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Composition of individual essential oil glands of savory ( Satureja hortensis L., Lamiaceae) from Syria
Author(s) -
Novak Johannes,
Bahoo Lina,
Mitteregger Ulli,
Franz Chlodwig
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
flavour and fragrance journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.393
H-Index - 70
eISSN - 1099-1026
pISSN - 0882-5734
DOI - 10.1002/ffj.1725
Subject(s) - carvacrol , essential oil , lamiaceae , thymol , satureja , botany , chemistry , composition (language) , horticulture , biology , linguistics , philosophy
The essential oil of Lamiaceae is produced in oil glands on the leaf epidermis and stored in a subcuticular space of these specialized leaf structures. An interesting approach to better understand the variability of the essential oil composition within a plant is the analysis of individual oil glands, which is demonstrated here in the case of an accession of Satureja hortensis L. from Syria. Oil glands from different positions on the plant (petals, calyces, young, medium and old leaves) were analyzed by sampling the content of each oil gland with an SPME fiber. The main compounds identified were γ ‐terpinene and carvacrol, responsible for the major part (approximately 90%) of the total essential oil composition. The portion of carvacrol was highest in the petals (85%). The calyces showed intermediate values of 75% while carvacrol was equal (58%) at all three ages of leaves (young, medium and old leaves). γ ‐Terpinene increased from 9% in the calyx to 30% in the leaves. The lanceolate leaves were divided into four sections starting from the base (sector no. 1) to the top (sector no. 4) of the leaf blade. The content of carvacrol increased from 56% in sector no. 1 to 66% in sector no. 2 and decreased subsequently to 53% in sector no. 4. γ ‐Terpinene showed the opposite trend with a decrease from 32% (sector no. 1) to 25% (sector no. 2) and a steady increase to 36% in sector no. 4. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.