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Pyrrolizidine Alkaloid Extraction and Analysis: Recent Updates

Sarah F. Al-Subaie, Abdullah M. Alowaifeer, Maged E. Mohamed

2022Foods26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pyrrolizidine alkaloids are natural secondary metabolites that are mainly produced in plants, bacteria, and fungi as a part of an organism's defense machinery. These compounds constitute the largest class of alkaloids and are produced in nearly 3% of flowering plants, most of which belong to the Asteraceae and Boraginaceae families. Chemically, pyrrolizidine alkaloids are esters of the amino alcohol necine (which consists of two fused five-membered rings including a nitrogen atom) and one or more units of necic acids. Pyrrolizidine alkaloids are toxic to humans and mammals; thus, the ability to detect these alkaloids in food and nutrients is a matter of food security. The latest advances in the extraction and analysis of this class of alkaloids are summarized in this review, with special emphasis on chromatographic-based analysis and determinations in food.

Topics & Concepts

PyrrolizidineBoraginaceaePyrrolizidine alkaloidSenecioAlkaloidBiologyAsteraceaeBotanyChemistryPlant Toxicity and Pharmacological PropertiesBotanical Research and ChemistryBotany, Ecology, and Taxonomy Studies