Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Phytochemical and Bioactivity Studies on Hedera helix L. (Ivy) Flower Pollen and Ivy Bee Pollen
View through CrossRef
Bee pollen, known as a ‘life-giving dust’, is a product of honeybees using flower pollen grains and combining them with their saliva secretions. Thus, flower pollen could be an indicator of the bee pollen botanical source. Identification of bee pollen sources is a highly crucial process for the evaluation of its health benefits, as chemical composition is directly related to its pharmacological activity. In this study, the chemical profiles, contents of phenolic marker compounds and pharmacological activities of Hedera helix L. (ivy) bee pollen samples from Türkiye and Slovenia, as well as ivy flower pollen grains, were compared. High-performance thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC) analyses revealed that pollen samples, regardless of where they were collected, have similar chemical profiles due to the fact that they have the same botanical origins. Marker compounds afzelin, platanoside and quercetin-3-O-β-glucopyranosyl-(1→2)-β-galactopyranoside, common to both bee pollen and flower pollen, were isolated from bee pollen, and their structures were elucidated by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and mass spectrometry (MS). These three compounds, as well as chlorogenic acid and 3,5-dicaffeoylquinic acid (found in flower pollen), were quantified using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analyses. In vitro tests and effect-directed analyses were used to evaluate the xanthine oxidase inhibition and antioxidant activity of the marker compounds and extracts from flower pollen and bee pollen. This is the first report comparing chemical profiles and related bioactivities of the flower pollen and bee pollen of the same botanical origin, as well as the first report of the chemical profile and related bioactivities of ivy flower pollen.
Title: Phytochemical and Bioactivity Studies on Hedera helix L. (Ivy) Flower Pollen and Ivy Bee Pollen
Description:
Bee pollen, known as a ‘life-giving dust’, is a product of honeybees using flower pollen grains and combining them with their saliva secretions.
Thus, flower pollen could be an indicator of the bee pollen botanical source.
Identification of bee pollen sources is a highly crucial process for the evaluation of its health benefits, as chemical composition is directly related to its pharmacological activity.
In this study, the chemical profiles, contents of phenolic marker compounds and pharmacological activities of Hedera helix L.
(ivy) bee pollen samples from Türkiye and Slovenia, as well as ivy flower pollen grains, were compared.
High-performance thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC) analyses revealed that pollen samples, regardless of where they were collected, have similar chemical profiles due to the fact that they have the same botanical origins.
Marker compounds afzelin, platanoside and quercetin-3-O-β-glucopyranosyl-(1→2)-β-galactopyranoside, common to both bee pollen and flower pollen, were isolated from bee pollen, and their structures were elucidated by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and mass spectrometry (MS).
These three compounds, as well as chlorogenic acid and 3,5-dicaffeoylquinic acid (found in flower pollen), were quantified using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analyses.
In vitro tests and effect-directed analyses were used to evaluate the xanthine oxidase inhibition and antioxidant activity of the marker compounds and extracts from flower pollen and bee pollen.
This is the first report comparing chemical profiles and related bioactivities of the flower pollen and bee pollen of the same botanical origin, as well as the first report of the chemical profile and related bioactivities of ivy flower pollen.
Related Results
Comparative Analysis of Different DNA Extraction Methods and Preliminary Analysis of Genetic Diversity of Hedera nepalensis K. Koch. in Vietnam Based on GBSSI Marker
Comparative Analysis of Different DNA Extraction Methods and Preliminary Analysis of Genetic Diversity of Hedera nepalensis K. Koch. in Vietnam Based on GBSSI Marker
Though the ivy (Hedera nepalensis K. Koch.) has long been utilized in traditional medicine, its genome information is very limited. For plants, an effective method of DNA extractio...
Genotyping ITS and matK regions of Hedera nepalensis K. Koch in Vietnam
Genotyping ITS and matK regions of Hedera nepalensis K. Koch in Vietnam
This study develops procedures for cloning ITS and matK genes on six specimens in order to exploit and conserve the genetic resources of H. nepalensis and evaluate its genetic dive...
Stingless Bee-Collected Pollen (Bee Bread): Chemical and Microbiology Properties and Health Benefits
Stingless Bee-Collected Pollen (Bee Bread): Chemical and Microbiology Properties and Health Benefits
Stingless bee-collected pollen (bee bread) is a mixture of bee pollen, bee salivary enzymes, and regurgitated honey, fermented by indigenous microbes during storage in the cerumen ...
The Patient's Hay-fever diary: users feedback can improve pollen information
The Patient's Hay-fever diary: users feedback can improve pollen information
<p><em>Background: </em>Pollen information is crucial for effective preventive behaviour of pollen allergy sufferers. In addition to the r...
Flower diversity and bee reproduction in an arid ecosystem
Flower diversity and bee reproduction in an arid ecosystem
Background. Diverse flower communities are more stable in floral resource production along the flowering season, but the question about how the diversity and stability of resources...
Light acclimation in leaves of the juvenile and adult life phases of ivy (Hedera helix)
Light acclimation in leaves of the juvenile and adult life phases of ivy (Hedera helix)
Hoflacher, H. and Bauer, H. 1982. Light acclimation in leaves of the juvenile and adult life phases of ivy (Hedera helix). – Physiol. Plant. 56: 177–182.Light acclimation was inves...
Mediating Airborne Birch Modelling and Forecasting
Mediating Airborne Birch Modelling and Forecasting
Air pollution contributes to increased mortality and lower quality of life. It imposes additional distress on people suffering from respiratory diseases such as pollinosis. A quart...
THE FLORAL BIOLOGY OF CASSIA DIDYMOBOTRYA AND C. AURICULATA (CAESALPINIACEAE)
THE FLORAL BIOLOGY OF CASSIA DIDYMOBOTRYA AND C. AURICULATA (CAESALPINIACEAE)
The flowers of Cassia didymobotrya and C. auriculata have three types of fertile anthers that differ in orientation, size, shape, and pollen production. Flowers with right‐handed o...

