New Orleans, Louisiana
August 15, 2000
Here's a botanical twist: The more stress that is placed on
wild populations of St. John's wort, the more effective the plant might be
in warding off human depression.
Plant pathologists from Cornell
University and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) have found that hypericin (pronounced hi-PARIS-in), an
active ingredient in St. John's wort (Hypericum perforatum) -- a popular
herbal remedy for depression-- might be increased when the plant is
attacked by predators such as insects.
"It appears to increase its own chemical arsenal to ward off attack from
predators," says Donna M. Gibson, a USDA plant physiologist and Cornell
adjunct professor of plant pathology. Gibson and Tara M. Sirvent, a Cornell plant pathology graduate student from Casper, Wyo., have developed
a way to analyze the active chemical and other related compounds in the
plant.
Sirvent and Gibson will present a poster, "Are hypericins involved in plant
defense strategies of St. John's wort?" on Aug. 15 at the annual meeting of
the American Phytopathological Society at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in New
Orleans. The research was funded by the USDA's Agricultural Research
Service and the agency's Foreign Agricultural Service.
The researchers dissolved the chemical components of the plant in a solution and separated them using a technique called high-performance
liquid chromatography. This enabled the detection of individual compounds
in the plant. Sirvent and Gibson examined wild populations and found plants that had been exposed to stress -- particularly attacks from insects
-- had increased amounts of hypericin.
The level of hypericin determines the potency of St. John's wort sold over-the-counter, and as the plant's hypericin content increases so does
its worth. While much of St. John's wort sold in stores is "wild-crafted"
-- or picked from the wild -- commercially produced H. perforatum can fetch
as much as $2,000 to $3,000 an acre.
In the marketplace, however, not all St. John's wort products are the same.
Previous studies have shown that the amount of hypericin in the plant --
although usually labeled -- can vary from plant to plant, manufacturer to
manufacturer, bottle to bottle and pill to pill. Thus Sirvent and Gibson
are trying to determine how much of a role pre-harvest factors play in
chemical differences. They are examining factors such as light, moisture,
altitude and latitude; the plant parts; the plant's development stage; and
the harvesting and handling practices that might affect the quality of the
final product.
Additionally, variations in St. John's wort products sometimes occur because manufacturers mix species of H. perforatum.
The plant typically is gathered as a weedy species in the western
United States, but some is being grown commercially in the Pacific Northwest. It
also is found along roadways and in fields in the eastern United States.
Hypericin is concentrated in little black nodules -- nearly imperceptible
to the untrained eye -- that adorn the floral edges and the plant's leaves.
Curiously, St. John's wort is considered a noxious weed that can cause
hypericism, or blistering and dyeing of an animal's skin when it is eaten.
Its scraggly, almost frail-looking stem produces a brilliant yellow flower
cluster and it grows readily in rock quarries and in marginal areas such as
roadsides, where little else grows.
The web version of this release may be found at
http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/Aug00/APSWort.bpf.html
Cornell University News Service news release
N2927 |