Abstract

Phenanthrenes and their derivatives have biological relevance owing to their antimicrobial, antioxidant, and cytotoxic effects on cancer cells. They can be efficiently analyzed through ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography coupled to tandem high-resolution mass spectrometry (UHPLC–MS/HRMS). Herein, we first studied the unique fragmentation behavior of phenanthrenes based on direct infusion MS/HRMS analysis. As a newly described phenomenon, “organ pipe distribution”, we found a structural connection linking their unique fragmentation pattern to serial H radical losses. The bonds responsible for this behavior were identified through quantum chemical calculations using a stepwise approach. Furthermore, the chromatographic aspect of this study was enhanced by developing, validating, and applying a new unscheduled targeted UHPLC–MS/HRMS method for quantifying phenanthrenes in Juncus compressus herb. Targeted compounds were efficiently separated within 4 min upon utilizing the Accucore C30 column, and the unscheduled targeted analytical approach afforded five new isomers. Compounds 1 (effususol), 3 (dehydroeffusol), and 6 (7-hydroxy-1-methyl-2-methoxy-5-vinyl-9,10-dihydrophenanthrene) had their linearity limits determined within 10–5000 nM, and Compounds 2 (effusol), 4 (juncusol), 5 (effususin A), and 7 (compressin A) within 25–5000 nM. The coefficients of variation for precision ranged from 1.4 % to 15.2 %. The obtained matrix effects and accuracy values were also within acceptable ranges. Compounds 2 (effusol) and 3 (dehydroeffusol) were present in both methanolic and dichloromethanolic extracts of Plants 1 and 3 at the highest concentrations. Furthermore, the relationship between phenanthrene fingerprints, obtained through ANOVA statistical analysis of quantitative data, and the geographical location of herbs was also established.

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