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Dive into the research topics where Sandra Combrinck is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandra Combrinck.


Phytochemistry | 2015

Gingerols and shogaols: Important nutraceutical principles from ginger

Ruchi Badoni Semwal; Deepak Kumar Semwal; Sandra Combrinck; Alvaro Viljoen

Gingerols are the major pungent compounds present in the rhizomes of ginger (Zingiber officinale Roscoe) and are renowned for their contribution to human health and nutrition. Medicinal properties of ginger, including the alleviation of nausea, arthritis and pain, have been associated with the gingerols. Gingerol analogues are thermally labile and easily undergo dehydration reactions to form the corresponding shogaols, which impart the characteristic pungent taste to dried ginger. Both gingerols and shogaols exhibit a host of biological activities, ranging from anticancer, anti-oxidant, antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory and anti-allergic to various central nervous system activities. Shogaols are important biomarkers used for the quality control of many ginger-containing products, due to their diverse biological activities. In this review, a large body of available knowledge on the biosynthesis, chemical synthesis and pharmacological activities, as well as on the structure-activity relationships of various gingerols and shogaols, have been collated, coherently summarised and discussed. The manuscript highlights convincing evidence indicating that these phenolic compounds could serve as important lead molecules for the development of therapeutic agents to treat various life-threatening human diseases, particularly cancer. Inclusion of ginger or ginger extracts in nutraceutical formulations could provide valuable protection against diabetes, cardiac and hepatic disorders.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2014

Lawsonia inermis L. (henna): Ethnobotanical, phytochemical and pharmacological aspects

Ruchi Badoni Semwal; Deepak Kumar Semwal; Sandra Combrinck; Catherine Cartwright-Jones; Alvaro Viljoen

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE The use of Lawsonia inermis L. (henna) for medicinal and cosmetic purposes is inextricably linked to ancient and modern cultures of North Africa and Asia. Literature and artwork indicates that Lawsonia inermis played an important holistic role in the daily lives of some ancient cultures, providing psychological and medicinal benefits, as well as being used for personal adornment. Although henna was historically applied to the hands and feet to protect against fungal pathogens and to hair to combat lice and dandruff, other traditional uses include the treatment of liver and digestive disorders, reduction of tissue loss in leprosy, diabetic foot disorders and ulcers. PHYTOCHEMISTRY Almost 70 phenolic compounds have been isolated from various parts of the plant. Naphthaquinones, which include the dyeing principle lawsone, have been linked to many of the pharmacological activities. The terpene, β-ionone is largely responsible for the pungent odour of the essential oil isolated from the flowers. In addition to other volatile terpenes, some non-volatile terpenoids, a single sterol, two alkaloids and two dioxin derivatives have also been isolated from the plant. BIOACTIVITY Henna is a pharmacologically important plant with significant in vitro and in vivo biological activities. Although a myriad of pharmacological activities have been documented, the antioxidant and antimicrobial activities are the most thoroughly investigated. Some incidents of adverse reactions following application to the skin have been reported, but these are mainly confined to cases involving individuals with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency and reactions to adulterants added to henna products. CONCLUSIONS Adulteration of henna is very common and may have resulted in unwarranted scientific findings. Phytochemical profiling studies of the plant, which are crucial for the establishment of proper quality control protocols, are lacking and hamper the development of medicinal products. Although many in vitro studies have been conducted to evaluate the pharmacological activities and many in vivo studies have focussed on the toxicity of extracts, more in vivo studies to validate pharmacological activities are needed. The roles of specific compounds and their synergies have not been comprehensively investigated.


Phytochemical Analysis | 2013

A Novel Approach in Herbal Quality Control Using Hyperspectral Imaging: Discriminating Between Sceletium tortuosum and Sceletium crassicaule

Emmanuel Amukohe Shikanga; Alvaro Viljoen; Ilze Vermaak; Sandra Combrinck

INTRODUCTION Sceletium tortuosum is the most sought after species of the genus Sceletium and is commonly included in commercial products for the treatment of psychiatric conditions and neurodegenerative diseases. However, this species exhibits several morphological and phytochemical similarities to S. crassicaule. OBJECTIVES The aim of this investigation was to use ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) and hyperspectral imaging, in combination with chemometrics, to distinguish between S. tortuosum and S. crassicaule, and to accurately predict the identity of specimens of both species. METHODS Chromatographic profiles of S. tortuosum and S. crassicaule specimens were obtained using UPLC with photodiode array detection. A SisuChema near infrared hyperspectral imaging camera was used for acquiring images of the specimens and the data was processed using chemometric computations. RESULTS Chromatographic data for the specimens revealed that both species produce the psychoactive alkaloids that are used as quality control biomarkers. Principal component analysis of the hyperspectral image of reference specimens for the two species yielded two distinct clusters, the one representing S. tortuosum and the other representing S. crassicaule. A partial least squares discriminant analysis model correctly predicted the identity of an external dataset consisting of S. tortuosum or S. crassicaule samples with high accuracy (>94%). CONCLUSIONS A combination of hyperspectral imaging and chemometrics offers several advantages over conventional chromatographic profiling when used to distinguish S. tortuosum from S. crassicaule. In addition, the constructed chemometric model can reliably predict the identity of samples of both species from an external dataset.


Biomedical Chromatography | 2016

A (-)-norephedrine-based molecularly imprinted polymer for the solid-phase extraction of psychoactive phenylpropylamino alkaloids from Khat (Catha edulis Vahl. Endl.) chewing leaves.

Minaleshewa Atlabachew; Nelson Torto; Bhagwan Singh Chandravanshi; Mesfin Redi-Abshiro; Samuel Chigome; Kediemetse Mothibedi; Sandra Combrinck

A molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP) was prepared using (-)-norephedrine as the template, methacrylic acid as the functional monomer, ethylene glycol dimethacrylate as the cross-linker and chloroform as the porogen. The MIP was used as a selective sorbent in the molecularly imprinted solid-phase extraction (MIP-SPE) of the psychoactive phenylpropylamino alkaloids, norephedrine and its analogs, cathinone and cathine, from Khat (Catha edulis Vahl. Endl.) leaf extracts prior to HPLC-DAD analysis. The MIP was able to selectively extract the alkaloids from the aqueous extracts of Khat. Loading, washing and elution of the alkaloids bound to the MIP were evaluated under different conditions. The clean baseline of the Khat extract obtained after MIP-SPE confirmed that a selective and efficient sample clean-up was achieved. Good recoveries (90.0-107%) and precision (RSDs 2.3-3.2%) were obtained in the validation of the MIP-SPE-HPLC procedure. The content of the three alkaloids in Khat samples determined after treatment with MIP-SPE and a commercial Isolute C18 (EC) SPE cartridge were in good agreement. These findings indicate that MIP-SPE is a reliable method that can be used for sample pre-treatment for the determination of Khat alkaloids in plant extracts or similar matrices and could be applicable in pharmaceutical, forensic and biomedical laboratories. Copyright


Planta Medica | 2012

In vitro permeation of Mesembrine alkaloids from Sceletium tortuosum across porcine buccal, sublingual, and intestinal mucosa

Emmanuel Amukohe Shikanga; Josias H. Hamman; Weiyang Chen; Sandra Combrinck; Nigel Gericke; Alvaro Viljoen

Sceletium tortuosum is an indigenous South African plant that has traditionally been used for its mood-enhancing properties. Recently, products containing S. tortuosum have become increasingly popular and are commonly administered as tablets, capsules, teas, decoctions, or tinctures, while traditionally the dried plant material has been masticated. This study evaluated the in vitro permeability of the four major S. tortuosum alkaloids (i.e., mesembrine, mesembrenone, mesembrenol, and mesembranol) across porcine intestinal, sublingual, and buccal tissues in their pure form and in the form of three different crude plant extracts, namely water, methanol, and an acid-base alkaloid-enriched extract. The permeability of mesembrine across intestinal tissue was higher than that of the highly permeable reference compound caffeine (which served as a positive control for membrane permeability) both in its pure form, as well as in the form of crude extracts. The intestinal permeability of mesembranol was similar to that of caffeine, while those of mesembrenol and mesembrenone were lower than that of caffeine, but much higher than that of the poorly permeable reference compound atenolol (which served as a negative control for membrane permeability). In general, the permeabilities of the alkaloids were lower across the sublingual and the buccal tissues than across the intestinal tissue. However, comparing the transport of the alkaloids with that of the reference compounds, there are indications that transport across the membranes of the oral cavity may contribute considerably to the overall bioavailability of the alkaloids, depending on pre-systemic metabolism, when the plant material is chewed and kept in the mouth for prolonged periods. The results from this study confirmed the ability of the alkaloids of S. tortuosum in purified or crude extract form to permeate across intestinal, buccal, and sublingual mucosal tissues.


International Journal of Phytoremediation | 2015

Binding of RDX to Cell Wall Components of Pinus sylvestris and Picea glauca and Three-Year Mineralisation Study of Tissue-Associated RDX Residues

Bernd W. Schoenmuth; Detlef Schenke; Tanja Scharnhorst; Sandra Combrinck; Robert I. McCrindle; Jakob O. Mueller; Carmen Büttner; Wilfried Pestemer

Contamination of soils with the explosive hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX, Research Department Explosive) as a result of military applications is a large-area problem globally. Since coniferous trees dominate the vegetation of large areas of military land in Central Europe, particularly in Germany, the long-term fate of 14C-RDX in the conifers Scots pine and Dwarf Alberta spruce was studied. Acetic acid was the most effective solvent for the removal of extractable RDX residues from homogenates of RDX-laden tree material (85%, 80–90% and 64–80% for roots, wood and needles, respectively). On average, only a fifth of RDX-derived 14C was bound in non-extractable residues (NER). Within the main cell wall compartments, lignin was the dominant binding site for NER (needles: 32–62%; roots: 38–42%). Hemicellulose (needles: 11–18%; roots: 6–11%) and cellulose (needles: 12–24%; roots: 1–2%) were less involved in binding and a considerable proportion of NER (needles: 15–24%; roots: 59–51%) was indigestible. After three-year incubation in rot chambers, mineralisation of tree-associated 14C-RDX to 14CO2 clearly dominated the mass balance in both tree species with 48–83%. 13–33% of 14C-RDX-derived radioactivity remained in an unleachable form and the remobilisation by water leaching was negligible (< 2%).


Biomedical Chromatography | 2017

Single‐step isolation of embelin using high‐performance countercurrent chromatography and determination of the fatty acid composition of seeds of Embelia schimperi

Minaleshewa Atlabachew; Bewketu Mehari; Sandra Combrinck; Robert I. McCrindle

Embelin (2,5-dihydroxy-3-undecyl-p-benzoquinone) is known for its potent anthelmintic activity, but also for wound-healing, antidiabetic, anticonvulsant, antitumour, anti-inflammatory, analgesic, hepatoprotective, antioxidant, antibacterial and antispermatogenic activities. A high-performance countercurrent chromatography method was developed for the purification of embelin from an extract of the seeds of Embelia schimperi fruit. The optimized solvent system (n-hexane-ethylacetate-ethanol-water, 7:3:7:3) resulted in the isolation of 13.9 mg of embelin, directly from 100 mg of crude extract, in a single step within a short time (40 min). Although the compound appeared to be completely pure when analysed by ultra-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) with photo diode array detection, the purity was established as ~90% by UPLC-mass spectrometry. Furthermore, we report the fatty acid composition of the seeds of E. schimperi fruit. Nine fatty acids were quantified from the fruit seed extract by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, with linoleic (46.4%), palmitic (21.5%) and oleic (19.6%) acids making up the largest proportions.


Planta Medica | 2018

Potential Herb-Drug Pharmacokinetic Interactions between African Wild Olive Leaf Extract and Selected Antihypertensive Drugs

Katlego Mmopele; Sandra Combrinck; Josias H. Hamman; Clarissa Willers; Weiyang Chen; Alvaro Viljoen

The African wild olive (Olea europaea subsp. africana) is traditionally used as a hypotensive agent. Herb-drug interactions may result from the concurrent use of herbal medicines and conventional prescription drugs. This aspect was investigated by determining the effect of the extract on the in vitro intestinal epithelial permeation of selected hypotensive drugs using the Caco-2 cell culture model. The phytochemical profiles of leaf extracts of African wild olive from different localities in South Africa were compared, since efficacy is determined by the chemical composition. Extracts were analysed using ultra-performance liquid chromatography. The oleuropein concentration varied considerably from below the detection limit (4.94 µg/mL) to 59.4 mg/g dry weight. Chemometric models constructed from the aligned chromatographic data indicated only quantitative differences between the profiles. The leaf extract was found to increase the permeability of propranolol in the absorptive direction (Papp = 8.93 × 10-6 cm/s) across Caco-2 cell monolayers, but considerably decreased transport in the secretory direction (Papp = 3.68 × 10-6 cm/s). The permeation of diltiazem was enhanced by the extract in both the absorptive (Papp = 7.33 × 10-6 cm/s) as well as in the secretory direction (Papp = 7.16 × 10-6 cm/s), but a decrease in the efflux ratio was observed. The extract therefore caused a net increase in the transport of both drugs in the absorptive direction due to an inhibition effect on their efflux. This suggests a potential increase in the blood levels of these drugs when taken simultaneously with African wild olive leaf extract, indicating potential adverse effects that must be verified in vivo.


Australasian Plant Pathology | 2016

Robust chemometric models for screening mango cultivars to predict their resistance against Fusarium infection

Wilma A. Augustyn; Sandra Combrinck; T. Regnier

Mango blossom malformation, caused by infection of mango panicles and young shoots by Fusarium species, leads to significant reductions in fruit yield. Previously, chemometric models were established that allowed biomarkers associated with resistance in tolerant cultivars to be identified. High concentrations of these biomarkers, mangiferin, maclurin and maclurin O-galloyl-glucoside, are inherent genetic traits of some cultivars and have been linked to their ability to confine Fusarium infection. In this study, phenolic profiles of mature leaf extracts from cultivars exhibiting different levels of resistance to Fusarium infection were obtained by UPLC-Q-ToF x MS, five tolerant and seven susceptible cultivars. A robust prediction model, was developed that could be used throughout the season to predict the likelihood of new cultivars being susceptible or tolerant towards mango malformation disease. The levels of biomarkers revealed by the models in tolerant and susceptible cultivars were compared and significant differences were observed. These models can serve as an important tool to investigate appropriate cultivars, prior to their introduction to areas prone to the disease.


Analytical Letters | 2016

Characterization of the Cultivation Region of Ethiopian Coffee by Elemental Analysis

Bewketu Mehari; Mesfin Redi-Abshiro; Bhagwan Singh Chandravanshi; Sandra Combrinck; Rob I. McCrindle

ABSTRACT Forty-nine green coffee (Coffea arabica L.) bean samples, representing the Harar, Jimma, Kaffa, Wollega, Sidama, and Yirgachefe varieties from east, west, and south Ethiopia were analyzed for Mg, P, S, Ca, Mn, Fe, Cu, Ba, Si, and K using inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy. Principal component analysis was used to group the samples based on their elemental compositions. Application of linear discriminant analysis provided models with an accuracy of 92% for region of production and 79% for variety. The elements P, Mn, S, Cu, and Fe were the most discriminating elements. These results show that initial screening may be performed to characterize possible fraudulently labelled products with verification by the existing paper-based traceability system and sensory evaluation.

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Alvaro Viljoen

Tshwane University of Technology

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T. Regnier

Tshwane University of Technology

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Weiyang Chen

Tshwane University of Technology

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Emmanuel Amukohe Shikanga

Tshwane University of Technology

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Ben M. Botha

Tshwane University of Technology

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Minaleshewa Atlabachew

Tshwane University of Technology

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Bewketu Mehari

Tshwane University of Technology

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Rob I. McCrindle

Tshwane University of Technology

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