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Variability in the Chemical Composition of Myrcia sylvatica (G. Mey) DC. Essential Oils Growing in the Brazilian Amazon.

Jamile Silva da CostaJofre Jacob da Silva FreitasWilliam N SetzerJoyce Kelly Rosário da SilvaJosé Guilherme S MaiaPablo Luis Baia Figueiredo
Published in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Myrcia sylvatica (G. Mey) DC. is known as "insulin plant" because local communities use the infusions of various organs empirically to treat diabetes. The leaves of seven specimens of Myrcia sylvatica (Msy-01 to Msy-07) were collected in the Brazilian Amazon. Furthermore, the essential oils were extracted by hydrodistillation and analyzed by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry, and their chemical compositions were submitted to multivariate analysis (Principal Component Analysis and Hierarchical Cluster Analysis). The multivariate analysis displayed the formation of four chemical profiles (chemotypes), described for the first time as follows: chemotype I (specimen Msy-01) was characterized by germacrene B (24.5%), γ-elemene (12.5%), and β-caryophyllene (10.0%); chemotype II (specimens Msy-03, -06 and -07) by spathulenol (11.1-16.0%), germacrene B (7.8-20.7%), and γ-elemene (2.9-7.6%); chemotype III (Msy-04 and -05) by spathulenol (9.8-10.1%), β-caryophyllene (2.5-10.1%), and δ-cadinene (4.8-5.6%); and chemotype IV, (Msy-02) by spathulenol (13.4%), caryophyllene oxide (15.0%), and α-cadinol (8.9%). There is a chemical variability in the essential oils of Myrcia sylvatica occurring in the Amazon region.
Keyphrases
  • mass spectrometry
  • gas chromatography
  • type diabetes
  • cardiovascular disease
  • liquid chromatography
  • metabolic syndrome
  • adipose tissue
  • ms ms
  • simultaneous determination
  • water quality