gummy residue (630 g). Part of the crude extract (500 g) was suspended in water (1 L) at 50 °C and fractionated with EtOAc (3 × 2 L) and n-BuOH (3 × 2 L) successively to yield the EtOAc (81 g) and n-BuOH (90 g) fractions, respectively.
The EtOAc extract (81 g) was fractionated by column chromatography on silica gel to give 19 fractions (F1–F19), eluted with petroleum ether–EtOAc mixtures of increasing polarity. Fraction F11, which eluted with petroleum ether–EtOAc (3:1), was chromatographed by reverse C18 silica gel column chromatography, eluting with MeOH in H2O with increasing polarity to give four subfractions (F11A–F11D). F11A (80 mg) was chromatographed over Sephadex LH-20 (CHCl3: MeOH, 1:1) to give 1 (16 mg). F12 (200 mg) was fractionated into three subfractions (F12A–F12C) through a Sephadex LH-20 column. F12A was further purified by preparative HPLC (MeCN-H2O, 70:30, v/v) to yield compounds 3 (7.8 mg) and 4 (6.5 mg). Through similar procedures, F12C yielded compounds 5 (12.0 mg) and 6 (9.9 mg). F13 (360 mg) was subjected to an MCI gel column eluted with MeOH-H2O (8:2, v/v) and further separated through Sephadex LH-20 (MeOH), and preparative HPLC (MeCN–H2O, 50:50, v/v) to give compound 7 (13.5 mg). Fr14 (90 mg) was purified by preparative HPLC (MeCN–H2O, 45:55, v/v) as the isocratic solvent system to obtain compounds 2 (11.5 mg).
3.3.1. Compound 1
Yellowish needles;
: −10.5° (
c = 0.1, CHCl
3); UV (MeOH): 229 (2.77), 273 (2.63), 368 (2.13) nm. IR (KBr): νmax 3420, 2935, 2840, 1690, 1675, 1625, 1460, 1400, 1320, 1250, 1210, 1025 cm
−1.
1H and
13C-NMR spectral data (CDCl
3, 500 and 125 MHz), see
Table 1. HR-ESI-MS:
m/z 323.1287 [M − H]
− (calcd. for C
20H
19O
4, 323.1283).
3.3.2. Compound 2
Yellowish needle crystals;
: −18.1° (
c = 0.1, CHCl
3); UV (MeOH): 230 (3.27), 258 (3.10), 280 (3.73), 353 (3.50) nm. IR (KBr): νmax 3430, 2950, 2875, 1715, 1650, 1620, 1465, 1430, 1380, 1360, 1285, 1025 cm
−1.
1H and
13C-NMR spectral data (CDCl
3, 500 and 125 MHz), see
Table 1. HR-ESI-MS:
m/
z 403.1761 [M − H]
− (calcd. for C
22H
27O
7, 403.1757).
3.4. Cytotoxicity Assay
The inhibitory effects of the compounds against HL-60 and A549 cells were determined using a MTT assay [
10]. The cells (5000–10,000 per well) were cultivated in 96-well plates for 24 h. The medium was then replaced with new medium containing different concentrations of the compounds, and using cisplatin as a positive control. After incubation for 24 h, the medium was replaced by 100 μL of MTT, and the cells were further incubated for another 4 h at 37 °C to allow MTT formazan formation. Following incubation, the medium was replaced by acidic isopropanol (100 μL) to dissolve the formazan in each well. The absorbance was detected by a microplate reader (Multiskan Spectrum, Thermo Electron Corporation, Vantaa, Finland) at 570 nm. The concentration giving 50% inhibition (IC
50) was calculated by NDST software, and each assay was performed in triplicate.
3.5. Free Radical Scavenging Assay and ABTS Test
The DPPH radical scavenging activity of the compound was determined according to the method of Ślusarczyk et al. with slight modifications [
11]. Briefly, 0.2 mM solution of DPPH in methanol was prepared and 2.5 mL of this solution were added to 2.5 mL of compound solution in methanol at different concentrations. Then, 30 min later, the absorbance was measured at 517 nm in the UV spectrophotometry. A calibration curve was prepared using different Trolox concentrations (standard Trolox solutions ranging from 10 to 320 μM). The percentage inhibition activity was calculated as follows: (A
0-A
t)/A
0 × 100%, where A
0 is the absorbance of the control and A
t is the absorbance in the presence of samples.
The ABTS
+ free radical scavenging assay was determined according to the method described by Wang with some modification [
12]. ABTS+ radical cation was produced by mixing 7 mM ABTS
+ solution with 2.45 mM potassium persulfate, and the mixture was stored at room temperature and in the dark for 12 h. Then, the ABTS
+ solution was diluted with ethanol until its absorbance at 734 nm was 0.70. Next, 5 μL of sample solution was mixed with 2 mL of diluted ABTS
+ radical solution and allowed to react for 6 min. The absorbance was measured at 734 nm by UV spectrophotometry. The scavenging activity was expressed as IC
50 (the concentration of the tested sample required to scavenge 50% of ABTS), calculated by linear regression analysis. The experiment was conducted in triplicate.
3.6. Statistical Analysis
We described all values as the mean ± SD and analyzed by Graphpad Prism 6.0. To analyze the statistical significance among multiple groups, we used one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by Tukey post hoc test. p-values < 0.05 were considered to indicate statistical significance.