| Literature DB >> 22422527 |
Laila El Bouzidi1, Abdelaziz Abbad, Lahcen Hassani, Karine Fattarsi, David Leach, Mohammed Markouk, Laurent Legendre, Khalid Bekkouche.
Abstract
The essential oils of leaves and flowers of the wild and cultivated Moroccan Achillea ageratum L., a rare and threatened medicinal species, were examined by GC/MS, and their chemical compositions were compared. At least nine components were identified in both wild and cultivated A. ageratum oils, representing more than 95% of the oils. Artemisyl acetate (62.34-78.79%), yomogi alcohol (4.89-12.40%), santolina alcohol (4.86-11.77%), and artemisia alcohol (3.36-7.04%) were the major compounds. Terpene-alcohol proportion was higher in wild A. ageratum than in cultivated A. ageratum. The antibacterial analysis showed that both oils presented high activity against all the studied Gram-positive strains in a range of MIC values from 2.55 to 7.02 mg/ml, but they appeared not effective against the tested Gram-negative ones (MIC values 20.40-41.10 mg/ml). They also exhibited remarkable antifungal activities against Candida species with MIC values ranging from 5.83 to 8.42 mg/ml. From these results, it was concluded that domestication of this threatened medicinal species using clonal propagation did not significantly affect its chemical composition and consequently its antimicrobial properties.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22422527 DOI: 10.1002/cbdv.201100115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Biodivers ISSN: 1612-1872 Impact factor: 2.408