Abstract

Heating is a traditional method used in ginseng root processing, however, there aren’t reports on differences resulting from baking and steaming. Moreover, ginseng flowers, with 5.06 times more total saponins than ginseng root, are not fully taken advantage of for their ginsenosides. Transformation mechanisms of ginsenosides in ginseng flowers upon baking and steaming were thus explored. HPLC using authentic standards of 20 ginsenosides and UPLC-QTOF-MS/MS were used to quantify and identify ginsenosides, respectively, in ginseng flowers baked or steamed at different temperatures and durations. Results show that baking and steaming caused a 3.2-fold increase in ginsenoside species existed in unheated ginseng flowers (20/64 ginsenosides) and transformation of a certain amount of polar ginsenosides into numerous less polar ginsenosides. Among the 20 ginsenosides with standards, polar ginsenosides were abundant in ginseng flowers baked or steamed at lower temperatures, whereas less polar ginsenosides occurred and were enriched at higher temperatures. Furthermore, the two types of heating treatments could generate mostly similar ginsenosides, but steaming was much efficient than baking in transforming polar- into less polar ginsenosides, with steaming at 120 °C being comparably equivalent to baking at 150 °C. Moreover, both the two heating methods triggered ginsenoside acetylation and thus caused formation of 16 acetylginsenosides. Finally, a new transformation mechanism concerning acetyl-ginsenosides formation was proposed.

Highlights

  • Panax ginseng Meyer, has been utilized in China, Korea and Japan for thousands of years as a medicinal plant, and it is one of the most popular herbal medicines used as a dietary supplement in recent years [1]

  • We investigated the effects of baking and steaming at different temperatures and for various durations on the saponin composition of ginseng flowers utilizing the ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC)-QTOF-MS/MS technique and further quantified 20 representative ginsenosides by HPLC

  • A HPLC-UV method was used for analyzing the ginsenosides of unheated ginseng flowers (UGF)

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Summary

Introduction

Panax ginseng Meyer, has been utilized in China, Korea and Japan for thousands of years as a medicinal plant, and it is one of the most popular herbal medicines used as a dietary supplement in recent years [1]. We investigated the effects of baking and steaming at different temperatures and for various durations on the saponin composition of ginseng flowers utilizing the UPLC-QTOF-MS/MS technique and further quantified 20 representative ginsenosides by HPLC. These explorations should allow us to have a better understanding of the subtle differences between the two types of heated ginseng flowers, and to examine the major structural changes of ginsenosides during baking and steaming

Results and Discussion
Changes in Total Amount of the 20 Ginsenosides upon Baking and Steaming
C42 H72 O14
C54 H92 O23
C44 H74 O14
C44 H71 O13
Ginsenosides Originally Existing in UGF
Ginsenosides Newly Generated in Heated Ginseng Flowers
Transformation Mechanisms of Ginsenosides in Ginseng Flowers upon Heating
Chemicals and Plant Materials
Crude Extract Preparation
HPLC Analyses of Ginsenosides
Statistical Analysis
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