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Bioactive Constituents, Metabolites, and Functions
Absorption and Metabolic Behavior of Hesperidin (Rutinosylated Hesperetin) after Single Oral Administration to Sprague-Dawley Rat Alexia Nectoux, Chizumi Abe, Shu-Wei Huang, Naoto Ohno, Junji Tabata, Yuji Miyata, Kazunari Tanaka, Takashi Tanaka, Haruo Yamamura, and Toshiro Matsui J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b03594 • Publication Date (Web): 08 Aug 2019 Downloaded from pubs.acs.org on August 9, 2019
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Absorption and Metabolic Behavior of Hesperidin (Rutinosylated Hesperetin) after Single Oral Administration to Sprague-Dawley Rat
Alexia M. Nectoux,† Chizumi Abe,† Shu-Wei Huang,† Naoto Ohno,† Junji Tabata,† Yuji Miyata,‡ Kazunari Tanaka,§ Takashi Tanaka,∥ Haruo Yamamura,∬ and Toshiro Matsui*,†
†Department
of
Bioscience
and
Biotechnology,
Division
of
Bioresource
and
Bioenvironmental Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture, Graduated School of Kyushu University, 744 Motooka, Fukuoka 819-0395, Japan ‡Industrial
Technology Center of Nagasaki, 2-1303-8 Ikeda, Ohmura, Nagasaki, 856-0026,
Japan §Department
of Nutrition, University of Nagasaki, 1-1-1Manabino, Nagasaki 851-2195,
Japan ∥Graduate
School of Biochemical Science, Nagasaki University, 1-14 Bunkyo-machi,
Nagasaki 852-8521, Japan ∬Charle
Co., 3-1-2 Yasakadai, Kobe, Hyogo 654-0192, Japan
*Correspondence author *Tel : +81-928024752. Fax : +81-928024752. E-mail:
[email protected].
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1
ABSTRACT
2
We
3
(hesperetin-7-O-rutinoside) in the blood system of Sprague-Dawley rats by liquid
4
chromatography- and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometries
5
(LC-MS and MALDI-MS). After a single oral administration of hesperidin (10 mg/kg),
6
which was expected to be absorbed in its degraded hesperetin form, we detected intact
7
hesperidin in the portal vein blood (tmax, 2 h) for the first time. We successfully detected
8
glucuronized hesperidin in the circulating bloodstream, while intact hesperidin had
9
disappeared. Further MS analyses revealed that homoeriodictyol and eriodictyol conjugates
10
were detected in both portal and circulating blood systems. This indicated that hesperidin
11
and/or hesperetin are susceptible to methylation and demethylation during the intestinal
12
membrane transport process. Sulfated and glucuronized metabolites were also detected in
13
both blood systems. In conclusion, hesperidin can enter into the circulating bloodstream in
14
its conjugated forms, together with the conjugated forms of hesperetin, homoeriodictyol,
15
and/or eriodictyol.
investigated
the
absorption
and
metabolic
behavior
of
hesperidin
16 17
KEYWORDS: Hesperidin; Hesperetin; Absorption; Metabolism; LC-MS; MALDI-MS
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
18
INTRODUCTION
19
Hesperidin (hesperetin-7-O-rutinoside), a flavanone-type flavonoid abundant in citrus
20
fruits,1 was found to possess various physiological activities. Both in vitro and in vivo
21
studies highlighted anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer effects induced by hesperidin.1-4
22
Among others, hesperidin showed to inhibit tumors growth1,2 and to inhibit kinases and
23
phosphodiesterases, which have a role during inflammation response by cellular signal
24
transduction and activation process.1 Hesperidin intake was also reported to restore the
25
lipidemic levels on plasma, cardiac, and hepatic lipids in isoproterenol-induced rats,5 and to
26
show a dose dependent analgesic effect on mice.6 Its aglycone, hesperetin, also shows
27
physiological effects such as cellular antioxidant defense.3,7 Human clinical trials have
28
provided evidence that daily intake of hesperidin (500 mg/day) for 3 weeks had an
29
anti-inflammatory effect on impaired vessel functions by increasing nitrogen monoxide
30
production and by suppressing circulating inflammatory biomarker production.8,9
31
Hesperidin
32
hesperetin-7-O-glucuronide, were also found to induce hypotensive, vasodilatory, and
33
anti-inflammatory activities on spontaneously hypertensive rats10 while hesperetin was
34
found to improve glucose utilization in amyloid β-impaired neuronal cells.11
metabolites
resulting
from
hesperidin
intake,
including
35
Irrespective of the in vitro compatible physiological potential of both hesperidin
36
and hesperetin, several in vivo bioavailability studies have focused on the pharmacokinetics
37
of hesperetin; hesperidin was believed to be susceptive to microbial hydrolysis in the gut,
38
degrading it to its metabolites prior to intestinal absorption.12-14 The absence of hesperidin, 3
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39
in either human plasma or urine after oral intake of an orange beverage containing
40
hesperidin,13-15 supported the above-speculation that ingested hesperidin is degraded into
41
hesperetin to produce its related metabolites during the absorption process.
42
Thus far, hesperetin has been targeted for metabolism and pharmacokinetic
43
studies. It has been reported that in transport experiments using Caco-2 cell monolayers,
44
hesperetin
45
hesperetin-7-O-sulfate, and some of it is also pumped out through the breast cancer
46
resistance protein (BCRP) efflux route,16 whereas some hesperetin was transported intact
47
via the transcellular route.17 In in vivo hesperidin ingestion experiments, targeted hesperetin
48
metabolites
49
homoeriodictyol could be detected in the blood of rats,1,14 and hesperetin-7-O-glucuronide,
50
hesperetin-3’-O-glucuronide, hesperetin-sulfate, and hesperetin-sulfoglucuronide in the
51
blood of humans.18,19 Although most reports have focused on hesperetin metabolites, the
52
absorption of hesperidin (hesperetin-7-O-rutinoside) in its intact form or its metabolites in
53
the blood system is also important, since hesperidin itself can penetrate across Caco-2 cell
54
monolayers.17 Thus, this study aimed to clarify the in vivo absorption and metabolic
55
behavior of hesperidin, in the portal blood and circulating blood systems, by using
56
liquid-chromatography
57
matrix-assisted
58
investigation in both blood systems could help further our understanding of the role that
59
intestine and liver organs play in hesperidin metabolism after oral ingestion.
is
mostly
such
as
laser
metabolized
into
hesperetin-7-O-glucuronide
hesperetin-7-O-glucuronide,
time-of-flight desorption
mass
ionization
hesperetin-3’-O-glucuronide,
spectrometry (MALDI)-MS
4
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(LC-TOF-MS) techniques,
since
and
and
and the
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
62
Chemicals. Hesperidin was purchased from Funakoshi Co. (Tokyo, Japan).
63
Hesperetin and eriodictyol were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA).
64
Homoeriodictyol was purchased from ChromaDex Inc. (Irvine, CA, USA). Taxifolin was
65
purchased from TCI Fine Chemicals (Tokyo, Japan). Sulfatase type H-1 (EC 3.1.6.1, from
66
Helix pomatia), β-glucuronidase type B-1 (EC 3.2.1.31, from bovine liver), and
67
β-glucuronidase type H-1 (EC 3.2.1.31, from Helix pomatia) were purchased from
68
Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA). Other chemicals were of analytical grade and used
69
without further purification.
70
Animal Experiments. Seven week-old male Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats supplied
71
by Charles River Japan Co. (Kanagawa, Japan) were used for single oral administration
72
experiments of hesperidin. Rats were acclimated to laboratory conditions for 1 week prior
73
to the experiment; housed in an air-conditioned room (21 ± 1 °C, 55.5 ± 5% humidity)
74
under a 12 h dark/light cycle, with free access to distilled water, and standard MF diet
75
(Oriental Yeast Co., Tokyo, Japan). Rats fasted for 16 h prior to the single oral
76
administration of hesperidin. All animal experiments were carried out in accordance with
77
the guidelines set by the Guidance for Animal Experiments in the Faculty of Agriculture
78
and in the Graduate Course of Kyushu University in accordance with the Law (No. 105,
79
1973) and Notification (No. 6, 1980, of the Prime Minister’s Office) of the Japanese
80
Government. All experimental protocols were reviewed and approved by the Animal Care 5
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and Use Committee of Kyushu University (permit number: A30-015-4).
82
Administration experiments. On the day of the experiment, a solution containing
83
10 mg/kg or 100 mg/kg hesperidin, dissolved in saline solution containing 0.5%
84
carboxymethyl cellulose, was orally administered to SD rats. At 0, 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, and 24 h
85
after administration, blood was obtained in EDTA-2Na blood collection tubes, from either
86
the portal vein or the abdominal aorta (n = 3 for at every scheduled time). Blood samples
87
were then centrifuged at 3,500 × g for 15 min at 4 °C to obtain plasma. Samples were
88
immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at -80 °C.
89
Stability experiments of hesperidin against deconjugation enzymes. Sulfatase
90
type H-1 from Helix pomatia, β-glucuronidase type B-1 from bovine liver, and
91
β-glucuronidase type H-1 from Helix pomatia were used as deconjugation enzymes. Plasma
92
spiked
93
(hesperetin-7-O-rutinoside) itself was stable against the above-mentioned deconjugation
94
enzymes. Hesperidin (5 μM) was added to blank rat plasma (200 μL) and mixed with the
95
same volume of 100 mM sodium acetate buffer (pH 4.0). The mixture was then incubated
96
with sulfatase type H-1 (25 units), β-glucuronidase type H-1 (50 units), or β-glucuronidase
97
type B-1 (50 units) for 12 h at 37 °C. After the addition of 400 μL ethanol to the reaction
98
solution, the solution was centrifuged at 14,000 × g for 10 min at 25 °C to obtain the
99
supernatant. The supernatant was then applied to an Amicon Ultra-0.5 centrifugal filter
100
(molecular cut < 3,000 Da, Merck Millipore Ltd., Darmstadt, Germany). The filtrate,
101
obtained by centrifugation at 14,000 × g for 30 min at 25 °C, was evaporated to dryness.
with
hesperidin
was
examined
to
determine
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hesperidin
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The dried filtrate was dissolved in 50 μL of 50% ethanol, filtrated using a 0.45 μm
103
Millex-LH Syringe Driven Filter Unit (Millex, Tokyo, Japan), and then subjected to
104
LC-TOF-MS analysis.
105
Quantification of hesperidin and hesperetin in plasma by LC-TOF-MS. For
106
the determination of hesperidin and hesperetin in rat plasma, 600 μL of plasma was mixed
107
with the same volume of 100 mM sodium acetate buffer (pH 4.0), following the addition of
108
10 μL of 5.0 μM taxifolin as the internal standard (IS). The solution without enzymatic
109
treatment was used for the determination of intact hesperidin/hesperetin. The solution with
110
β-glucuronidase type B-1 (50 units) alone or β-glucuronidase type B-1 (50 units)/sulfatase
111
type H-1 (25 units) treatment, held for 12 h at 37 °C, was used for the determination of
112
glucuronized hesperidin/hesperetin or the conjugated forms estimated as hesperetin,
113
respectively. This solution was then deproteinated with 800 μL of ethanol, followed by
114
centrifugation at 14,000 × g for 10 min at 25 °C. The obtained supernatant was applied to
115
Millipore Amicon Ultra-0.5 centrifugal filter and centrifuged at 14,000 × g for 30 min at
116
25 °C. The filtrate was then evaporated to dryness, and dissolved in 50 μL of 50% ethanol.
117
Quantification analyses by LC-TOF-MS were performed using IS-aided (1.0 nmol/mL)
118
calibration curves of y = 0.020x + 0.0291 (r = 0.993; limit of detection, 3 pmol/mL) for
119
heperidin, y = 0.039x + 0.3681 (r = 0.997, limit of detection, 7 pmol/mL) for hesperetin, y =
120
0.0237x – 0.0229 (r = 0.996; limit of detection, 0.8 pmol/mL) for homoeriodictyol, and y =
121
0.100x – 0.0219 (r = 0.996; limit of detection, 3 pmol/mL) for eriodictyol, where y is the
122
peak area ratio (observed peak area against that of IS) and x is the concentration 7
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(nmol/mL).
124
LC-TOF-MS analysis. LC separation was performed with an Agilent 1200 series
125
HPLC (Agilent Technologies, Waldbronn, Germany) on a Cosmosil 5C18-MS-II column
126
(2.0 × 150 mm, Nacalai Tesque Inc., Kyoto, Japan) at 40 °C. The mobile phase consisted of
127
0.1% formic acid (solvent A) and methanol with 0.1% formic acid (solvent B) using a 20
128
min linear gradient from 0 to 100% of solvent B at a flow rate of 0.2 mL/min. TOF-MS
129
analysis was carried out using a micrOTOF-II mass spectrometer (Bruker Daltonics,
130
Bremen, Germany) in electrospray ionization (ESI)-negative mode. Mass spectral data was
131
collected within the range of 100–1,000 m/z. Hesperidin, hesperetin, and taxifolin (IS) were
132
detected at [M-H]‾ of 609.1814 m/z, 301.0707 m/z, and 303.0499 m/z, respectively, with a
133
width of 0.05 m/z. The TOF-MS conditions were as follows: nebulizer pressure, 1.6 bar;
134
dry gas, nitrogen; dry gas flow, 8.0 L/min; drying temperature, 200 °C; capillary voltage,
135
3800 V. The calibration solution of 10 mM sodium formate in 50% acetonitrile was
136
injected at the beginning of the run. The data was analyzed and acquired by Bruker Data
137
Analysis 4.0 software.
138
MALDI-MS analysis. Hesperidin and hesperetin metabolites in plasma without
139
deconjugation treatment were analyzed using MALDI-MS technique. The afore-mentioned
140
filtrate sample of rat plasma without any enzyme was used for the analysis. MALDI-MS
141
measurements were performed using an Autoflex III MS equipped with SmartBeam III
142
(Bruker
143
1,5-diaminonaphthalene (1,5-DAN), was dissolved in 70% acetonitrile at a concentration of
Daltonics)
in
negative
ion
linear
mode.
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The
matrix
reagent,
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10 mg/mL. MS data was acquired in the range of 100 – 1,000 m/z by averaging signals
145
from 2,500 laser pulses. The MS parameters were as follows: ion source 1, 20.00 kV; ion
146
source 2, 18.80 kV; lens voltage, 7.50 kV; gain factor, 5.0; laser frequency, 200 Hz; laser
147
power, 80%.
148
Data Analysis. Results are expressed as the mean ± standard error of the mean
149
(SEM). Pharmacokinetic analysis of concentration-time data was performed using
150
GraphPad Prism software (GraphPad, La Jolla, CA, USA). The maximum plasma
151
concentration (Cmax), time of maximum concentration (tmax), and area under the curve up to
152
24 h (AUC0-24) were obtained from the plasma concentration-time plots.
153 154
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
155
Stability of hesperidin against deconjugation enzymes. In order to investigate
156
the intact absorption of intact hesperidin in rat blood, MS analysis was used to examine the
157
stability of hesperidin against deconjugation enzymes: sulfatase type H-1, β-glucuronidase
158
type H-1, or β-glucuronidase type B-1. Deconjugation treatment of hesperidin-spiked
159
plasma with sulfatase type H-1 or β-glucuronidase type H-1 caused complete degradation
160
of hesperidin to its aglycone form (hesperetin) (Supplemental Figure S1). This suggests that
161
both enzymes have alternative catalytic abilities to cleave the sugar moiety considering
162
conjugated hesperidin could not be detected when the two type H-1 enzymes were used for
163
deconjugation treatment. In contrast, β-glucuronidase type B-1 treatment of the
164
hesperidin-spiked plasma did not cause any production of hesperetin (Supplemental Figure 9
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S1), indicating that β-glucuronidase type B-1 can be used for glucuronized conjugation
166
analysis of hesperidin in plasma owing to its characteristic catalytic reaction. Thus in this
167
study, sulfatase type H-1/β-glucuronidase type B-1 treatments of plasma were used to
168
evaluate the total amount of hesperidin absorption as its deconjugated hesperetin form,
169
while β-glucuronidase type B-1 was used to evaluate the glucuronized conjugates.
170
Absorption of hesperidin into portal and circulating blood systems after the
171
oral administration to SD rats. Oral administration of hesperidin at a dose of 10 mg/kg to
172
SD rats revealed for the first time that ingested hesperidin can rapidly enter into the portal
173
blood in its intact form (< 1 h after the administration), while no intact hesperidin was
174
detected in the circulating blood within the present LC-TOF-MS detection limits (>3
175
pmol/mL) (Figure 1A). After hesperidin ingestion, intact hesperetin was detected in the
176
portal blood more slowly than hesperidin (4 h after the administration), but was not
177
detected in the circulating blood either (Figure 1B). This is the first in vivo finding that
178
hesperidin and hesperetin can enter into the portal vein as their intact forms. These results,
179
which concur with previous in vitro findings,17 suggest that hesperidin possibly penetrates
180
through the intestinal membrane, some of which is degraded into hesperetin, and can then
181
be absorbed intact into the portal blood. The delay between hesperidin and hesperetin
182
detection times (1 h and 4 h, respectively) can be explained by the time needed for
183
hesperidin to be hydrolyzed by microbial enzymes prior to intestinal absorption and further
184
metabolism.13,14,18 No MS detection of either intact form in the circulating blood also
185
suggests that intact hesperidin and hesperetin have difficulty penetrating cellular 10
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membranes, which agrees with previous reports in which no intact hesperidin and
187
hesperetin were detected in blood after hesperidin ingestion.13,14,20,21
188
Figure 1C shows the absorption behavior of hesperidin conjugates, estimated as
189
hesperetin
in
both
portal
and
circulating
blood
treated
with
sulfatase
type
190
H-1/β-glucuronidase type B-1. The conjugated forms of hesperidin and/or hesperetin were
191
gradually detected in both blood systems, until 180 ± 110 pmol/mL-portal plasma and 60 ±
192
27 pmol/mL-circulating plasma 24 h after a single oral administration of hesperidin (10
193
mg/kg). This indicates that the conjugates of hesperidin and/or hesperetin were more stable
194
and predominant in blood systems, compared to intact hesperidin and hesperetin (Figures
195
1A and 1B).
196
Conjugated metabolites were detectable in both blood systems 4 h after
197
administration, with a 16 h tmax, while intact hesperidin and hesperetin reached their
198
maximum concentrations at 2 h and 8 h, respectively. In comparison, it has been reported
199
that hesperetin conjugates were found in rat circulating plasma 6 h after a 610 mg/kg (1
200
mmol/kg) hesperidin oral administration, with a 12 h tmax.13 Although the conjugate
201
concentration in the portal blood was 2×-higher than in the circulating blood, both
202
surprisingly display the same tmax (16 h). One explanation could due be the enterohepatic
203
circulation of hesperidin metabolites, which are excreted into the bile in the proximal
204
intestine, and then reabsorbed and metabolized in the intestinal tract.22 However, further
205
studies on such hesperidin metabolism after oral intake are needed using isotope-labeled
206
hesperidin in the rat bloodstream, for example. 11
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Metabolic behavior of hesperidin into portal and circulating blood systems
208
after oral administration to SD rats. By considering the characteristic catalysis of
209
β-glucuronidase type B-1 (Supplemental Figure S1), our further metabolic experiments
210
with β-glucuronidase type B-1 evaluated the presence of glucuronized hesperidin and
211
glucuronized hesperetin in the circulating blood. As shown in Figure 2, LC-TOF-MS
212
chromatograms of β-glucuronidase type B-1-treated circulating plasma (16 h after
213
administration) depict the detection of hesperidin (retention time, RT: 22.4 min; [M-H]‾=
214
609.1814 m/z) and hesperetin (RT: 25.1 min; [M-H]‾= 301.0707 m/z), clearly indicating
215
that hesperidin may be absorbed into the circulating bloodstream in its glucuronized form
216
without degradation to its aglycone, along with the absorption of glucuronized hesperetin.
217
Table 1 summarizes the pharmacokinetics of hesperidin, hesperetin, and their
218
conjugates (estimated as hesperetin) in the portal and circulating blood systems, together
219
with glucuronized hesperidin and glucuronized hesperetin in the circulating blood. In the
220
portal blood, hesperidin and hesperetin can be absorbed in their intact forms, but their
221
absorption (area under the curve, AUC0-24) was less than one tenth of the absorption of their
222
conjugates (AUC0-24: 13.5 ± 1.6 nmol·h/mL). Although intact hesperidin and hesperetin
223
were undetectable in the circulating blood, the AUC0-24 of their glucuronized forms was
224
0.13 and 0.93 nmol·h/mL, respectively, contributing to 15% of total hesperidin absorption
225
in the circulating blood. The total absorption of hesperidin (AUC0-24) as hesperetin in the
226
circulating blood was estimated to be half of that in the portal blood. This suggests that
227
other metabolic reactions, except for glucuronidation and sulfonation reactions of 12
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hesperidin and/or hesperetin (e.g., demethylation,21 methylation,23 sulfoglucuronidation14)
229
may occur before hesperidin enters the circulating bloodstream.
230
Identification of hesperidin metabolites by LC-TOF-MS and MALDI-MS
231
analyses. Further investigation of hesperidin metabolites was performed by LC-TOF-MS
232
and MALDI-MS methods. Although solely hesperidin, hesperetin and their conjugates were
233
detected in our first assay, other studies also highlighted the presence of
234
homoeriodictyol-glucuronide in rat plasma.13,14 Both analytical methods were applied to
235
blood samples taken 16 h after oral administration (tmax of hesperidin conjugates, see Figure
236
1C) of high dose hesperidin (100 mg/kg) from the portal vein and abdominal aorta, for
237
overall identification of hesperidin/hesperetin metabolites in blood. Figure 3 shows the
238
representative LC-TOF-MS chromatograms of standards and plasma samples with and
239
without β-glucuronidase type B-1 treatment. In extracted ion chromatography (EIC)-aided
240
MS detection of hesperetin, no peak corresponded to the ion m/z ([M-H]‾= 301.0707 m/z)
241
in either plasma samples without β-glucuronidase type B-1 treatment; intact hesperetin
242
disappeared due to degradation at 16 h after the administration. In contrast, for
243
β-glucuronidase type B-1-treated plasma samples two distinct peaks with the same m/z
244
were detected by LC-TOF-MS (Figure 3A). Compared to the RT of target hesperetin, the
245
latter peaks (RT: 25.1 min) were identified as hesperetin, indicating that the glucuronized
246
target was present in the portal vein and circulating blood systems, which agrees with the
247
results shown in Figure 2. The RT of the former peak matched that of homoeriodictyol (RT:
248
25.0 min), a transmethylated isomer of hesperetin.14 Figure 3A also shows the presence in 13
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249
the portal and circulating blood systems of the possible metabolite eriodictyol ([M-H]‾=
250
287.0561 m/z), a demethylated hesperetin. The presence of homoeriodictyol and eriodictyol
251
conjugates could be due to a transformation of hesperetin to eriodictyol by phase I
252
metabolic demethylation enzymes,23,24 followed by a remethylation into hesperetin or
253
homoeriodictyol by catechol-O-methyltransferase.25 These results suggest that hesperetin
254
from hesperidin was glucuronized during the intestinal absorption process, along with the
255
metabolic conversion to glucuronized eriodictyol/homoeriodictyol (Figure 3B). The plasma
256
level of glucuronized hesperetin conjugate was calculated to be 4×- and 2.5×-higher than
257
the plasma levels of glucuronized eriodictyol and homoeriodictyol conjugates, respectively.
258
Furthermore, hesperidin ([M-H]‾= 609.1814 m/z), demethylated hesperidin ([M-H]‾=
259
595.1657 m/z), and dimethylated hesperidin ([M-H]‾= 623.1970 m/z) were undetectable in
260
the circulating blood treated with β-glucuronidase type B-1 (Supplemental Figure S2).
261
Although the products of demethylation/transmethylation of hesperidin were not excluded,
262
as hesperetin demethylation/transmethylation is known to occur (Figure 3), such hesperidin
263
conjugates would likely not be metabolized, or would be present in lesser amounts in the
264
circulating blood, which could be below the limits of detection for the present LC-TOF-MS
265
conditions.
266
Further identification of metabolites from administered hesperidin (100 mg/kg
267
dose) was conducted using the MALDI-MS technique. Plasma samples of portal and
268
circulating blood without deconjugation treatment were subjected to this assay, since
269
MALDI-MS can detect ionizable targets nonspecifically. As shown in Figure 4, two 14
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distinct MS signals corresponding to 381.0 m/z and 477.1 m/z were observed in both blood
271
systems that were not observed in the control plasma. Both mass units were in agreement
272
with the m/z values ([M-H]‾) of sulfated and glucuronized hesperetin/homoeriodictyol,
273
respectively. The presence of sulfate conjugates implies a sulfonation reaction, which
274
would occur in the intestinal and liver cells.26 Neither intact nor conjugated hesperidin and
275
eriodictyol were detected by MALDI-MS in the range of 100–1,000 m/z, probably due to
276
their low plasma levels and/or low ionization efficiency against the 1,5-DAN matrix
277
reagent.27,28 Mono-sulfated and mono-glucuronized hesperetin/homoeriodictyol conjugates
278
were prominent metabolites in the circulating bloodstream when hesperidin was
279
administered to SD rats, as has been found in previous studies.14,15,18,19 The
280
above-mentioned metabolite profiles obtained in this study after a hesperidin oral intake
281
was in line with previous findings, displaying that the main forms of hesperidin metabolites
282
were glucuronized or sulfated hesperetin/homoeriodictyol conjugates.14 In addition to the
283
reported profiles, in this study we demonstrated for the first time that hesperidin can cross
284
the intestinal membrane as its intact form and enter into the portal blood system (Figure 1),
285
followed by the glucuronidation (glucuronized hesperidin) before entering into the
286
circulating blood system (Figure 2). Considering the differences between the metabolites
287
identified in the portal and circulating plasma, and the scientific background on hesperidin
288
absorption and metabolism, Figure 5 proposes a hesperidin first-pass metabolism scheme in
289
rat intestine and liver after oral ingestion.
290
LC-TOF-MS sensitivity limited the detection of homoeriodictyol and eriodictyol 15
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to a 100 mg/kg hesperidin oral administration. Unfortunately, this dose is not realistic for a
292
daily hesperidin intake because one daily glass of orange juice, the main source of
293
hesperidin in the human diet,2,29 could only provide 0.81 mg/kg of hesperidin per day.15,30
294
There is also no guarantee that the metabolic pathway would be similar for both 10 mg/kg
295
and 100 mg/kg of hesperidin, just as (–)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate, a dietary polyphenol, is
296
subject to different metabolic pathways depending on its concentration.31
297
Therefore, further work is needed to gather insight into the quantitative evaluation
298
of hesperidin metabolites in blood, and to clarify their physiological effects. Considering
299
that their distribution in organs has not been, to our knowledge, elucidated yet in the
300
literature, our interest is also to clarify which organs are targeted for the accumulation of
301
absorbed hesperidin metabolites.
302 303
ABBREVIATIONS USED
304
1,5-DAN, 1,5-diaminonaphtalene; AUC, area under the curve; AUC0-24, AUC for
305
24 h; BCRP, breast cancer resistance protein; EIC, extracted-ion-chromatography; ESI,
306
electrospray ionization; GlcA, glucuronic acid; HPLC, high performance liquid
307
chromatography;
308
chromatography-time-of-flight-mass
309
desorption ionization; NO, nitrogen monoxide; RT, retention time; SD, Sprague-Dawley;
310
SULTs, sulfotransferases; UGT, uridine 5’-diphospho-glucuronosyltransferases.
IS,
internal
standard;
spectrometry;
LC-TOF-MS,
MALDI,
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
312
The authors thank Mrs K. Miyazaki at Kyushu University for her technical assistance.
313 314
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
315
Supporting Information
316
LC-TOF-MS chromatograms of hesperidin and hesperetin, with and without deconjugation
317
enzyme treatments (Figure S1); EIC chromatograms corresponding to [M-H]‾ of
318
demethylated hesperidin and dimethylated hesperidin in portal and circulating blood, with
319
or without β-glucuronidase type B-1 treatment (Figure S2)
320 321
AUTHOR INFOMRATION
322
Correspondence author
323
*Tel : +81-928024752. Fax : +81-928024752. E-mail:
[email protected].
324
ORCID
325
Toshiro Matsui: 0000-0002-9137-8417
326
Author Contributions
327
TM devised the study; AN, CA, SH, NO, JT performed the experiments. All authors
328
interpreted and analyzed data. TM designed the study, interpreted and analyzed data. AN
329
and TM wrote the paper. All authors have read and approved the final manuscript to be
330
published.
331
Notes 17
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The authors declare no competing financial interest.
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FIGURE CAPTIONS
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Figure 1. Time-course of plasma concentration of hesperidin (A), hesperetin (B), and
439
hesperidin conjugates (as hesperetin after enzymatic treatment) (C) after single oral
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administration of hesperidin (10 mg/kg) to SD rats. Each LC-TOF-MS chromatogram
441
shows the elution of target in plasma at tmax in portal and circulating blood (hesperidin,
442
[M-H]‾= 609.1814 m/z; hesperetin, [M-H]‾= 301.0707 m/z). Inserted chromatograms show
443
the peak of IS (taxifolin, [M-H]‾= 303.0499 m/z). Data are expressed as the mean ± SEM (n
444
= 3). S/N means signal to noise ratio.
445 446
Figure 2. LC-TOF-MS chromatograms of hesperidin and hesperetin in circulating
447
plasma of SD rats at 16 h after 10 mg/kg hesperidin administration. MS
448
chromatograms show the elution of each target in plasma with or without
449
β-glucuronidase type B-1 treatment. Standard concentration was 10 μM. ND indicates
450
no detection.
451 452
Figure 3. LC-TOF-MS chromatograms of (A) hesperetin and homoeriodictyol
453
([M-H]‾= 301.0707) and (B) eriodictyol ([M-H]‾= 287.0561) in portal and circulating
454
plasma at 16 h after administration of hesperidin (100 mg/kg). ND indicates no
455
detection. Metabolic conversion between hesperetin, eriodictyol, and homoeriodictyol
456
is depicted in (C), with the concentration of each deconjugated form in sulfatase type
457
H-1 and β-glucuronidase type B-1-treated circulating blood at 16 h after 24
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administration of hesperidin (100 mg/kg).
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Figure
4.
MALDI-MS
spectra
corresponding
to
[M-H]‾
of
461
hesperetin/homoeriodictyol sulfate (381.0 m/z) and hesperetin/homoeriodictyol
462
glucuronide (477.1 m/z) in portal and circulating plasma at 16 h after oral
463
administration of hesperidin (100 mg/kg). Control indicates SD rat plasma with no
464
hesperidin administration. ND indicates no detection.
465 466
Figure 5.
Absorption behavior of hesperidin proposed by the present LC-TOF-MS
467
and MALDI-MS analyses. Abbreviations: Homoe (homoeriodyctyol), GlcA
468
(glucuronic acid), Sul (sulfate), UGT (UDP-glucuronosyltransferases), and SULT
469
(sulfotransferases).
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