Examination of the changes in components of the volatile oil from Abyssinian sage, Musk sage and Medical sage [Salvia aethiopis L., Salvia sclarea L. and Salvia officinalis L. (hybrid)] growing in different locations

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3989/gya.0715182

Keywords:

α-thujone, GC-MS/FID, Salvia officinalis L. (hybrid), Volatile oil

Abstract


This study was conducted simultaneously in different locations in Çanakkale, Balıkesir and Kütahya in order to determine the effect of location on the volatile oil components, volatile oil rate and volatile oil quality of Abyssinian sage, Musk sage and Medical sage (Salvia aethiopis L., Salvia sclarea L. and Salvia officinalis L. (hybrid)) plants from the 2015 growing season. Field experiments were carried out in 3 replicates according to the randomized block design. These plants’ volatile oils were obtained by the hydrodistillation method (GC-MS/FID) and the volatile oil rates in three different locations were measured as 0.53%, 0.21%, 0.20%, respectively. The basic components of the volatile oil were determined as follows: β-caryophyllene 36.22%, 30.46%, 35.96%, α-copaene 15.06%, 16.46%, 16.58%, germacrene-D 13.23%, 20.01%, 15.20%, β-cubebene 5.62%, 7.04%, 6.93%, α–humulene 8.68%, 7.40%, 8.54%, caryophylleneoxide 7.40%, 1.82%, 3.53%. No volatile oil was acquired from Salvia sclarea L. except for the Çanakkale location which was only 0.02% and the main components in this volatile oil were measured as germacrene-D 20.78%, and phytol 17.81%. The best volatile oil contents from Abyssinian sage and Musk sage were obtained from the Çanakkale location with 0.53% and 0.02%, respectively. The rates of volatile oils from Medical sage (Salvia officinalis L. (hybrid)) were 1.00%, 1.40% and 0.96%, respectively, in the three locations. The main components in this volatile oil were measured as α-thujone 46,00%, 44.53%, 35.78%, β-thujone 5.05%, 6.31%, 8.61%, camphor 10.73%, 19.15%, 18.68%, 1.8-cineole 8.99%, 7.23%, 5.06%, viridiflorol 1.85%, 2.28%, 4.23%. The highest volatile oil rate in Medical sage was reached at the Balıkesir location at a rate of 1.40%. As a result of this study it was found that volatile oil components are comparatively richer in terpenes and the amount of volatile oil differs according to ecological factors.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Arslan N, Gurbuz B, Yilmaz G. 1995. Sage (Salvia officinalis L.) seed retention ratio and into butirik asitin on the roots of body steels ınvestigation on the effects. Tr. J. Agric. Fores. Tubitak 19, 83-87.

Bagci E, and Kocak, AA. 2007. Two salvia L. (S. ceratophylla L., S. aethiopis L.) Species. Firat Univ. J. Sci. Tech. 19, 435-442.

Baydar H.2007. Medical, aromatic and stimulant plants science and technology. Sdu. Faculty of Agriculture Publications No. 51, Isparta, 288s.

Baytop T. 1999. With treatment plants in turkey: past and present (II ed.). Nobel Medical bookstores.

Cutillas AB, Carrasco A, Martinez-Gutierrez R, Tomas V, Tudela J. 2017. Salvia officinalis L. essential oils from spain: determination of composition, antioxidant capacity, antienzymatic, and antimicrobial bioactivities. Chem. Biodiver. 14, e1700102. https://doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.201700102 PMid:28477412

Demirci B, Pistol N, Baser KHC. 2002. Enantiomeric distribution of some of the essential oils of some Salvia Species. Flavour Fragrance J. 17, 54-58. https://doi.org/10.1002/ffj.1039

Dweck AC. 2000. The folklore and cosmetic use of various Salvia Species: sage the genus salvia. Harwood Academic Publishers, pp:1-25, The Netherlands.

Kandemir N. 2003. "The morphological, anatomical and karyological Properties of endemic Salvia hypargeia fich. - Mey. (Lamiaceae) in Turkey". Pak. J. Hot. 35, 219-236.

Kilic O. 2016. Chemical composition of four Salvia L. species from Turkey: essential oil bearing plants of chemotaxonomic. Approach. J. 19, 229-235. https://doi.org/10.1080/0972060X.2014.958560

Ku?ma ?, Ro?alski M, Walencka E, Ró?alska B, Wysoki?ska H. 2007. Antimicrobial activity of diterpenoids from hairy roots of Salvia sclarea L.: Salvipisone as a potential anti-biofilm agent active against antibiotic resistant Staphylococci. Phytomed. 14, 31-35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phymed.2005.10.008 PMid:17190643

Lahlou M. 2004. Essential oils and fragrance compounds: bioactivity and mechanisms of action. Flavor Fragrance J. 19, 159 -165. https://doi.org/10.1002/ffj.1288

Morteza-Semnani K, Goodarzi A, Azadbakht M. 2005b. The essential oil of Salvia aethiopis L. J. Essent. Oil Res. 17, 274-275. https://doi.org/10.1080/10412905.2005.9698900

Pesic ZP, Bankovic VM. 2003. Investigation on the essential oil of Salvia sclarea L. Flavour and Fragrance Journal 18, 228- 230. https://doi.org/10.1002/ffj.1202

Pino JA, Aguero J, Fuentes V. 2002. Essential oil of Salvia officinalis L. ssp. altissima grown in Cuba. J. Essent. Oil Res. 14, 373-374. https://doi.org/10.1080/10412905.2002.9699889

Özek T, Tabanca N, Demirci F, David E, Wedgeand K, Ba?er HC. 2010. Enantiomeric distribution of some linalool containing essential oils and their Biological Activities. Rec. Nat. Prod. 4, 180-192.

Raina AP, Negi KS, Dutta M. 2013. Variability in sage (Salvia officinalis L.) grown in north western Himalayan region of India. J. Medic. Plants Res. 7, 683-688.

Rajabi Z, Ebrahimi M, Farajpour M, Mirza M, Ramshini H. 2014a. Compositions and yield variation of essential oils among and within nine salvia species from various areas of Iran. Indus. Crops Prod. 61, 233-239. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.indcrop.2014.06.038

Rustaiyan A, Masoudi S, Monfared A, Komeilizadeh H. 1999. Volatile constituents of three Salvia species grown wild in Iran. Flavour and Fragrance Journal 14, 276-278. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1099-1026(199909/10)14:5<276::AID-FFJ825>3.0.CO;2-Y

Secmen Ö, Gemici Y, Gork G, Bekat L, Leblebici E. 2000. Systematic of seed plants. Ege University, Faculty of Science Publications No. 116, 396s, Izmir.

Senkal BC, Silk A. 2012. Türki flora (Salvia L.spp.). Evaluation of content of essential oil varieties. Medical and Aromatic Plants Symposium13-15 September B 2012 Tokat. Academic Papers, pp: 166-176.

Sezik E, Yesilada E. 1999. Turkish folk drugs carrying essential oil essential oils, Eds: Kırımer N, Mat A, Anadolu University Press, Eski?ehir, ss. 93-131.

Sharopov FS, Setzer WN. 2012. The essential oil of Salvia sclarea L. from Tajikistan. Records Nat. Prod. 6, 75. https://doi.org/10.1177/1934578X1100600524

Tajbakhsh M, Rineh A, Khalilzadeh MA, Eslami B. 2007. Chemical constituents of the essential oils fromleaves, flowers, stemandaerial parts of Salvia aethiopis L. from Iran. J. Essent. Oil Res. 9, 569-571. https://doi.org/10.1080/10412905.2007.9699334

Topcu G, Altiner EN, Gozcu S, Halfon B, Aydogmus Z, Pezzuto JM, Zhou BN, Kingston DGI. 2003. Studies on di-andtriterpenoids from Salvia staminea with cytotoxic activity. Plant. Med. 69, 464-469. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-2003-39705 PMid:12802732

Tulukcu E. 2005. In Use of Medicinal Plants and Some Poisonous Plants T. Silk Road Magazine. No: 216, Konya.

Verma RS. 2010. Chemical investigation of decanted and hydrophilic fractions of Salvia sclarea essential oil. J. Trad. Med. 5, 102-108.

Verma RS, Padalia RC, Chauhan A. 2015. Harvesting season and plant part dependent varieties of Salvia officinalis L. grown in northern India. J. Herbal Med. 5, 165-171. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hermed.2015.04.004

Zeybek N, Zeybek U. 1994. Pharmaceutical Botany, E.Ü. Faculty of Pharmacy 2nd.

Published

2019-09-30

How to Cite

1.
Karayel HB, Akçura M. Examination of the changes in components of the volatile oil from Abyssinian sage, Musk sage and Medical sage [Salvia aethiopis L., Salvia sclarea L. and Salvia officinalis L. (hybrid)] growing in different locations. Grasas aceites [Internet]. 2019Sep.30 [cited 2024Apr.18];70(3):e319. Available from: https://grasasyaceites.revistas.csic.es/index.php/grasasyaceites/article/view/1787

Issue

Section

Research

Most read articles by the same author(s)