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Chemical Composition and Histochemical Localization of Essential Oil from Wild and Cultivated Rhaponticum carthamoides Roots and Rhizomes.

Velislava TodorovaStanislava IvanovaYoana GeorgievaVanya NalbantovaDiana Karcheva-BahchevanskaNiko BenbassatMartina S SavovaMilen I GeorgievKalin Ivanov
Published in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Rhaponticum carthamoides (Willd.) Iljin is not only a source of phytosteroids and flavonoids, but is also source of essential oil (EO). This study evaluated the volatile metabolic constituents and histochemical localization of root and rhizome essential oils (EOs) from R. carthamoides populations wild-grown in Russia and cultivated in Bulgaria. The performed histochemical analysis confirmed the presence of lipophilic substances in the secretory ducts of the examined roots and rhizomes. Both EOs were obtained by hydrodistillation and further analyzed by gas chromatography with mass detection. The results showed differences between the chemical compositions of both EOs. Forty-six components were tentatively identified in R. carthamoides oil from the wild population, with β -selinene (4.77%), estragole (6.32%), D-carvone (6.37%), cyperene (8.78%), and ledene oxide (11.52%) being the major constituents. In the EO isolated from cultivated R. carthamoides , twenty-three compounds were tentatively identified, with humulene (7.68%), β -elemene (10.76%), humulene-1,2-epoxide (11.55%), ledene oxide (13.50%), and δ- elemene (19.08%) predominating. This is the first report describing the histolocalization and chemical profile of EO from R. carthamoides cultivated in Bulgaria. Further research on the cultivation of R. carthamoides in Bulgaria would affect the relationship between its chemical composition and pharmacological effects.
Keyphrases
  • essential oil
  • gas chromatography
  • mass spectrometry
  • tandem mass spectrometry
  • genetic diversity
  • gas chromatography mass spectrometry
  • loop mediated isothermal amplification
  • liquid chromatography