Abstract

Inorganic elements are important components of medicinal herbs, and provide valuable experimental evidence for the quality evaluation and control of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). In this study, to investigate the relationship between the inorganic elemental fingerprint and geographical origin identification of cultivated Polygala tenuifolia, 41 elemental fingerprints of P. tenuifolia from four major polygala-producing regions (Shanxi, Hebei, Henan, and Shaanxi) were evaluated to determine the importance of inorganic elements to cultivated P. tenuifolia. A total of 15 elemental (B, Ca, Cl, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, Na, N, Mo, S, Sr, P, and Zn) concentrations of cultivated P. tenuifolia were measured using inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy (ICP-MS). The element composition samples were classified by radar plot, elemental fingerprint, and multivariate data analyses, such as hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA), principle component analysis (PCA), and discriminant analysis (DA). This study shows that radar plots and multivariate data analysis can satisfactorily distinguish the geographical origin of cultivated P. tenuifolia. Furthermore, PCA results revealed that N, Cu, K, Mo, Sr, Ca, and Zn are the characteristic elements of cultivated P. tenuifolia. Therefore, multi-element fingerprinting coupled with multivariate statistical techniques can be considered an effective tool to discriminate geographical origin of cultivated P. tenuifolia.

Highlights

  • Polygala tenuifolia is a perennial herb that has been cultivated throughout East Asia (P. tenuifolia in Korea, Wonji in Korean, Onji in Japanese, and Yuanzhi in Chinese)[1]

  • The corresponding results demonstrated that the combination of inorganic elemental fingerprint with multivariate statistical analysis is a promising approach to discriminate the geographical origin of cultivated P. tenuifolia

  • To investigate the relationship between the inorganic elemental fingerprints and the geographical origin identification of cultivated P. tenuifolia, 15 inorganic elements were determined in cultivated P. tenuifolia samples by ICP-MS15

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Summary

Introduction

Polygala tenuifolia (family: Polygalaceae) is a perennial herb that has been cultivated throughout East Asia (P. tenuifolia in Korea, Wonji in Korean, Onji in Japanese, and Yuanzhi in Chinese)[1]. ICP-MS, as an element-specific detector, has several advantages, such as wide linear range, high sensitivity, multi-elements, and multi-isotopes detection ability[18]. These factors help determine various elements for qualitative, quantitative, and semi-quantitative analyses. This study did not focus on the identification of cultivated P. tenuifolia using the elemental composition profiles Instead, it determined the 15 inorganic elements in cultivated P. tenuifolia using ICP-MS and investigated the elemental compositions. The corresponding results demonstrated that the combination of inorganic elemental fingerprint with multivariate statistical analysis is a promising approach to discriminate the geographical origin of cultivated P. tenuifolia

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