Improving the Vanillin-Sulphuric Acid Method for Quantifying Total Saponins
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials
2.2. Methods
2.2.1. The Usual Vanillin-Sulphuric Acid TSC Assay
2.2.2. Solvents and the Reagent Blank
2.2.3. Solvents Used to Prepare Saponin (Aescin) Solutions
- Set 1: A stock solution of aescin in ethanol (1500 mg L−1) was prepared. The ethanol stock solution was diluted with ethanol to 1000, 800, 500, 250 and 100 mg L−1.
- Set 2: A stock solution of aescin in water (1500 mg L−1) was prepared. The water stock solution was diluted with water to 1000, 800, 500, 250 and 100 mg L−1.
- Set 3: The ethanol stock solution (1500 mg L−1) was diluted with water to 1000, 800, 500, 250 and 100 mg L−1.
- Set 4: A stock solution of aescin in methanol (1500 mg L−1) was prepared. The methanol stock solution was diluted with water to 500, 250, 125, 62.5 and 31.25 mg L−1. The range of concentrations for this set was adjusted downwards because the initial concentrations (as in Sets 1 to 3) gave absorbance values that were too high for the Cary 50 UV-VIS spectrophotometer.
2.2.4. The Modified Vanillin-Sulphuric Acid TSC Assay
2.2.5. Determining the TSC of a Gac Seed Extract Using the Modified Method
2.2.6. Statistical Analyses
3. Results
3.1. The Effect of Different Solvents in the Reagent Blank
3.2. Effect of Solvents on the Aescin Standard Curve
3.3. Aescin Standard Curve for the Modified Method
3.4. Saponin Content of the Gac Seed Kernel Powder
4. Discussion
4.1. Effect of Common Extraction Solvents on the Vanillin-Sulphuric Acid Method
4.2. Modifications of the Vanillin-Sulphuric Acid Method
- To make it easier to remove the solvent from the extract by evaporation, the volume of the sample extract used in the assay was decreased ten times (from 0.25 mL to 25 µL);
- To keep the total volume of the solution, and the concentration of the reagents during the reaction step the same as for the unmodified assay, the concentration of the vanillin solution in ethanol was decreased by half from 8% to 4% (w/v), and the volume of the 4% (w/v) vanillin solution added was doubled (from 0.25 mL to 0.5 mL).
4.3. Advantages of the Modified Vanillin-Sulphuric Acid Method
- Because the chemical reaction in the modified protocol is not interfered with by the presence of extraction solvent, it does not require the standard curve to be constructed with a new solvent every time the extraction solvent is changed. Moreover, once the standard curve has been proven to be reproducible over time, then it will not need to be done for every assay; the same standard curve can be used for subsequent assays, and for extracts derived from all types of solvents, which means that labour and reagents can be is saved.
- In the unmodified protocol, the standards and the reagent blank needs to be prepared (dissolved and diluted) in the same solvent that has been used to extract the material. However, this is difficult in practice because every saponin standard dissolves only in a limited number of solvents. This often leads to the use of a solvent other than that used for extraction of the material to dissolve the saponin standard, which can result in some errors and inconsistencies in the results obtained. In contrast, the results obtained with the modified protocol are not affected by the nature of the solvent used to dissolve the standard because whatever the solvent is, it is eliminated from the reaction system in the same way the extraction solvent is removed. Therefore, the modified protocol can be applied not only for aescin, used in the present study as the external saponin standard, but also for any other selected saponin standard.
- In the unmodified protocol, the sample extract needs to be diluted so that its saponin content does not cause an absorbance reading that is too high, and therefore, out of the assay’s linear range. In contrast, in the modified protocol, the appropriate concentration of saponin in the reaction mixture can simply be achieved by changing the volume of the sample aliquot added to the test tube prior to evaporating the extraction solvent. Therefore, the modified protocol does not require the sample dilution step, which means that labour and solvents can be saved.
- For the unmodified protocol, when the sample extract contains a highly non-polar solvent, such as hexane or chloroform, it can form a cloudy emulsion with the highly polar vanillin-sulphuric acid solution, and therefore, the saponin content cannot be accurately measured spectrophotometrically. The modified method avoids that problem because the solvent contained in the extract is evaporated away and not present when the polar vanillin-sulphuric acid solution is added and therefore possible emulsification is prevented.
4.4. Implementation of the Modified Vanillin-Sulphuric Acid Method
- To facilitate the removal of the solvent from the sample extract, a small volume of undiluted sample (high concentration) is recommended.
- If the saponins in the sample extract are heat- and/or oxidation-sensitive, a stream of an inert gas (e.g., nitrogen or helium) can be used to evaporate the extraction solvent instead of using a hot water bath.
- When building up the standard curve for saponin standards other than aescin, the concentration of the standard stock solution and the volume of each diluted standard solution can be adjusted so that the absorbance readings fall within the absorbance linear range of the spectrophotometer used.
- When the volume of the sample used (V µL) is not 25 µL, the concentration value calculated from the calibration curve needs to be multiplied by a normalisation factor of 25/V to obtain the final saponin concentration in the extract, which can then be used to determine the TSC of the extracted plant material.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Component | Reagent Blank (mL) | Standards (mL) | Samples (mL) |
---|---|---|---|
Extraction Solvent | 0.25 | - | - |
Standards in Extraction Solvent | - | 0.25 | - |
Sample in Extraction Solvent | - | - | 0.25 |
Vanillin 8% (w/v) in Ethanol | 0.25 | 0.25 | 0.25 |
Sulphuric acid 72% (v/v) in Water | 2.50 | 2.50 | 2.50 |
Component | Zeroing Blank (mL) | Reagent Blank (mL) |
---|---|---|
Deionised Water | 0.25 | - |
Extraction Solvent (absolute) | - | 0.25 |
Vanillin 8% (w/v) in Ethanol | 0.25 | 0.25 |
Sulphuric acid 72% (v/v) in Water | 2.50 | 2.50 |
Component | Reagent Blank | Aescin Solutions (mL) | |
---|---|---|---|
Water Blank (mL) | Ethanol Blank (mL) | ||
DI water | 0.25 | - | - |
Ethanol | - | 0.25 | - |
Aescin solution | - | - | 0.25 |
Vanillin 8% (w/v) in Ethanol | 0.25 | 0.25 | 0.25 |
Sulphuric acid 72% (v/v) in Water | 2.50 | 2.50 | 2.50 |
Component | Reagent Blank (mL) | Standards (mL) | Samples (mL) |
---|---|---|---|
Extraction Solvent | 0.025 (removed) | - | - |
Standards in Methanol | - | 0.025 (removed) | - |
Sample in Extraction Solvent | - | - | 0.025 (removed) |
Vanillin 4% (w/v) in Ethanol | 0.500 | 0.500 | 0.500 |
Sulphuric acid 72% (v/v) in Water | 2.500 | 2.500 | 2.500 |
Standard | Dilution | Concentration (mg L−1) | Absorbance (560 nm) |
---|---|---|---|
(1) | Stock solution (no dilution) | 15,000 | 1.7283 ± 0.0321 |
(2) | 2 mL (1) + 2 mL methanol | 7500 | 0.8674 ± 0.0062 |
(3) | 2 mL (2) + 2 mL methanol | 3750 | 0.4352 ± 0.0124 |
(4) | 2 mL (3) + 2 mL methanol | 1875 | 0.2069 ± 0.0265 |
(5) Blank | 2 mL (4) + 2 mL methanol Methanol only | 937.5 0 | 0.1151 ± 0.0075 Used for zeroing |
Method | Absorbance ‡ | Standard Curve | Saponin ‡ (mg AE L−1) | TSC § (mg AE g−1) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Unmodified † | 0.409 ± 0.010 a | Y = 0.0013X – 0.0302 | 3377 ± 77 a | 105.69 ± 2.40 a |
Modified | 0.410 ± 0.008 a | Y = 0.00012X + 0.0008 | 3411 ± 57 a | 106.77 ± 1.79 a |
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V. Le, A.; E. Parks, S.; H. Nguyen, M.; D. Roach, P. Improving the Vanillin-Sulphuric Acid Method for Quantifying Total Saponins. Technologies 2018, 6, 84. https://doi.org/10.3390/technologies6030084
V. Le A, E. Parks S, H. Nguyen M, D. Roach P. Improving the Vanillin-Sulphuric Acid Method for Quantifying Total Saponins. Technologies. 2018; 6(3):84. https://doi.org/10.3390/technologies6030084
Chicago/Turabian StyleV. Le, Anh, Sophie E. Parks, Minh H. Nguyen, and Paul D. Roach. 2018. "Improving the Vanillin-Sulphuric Acid Method for Quantifying Total Saponins" Technologies 6, no. 3: 84. https://doi.org/10.3390/technologies6030084
APA StyleV. Le, A., E. Parks, S., H. Nguyen, M., & D. Roach, P. (2018). Improving the Vanillin-Sulphuric Acid Method for Quantifying Total Saponins. Technologies, 6(3), 84. https://doi.org/10.3390/technologies6030084