Fingerprinting of Plumbagin in lic>Drosera burmannii Vahl using High Performance Thin Layer Chromatography

HPTLC fingerprinting profile of the alcohol and aqueous extracts of Drosera burmannii is described. Seven components have been detected in the alcohol extract. Further, plumbagin, an useful antifertility agent, was also detected by comparison with the reference standard. The aqueous extract revealed two spots with no spot corresponding to plumbagin.

Drosera L. like D. rotundifolia L. are used in whooping cough, fever, mental and stomach disorders, skin diseases in homeopathic system of medicine 2 . The objective of the present study was to develop HPTLC-aided fingerprint profile of D. burmannii, which may be used as markers for quality evaluation, and standardization of the drug.
D. burmannii was collected from forests of Savanadurga, Bangalore during February 2006 and was authenticated. A voucher herbarium specimen (Hema Basnett 005) along with a voucher drug sample is preserved at this College herbarium and crude drug museum. The material was washed, shade dried, powdered, passed through sieve no. 60 and stored in airtight containers in day light for three months at room temperature (±20 o ). Plumbagin reference standard was procured from HiMedia, Mumbai. The air dried powder was successively extracted with 95% ethanol in a Soxhlet apparatus and Þ nally the marc was macerated with chloroform water (0.25%) for 24 h to obtain the aqueous extract. The extracts were further concentrated under vacuum using a rotary ß ash evaporator and dried in a desiccator.
Camag HPTLC system equipped with Linomat V sample applicator, Camag TLC Scanner 3 and WinCATS 4 software for interpretation of the data was used. An aluminium plate (20×10 cm) precoated with silica gel 60F 254 (E. Merck) was used as adsorbent. The plates were developed using toluene:glacial acetic acid (55:1) and toluene:chloroform:glacial acetic acid (1:1:0.1) as mobile phase for alcohol and aqueous extracts respectively in a Camag twin trough chamber to a distance of 8 cm each.
Solution of plumbagin reference standard (1 mg/ml) was prepared in alcohol as stock solution. Solution of the alcohol extract was prepared by dissolving the extract in alcohol. The aqueous extract was dissolved in alcohol, filtered, the filtrate used as aqueous extract solution. The TLC plates were activated by heating at 115 0 for about 30 min prior to use. The standard plumbagin solution and alcohol extract solution or aqueous extract solution were applied as 6 mm bands on two different precoated silica gel 60 F 254 TLC plates, and the plates were developed in appropriate mobile phase. No prewashing of plates was carried out. Chamber saturation time was maintained at 1 h. The developed plates were allowed to dry and scanned at a wavelength of 425 nm, slit dimension 6.00×3.00 nm, scanning speed 20 nm/sec and the source of radiation was tungsten lamp. The R f and peak area of the standard and the extracts were interpreted by using the software. The developed plates were photo documented using Camag Reprostar-3, equipped with a 12bit CCD camera, under 254, 366 nm and white light.
Plumbagin reference standard shows an R f of 0.56 ( fig. 1) and 0.66 in the mobile phase adopted for alcohol and aqueous extracts respectively. HPTLC analysis of alcohol and aqueous extracts of D. burmannii revealed different chromatographic profiles. In this study the alcohol extract revealed seven components at R f 0.12, 0.18, 0.21, 0.24, 0.29, 0.56, 0.81 (figs. 2 and 3). Out of these, the most pronounced spot of maximum area was at R f 0.56, corresponding to that of marker compound plumbagin. Three other spots at R f 0.12, 0.18 and 0.21 were also prominent.
The method is specific for plumbagin in alcohol extract since it resolves the peak of plumbagin in the mobile phase proposed for the alcohol extracts to an R f of 0.56 in the presence of other components. The specificity was confirmed by overlaying the spectra of plumbagin in reference standard (λ max 425 nm), with the absorption spectrum obtained from the corresponding band in the track of alcohol extract ( fig. 4). The aqueous extract revealed spots at R f 0.15 and 0.24 with no spot corresponding to that of plumbagin reference standard (R f 0.66). This is due to the hydrophobic nature of plumbagin 13 . The study is the first report on HPTLC profile of D. burmannii, which reveals components useful for quality evaluation, and standardization of the drug. Further it confirms the presence of plumbagin as marker compound in D. burmannii.