The reciprocal EC50 value as a convenient measure of the potency of a compound in bioactivity-guided purification of natural products.
2020
Identification of potent natural products is a challenging task in which sophisticated separation processes including HPLC are employed. The bioactivity of HPLC fractions is determined with a bioassay, and the most potent compounds are progressed to structural elucidation. In pharmacology, the potency of a compound is expressed as the half-maximal effective concentration (EC50), which refers to the concentration of a drug that induces a response halfway between the baseline and maximum. While expressing the potency of a compound by its EC50 value makes sense in a clinical context, it is counterintuitive in the context of bioactivity-guided purification, as the potency of a compound is inversely related to its EC50 value, and the most potent compound is the one with the lowest EC50. In natural products chemistry, it would be more logical if an increase in potency would be reflected by an increase of a parameter reflecting the potency. In this study, we introduce the term "effective dilution volume (EDV50)" as the reciprocal of the EC50 (1/EC50). We show how the EDV50 can be used to identify potent compounds in chromatographic separations, allowing to easily graph and identify anti-inflammatory compounds. We show two examples of this approach by overlaying an HPLC chromatogram with the EDV50 to point out the most potent compounds. We hope that the EDV50 will make the illustration of active fractions containing potent compounds in a chromatogram obvious for the reader and will become a useful graphic tool in the natural products literature in the future.
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