Variability in essential oil composition of Piper dilatatum L.C. Rich

Publication date: August–December 2011 Source:Biochemical Systematics and Ecology, Volume 39, Issues 4–6 Author(s): Eloisa Helena A. Andrade , Claudio N. Alves , Elsie F. Guimarães , Léa Maria M. Carreira , José Guilherme S. Maia Twelve samples of air-dried aerial parts of Piper dilatatum L. C. Rich yielded essential oils and their volatile constituents were analyzed by GC and GC–MS. Sesquiterpenes, both hydrocarbons and oxygenated, were the most highly represented classes, the former ranging from 31.5% to 87.7% and the latter varying from 1.8% to 49.4%. Using hierarchical cluster analysis, the oils were divided into seven groups, whose main constituents were: (E)-caryophyllene, α-cadinol and germacrene D (group A); spathulenol, bicyclogermacrene and (Z)-β-ocimene, (group B); spathulenol, germacrene D and (E)-nerolidol, (group C); germacrene D, limonene, α-phellandrene and bicyclogermacrene (group D); β-elemene, germacrene D and β-pinene (group E); curzerene, p-cymene and α-eudesmol (group F); and (Z)-α-bisabolene, curzerene and germacrene D (group G). We have seen that Piper oils from the Amazon present as major constituents terpenoids and phenylpropanoids, always with the predominance of one over another. The essential oils of P. dilatatum presented in this paper, containing only mono- and sesquiterpenes as its major components, is further chemotaxonomic evidence of this dichotomy in the Piper genus. Highlights ► The essential oils of twelve spec...
Source: Biochemical Systematics and Ecology - Category: Biochemistry Source Type: research
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