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Chemo-Geographic Variations in Wild Population of Asteriscus graveolens in Israel Based on Volatile Composition Analyses
Year:
2020
Source of publication :
Chemistry and Biodiversity
Authors :
Dudai, Nativ
;
.
Nitzan, Nadav
;
.
Volume :
Co-Authors:

Hadas Ben‐Gera 

 Keren Bensimon Mashraki 

Reena Sharma 

 Alona Shachter 

 David Chaimovitsh 

Itay Gonda 

 Nadav Nitzan 

 Nativ Dudai

Facilitators :
From page:
0
To page:
0
(
Total pages:
1
)
Abstract:

Asteriscus graveolens is an aromatic desert shrub which holds medicinal potential. This species belongs to the Asteraceae family and is endemic to the Mediterranean region. In the present study, wild plants were sampled from eleven locations throughout southern Israel and the volatile profiles from leaves and flowers were analyzed using GC/MS. Three methods for volatile sampling were tested for a representative population: solvent extraction (methyl tert‐butyl ether), hydrodistillation of the essential oil and headspace solid‐phase microextraction. In all methods, the majority of volatiles were characterized as oxygenated mono‐ and sesquiterpenes. Only solvent extraction was able to detect asteriscunolides that were previously reported as anticancer molecules. Hence, that method was chosen for further analyses. The leaves were dominated by three asteriscunolide isomers, cis‐chrysanthenyl acetate and intermedeol. The flowers were dominated by bisabolone, 6‐hydroxybisabol‐2‐en‐1‐one, cis‐chrysanthenyl acetate, epiα‐cadinol, and germacrene‐D. k‐Means clustering analysis of these data divided the population into four clusters that significantly differ in their volatile composition as was further demonstrated by MANOVA analysis. Geographically, A. graveolens populations growing in Israel were found to be chemically diverse with unique varieties in the Dead Sea basin and the Arava region. This work demonstrates that chemo‐geographic variation of volatile composition exists within A. graveolens population growing in Israel, so future research evaluating the medicinal potential of that plant should take this into consideration.

Note:
Related Files :
Asteriscus graveolens
Volatile composition
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More details
DOI :
10.1002/cbdv.202000311
Article number:
0
Affiliations:
Database:
Scopus
Publication Type:
article
;
.
Language:
English
Editors' remarks:
ID:
51535
Last updated date:
02/03/2022 17:27
Creation date:
04/11/2020 19:30
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Scientific Publication
Chemo-Geographic Variations in Wild Population of Asteriscus graveolens in Israel Based on Volatile Composition Analyses

Hadas Ben‐Gera 

 Keren Bensimon Mashraki 

Reena Sharma 

 Alona Shachter 

 David Chaimovitsh 

Itay Gonda 

 Nadav Nitzan 

 Nativ Dudai

Chemo-Geographic Variations in Wild Population of Asteriscus graveolens in Israel Based on Volatile Composition Analyses

Asteriscus graveolens is an aromatic desert shrub which holds medicinal potential. This species belongs to the Asteraceae family and is endemic to the Mediterranean region. In the present study, wild plants were sampled from eleven locations throughout southern Israel and the volatile profiles from leaves and flowers were analyzed using GC/MS. Three methods for volatile sampling were tested for a representative population: solvent extraction (methyl tert‐butyl ether), hydrodistillation of the essential oil and headspace solid‐phase microextraction. In all methods, the majority of volatiles were characterized as oxygenated mono‐ and sesquiterpenes. Only solvent extraction was able to detect asteriscunolides that were previously reported as anticancer molecules. Hence, that method was chosen for further analyses. The leaves were dominated by three asteriscunolide isomers, cis‐chrysanthenyl acetate and intermedeol. The flowers were dominated by bisabolone, 6‐hydroxybisabol‐2‐en‐1‐one, cis‐chrysanthenyl acetate, epiα‐cadinol, and germacrene‐D. k‐Means clustering analysis of these data divided the population into four clusters that significantly differ in their volatile composition as was further demonstrated by MANOVA analysis. Geographically, A. graveolens populations growing in Israel were found to be chemically diverse with unique varieties in the Dead Sea basin and the Arava region. This work demonstrates that chemo‐geographic variation of volatile composition exists within A. graveolens population growing in Israel, so future research evaluating the medicinal potential of that plant should take this into consideration.

Scientific Publication
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