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Microwave-Assisted Water Extraction of Aspen ( Populus tremula ) and Pine ( Pinus sylvestris L.) Barks as a Tool for Their Valorization.

Matiss PalsLiga LauberteJevgenija PonomarenkoMaris LaubertsAlexander Arshanitsa
Published in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The barks of aspen ( Populus tremula ) and pine ( Pinus sylvestris) are byproducts of wood processing, characterized by their low economic value. In the present study, microwave-assisted one-cycle water extraction was explored as a tool for the valorization of this biomass as a source of biologically active compounds. The microwave extractor of the original construction equipped with a pressurized extraction chamber and a condenser section was used. The microwave-assisted extraction (MAE), specially including dynamic dielectric heating up to 70 °C followed by 30 min of isothermal heating, promoted the isolation of salicin from aspen bark, allowing for the obtention of a two-times-higher free salicin concentration in water extracts (-14% vs. 7%) reached by multi-cycle accelerated solvent extraction (ASE), which is an advanced technique used as a reference. The MAE of pine bark with dynamic heating up to 90-130 °C, avoiding the isothermal heating step, allowed for the obtention of a 1.7-times-higher concentration of proantocyanidin dimers-tetramers, a 1.3-times-higher concentration of catechin and a 1.2-times-higher concentration of quinic acid in water extracts in comparison to a more time- and solvent-consuming ASE performed at the same temperature. The biological activity of the obtained extracts was characterized in terms of their ability to inhibit xahntine oxidase enzyme, which is a validated target for the therapeutic treatment of hyperuricemia.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • drinking water
  • metabolic syndrome
  • uric acid
  • wastewater treatment
  • replacement therapy