Abstract

Centella asiatica (L.) Urban extracts are widely used as food, drugs and cosmetics, and the main active compounds are glycosides (madecassoside and asiaticoside) and aglycones (madecassic acid and asiatic acid). Green extraction is an interesting concept that can produce safe and high-quality extracts that use less solvent, time and energy with the environmental friendly. This study investigated the optimum conditions for extracting a triterpenoid glycoside-enriched C. asiatica extract using microwave-assisted extraction (MAE) and ultrasound-assisted extraction (UAE). Central composite design and response surface methodology (RSM) were used for the experimental design and data analysis. Four-month-old C. asiatica tetraploid plants were selected as the elite raw material containing high amount of triterpenoid glycosides for the extraction experiments, and the triterpenoid content was determined by a validated HPLC method. The results demonstrated that the RSM models and equations were reliable and could predict the optimal conditions to enhance C. asiatica extract yield, glycoside and aglycone amounts. The percent of ethanol was the major factor that had a significant effect on C. asiatica yield and glycoside and aglycone content during MAE and UAE. The maximum triterpenoids content in extract; 7.332 ± 0.386% w/w madecassoside and 4.560 ± 0.153% w/w asiaticoside 0.357 ± 0.013% w/w madecassic acid and 0.209 ± 0.025% w/w asiatic acid were obtained by MAE with 80% ethanol at 100 watts for 7.5 min, whereas the optimal conditions for highest total triterpenoids extraction from dry plant was UAE with 80% ethanol, temperature 48 °C, 50 min enhanced 2.262 ± 0.046% w/w madecassoside, 1.325 ± 0.062% w/w asiaticoside, 0.082 ± 0.009% w/w madecassic acid and 0.052 ± 0.007% w/w asiatic acid as secondary outcome. Moreover, it was found that MAE and UAE consumed energy 59 and 54%, respectively, lower than that of the conventional method, maceration, in term of kilowatt-hour per gram of total triterpenoids. These optimized green conditions could be recommended for C. asiatica extraction for triterpenoid glycoside-enriched extracts production for the pharmaceutical or cosmeceutical industries and triterpenoids quantitative analysis in raw materials.

Highlights

  • Centella asiatica (L.) Urban is a creeping perennial herb belonging to the plant family Apiaceae (Umbelliferae), known by the common name Gotu kola or Indian ­pennywort[1]

  • The independent variables of microwave-assisted extraction (MAE) were the ethanol percentage (40–80%), microwave power (100–200 watts) and extraction time (5–10 min), and the independent variables of ultrasound-assisted extraction (UAE) were the ethanol percentage (40–80%), extraction temperature (40–70 °C) and time (30–90 min). Each of these variables affected six dependent parameters: the extract yield, madecassoside content, asiaticoside content, madecassic acid content, asiatic acid content and total triterpenoid content, and these results can be found as Supplementary Table S1 and Table S2 online

  • The important factor influencing the extract yield from both MAE and UAE was identified by central composite design (CCD)

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Summary

Introduction

Centella asiatica (L.) Urban is a creeping perennial herb belonging to the plant family Apiaceae (Umbelliferae), known by the common name Gotu kola or Indian ­pennywort[1]. Green extraction is a new concept to discover and design optimal extraction processes to reduce energy and solvent usage and use renewable natural materials that produce safe and high extract or product quality by using a proper s­ trategy[13]. This new technology can be transferred from laboratory experiments to the industrial scale. Time consuming and energy consumption of green extraction methods were compared with conventional method

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