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Plant steroids

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from the sisal plant, various species of yucca. Philipines and Far East. isomer is sisalgenin ... seeds fenugreek, digitalis; leaves sisal. fermentation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plant steroids


1
Plant steroids
  • Anna Drew
  • with grateful acknowledgement for inspirational
    teaching received at
  • The School of Pharmacy, University of London

2
PLANT STEROIDS
  • Used for
  • replacement therapy (male female)
  • athletes (glucocorticoids)
  • skin conditions (hydrocortisone)
  • antifertility pill (oestrogens progesterones)
  • cancer (breast, testes, prostrate)
  • rheumatoid arthritis
  • Industrial demand may be met by plant sources or
    replaced by synthetic sources (expensive)

3
Structure
  • Hydrocarbons
  • (3 x 6C) (1 x 5C) tetracyclic triterpenoid
    type
  • ring junctions sometimes contain 3y methyl groups
  • normally side chains are at C17 (classified by
    this)
  • and functional groups at C3 (-O or -OH groups)
  • also at C11 (-O, OH gives oxygen function)

4
  • shape very important for biological activity
  • 3D determined by ring junction AB CD
  • AB-CD trans junction tend to have a flat, planar
    structure
  • important for hormonal activity
  • AB-CD cis junction are bent or buckled
  • allows them to fit on heart / smooth muscle and
    blood protein receptor sites
  • poisonous steroids some used in heart disease

Trans AB isomer
Cis AB isomer
5
Hormones plant sources
  • GROUP 1 sapogenins
  • occur as glycosides linked to a sugar
  • polar, soluble in alcohol and alcohol/water
    mixtures
  • occur in leaves -gt roots, rhizomes
  • GROUP 2 phytosterols
  • occur as ester linked to fatty acids
  • non-polar, soluble in hexane and petroleum
    spirits
  • occur in fruits and seeds

Occur in very large amounts in plants 10-25
by weight of plant material
6
Sapogenins
  • Sapogenin steroid nucleus
  • Saponin glycosides sugars
  • soap-like in nature
  • have been used to poison fish
  • accumulates in gills preventing O2 transfer
  • also frogs and toads
  • breathe through skin and hence are killed
  • not poisonous to mammals when eaten
  • not absorbed in intestine or stomach
  • may irritate bowel causing diarrhoea
  • few effects

7
  • if injected different
  • used in arrow poisons
  • cause haemolysis of red blood cells
  • breaks down red blood cell membrane
  • haemoglobinuria
  • some used as emulsifying agents
  • interested in the aglycone from a saponin
  • Saponins occur widely in plants
  • some economically important ones
  • Sources
  • 1 Dioscoreaceae (yam family)
  • Dioscorea genus dicots vines
  • sweet yam food source, very low steroid content
  • bitter yam Mexico, South America high content

8
  • 2 Liliaceae family
  • monocots Far East, Phillipines
  • Smilax or Yucca
  • very important since these provide sapogenins for
    manufacture of corticosteroids
  • 3 Amaryllidaceae
  • Agave sisalana sisal leaf, East Africa
  • 4 Solanaceae
  • can be used when supply of 1 and 2 short or
    too expensive
  • Solanum sp. contain steroidal saponins
  • as well as tropane alkaloids, atropine, etc
  • eg tomato, potato, woody nightshade
  • 5 Scrophulariaceae

9
  • Structure
  • based on steroid nucleus
  • flat trans- shape
  • right shape steroid to make hormones
  • occurs in a high concentration in plants
  • spiroketal side chain easily oxidised off (leaves
    unstable progesterone)
  • spiroketal side chain at C17

10
  • 2 isomers at C25 due to free rotation around it
  • no other isomers occur naturally
  • sugars attach at C3 to make sapogenins saponins
  • tend to have quite large molecular weight
  • eg 3-12 sugars polysaccharide side chain
  • common sugars xylose, galactose, rhamnose,
    glucose
  • combination of these sugars is usually a branched
    complex structure with high mol wt (ie not linear
    sugar chains)
  • lipid soluble steroid part water soluble sugar
    part
  • can orientate at wateroil or airwater interface

25 a iso-series
25 ß neo-series
11
Tigogenin
  • simplest sapogenin
  • has correct configuration from which to make
    steroids
  • occurs with the isomer neotigogenin
  • widely distributed in plants
  • yam, digitalis seeds, fenugreek seeds

Structure courtesy of www.chemblink.com
12
Diosgenin
  • can obtain prednenolone and progesterone from it
  • occurs with isomer yamogenin
  • occurs with some tigogenin in
  • fenugreek seeds and Mexican wild yam Dioscorea
    mexicana (and Japanese types)
  • hard to cultivate yams tubers underground may
    take years to grow large enough mostly taken
    from wild

Structure courtesy of www.chemblink.com
13
Hecogenin
  • from the sisal plant, various species of yucca
  • Philipines and Far East
  • isomer is sisalgenin
  • keto function at C12 important
  • corticosteroids have C11 O group giving activity
  • here C11 cannot be substituted C12 O enables
    halogenation at C11, then O removed at C12

Structure courtesy of www.chemblink.com
14
Commercial extraction
  • sources crushed
  • tubers yams seeds fenugreek, digitalis
    leaves sisal
  • fermentation
  • add excess water in fermenting vat and leave
    24-48 hour
  • saponins are covalently bonded into cellulose
    wall
  • own enzymes act on the polysaccharides in the
    cell wall to liberate them
  • filtration to collect plant powder
  • acid hydrolysis to split off saponins from
    sapogenins
  • equal HCL, MeOH, H2O

15
  • plant material dried in an oven
  • Soxhlet extraction with petroleum spirit
  • to distill over saponins
  • crystallise out in receiver
  • 10g/100g yam tuber high yield economic
  • recrystallise
  • using various solvents depending on desired
    compound
  • can be carried out on a large scale
  • cheap
  • no chromatographic process
  • materials cheap (H2O, HCl) petroleum spirit can
    be recovered
  • recrystallisation expensive but gives a high
    yield
  • pceutical companies will buy compounds in pure

16
Analysis of plant material
  • Qualitative
  • TLC on sulphuric acid to indicate spot position
    (chloroform solvent)
  • Quantitative
  • i) colorimetric assay sulphuric acid produces
    orange colour with steroids
  • ii) IR spectrometry 960cm-1
  • need a lot of plant material
  • iii) GLC micromethod draw up assay with
    suitable standard and do many samples in one day
  • quickest
  • qualitative and quantitative

17
Commerical use
  • production of steroids from diosgenin
  • before 1940 isolate from animal glands or urine
    expensive
  • 1940 Marker (USA) discovered a process
    essentially same process is still used
  • diosgenin extracted from Mexican yam
  • then spiroketone chain is opened up....

18
(No Transcript)
19
  • in theory process gave 100 yield
  • progesterone known to prevent ovulation tried
    to produce the pill (1950)
  • now have combination pills
  • 1950-1960 corticosteroids needed
  • antiinflammatory, anticancer, antirheumatoid
  • hydrocortisone and cortisone (which can be
    fluorinated) couldnt be produced from
    progesterone
  • 1 Fermentation
  • arose by accident when making antibiotics from
    Rhizopus
  • needed steroids in medium to grow
  • produced 11 keto progesterone
  • analysed fermentation to confirm pregnenolone /
    progesterone were producing 11 keto progesterone
    (from which hydrocortisone can be made)
  • biotechnology expensive

20
  • 2 Hecogenins
  • more economical
  • NB Diosgenin can be used to produce
    hydrocortisone but a fermentation stage is needed
    to introduce O- at C11 keto a position of
    pregnane nucleus

11 keto progesterone
Marker
tautomers
11 keto diosgenin
hydrocortisone
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