| Literature DB >> 24899872 |
Sylwia Zielińska1, Adam Matkowski1.
Abstract
Agastache is a small genus of Lamiaceae, comprising 22 species of perennial aromatic medicinal herbs. In this article, we review recent advances in phytochemical, pharmacological, biotechnological and molecular research on Agastache. The phytochemical profile of all Agastache species studied to date is generally similar, consisted of two main metabolic classes-phenylpropanoids and terpenoids. In the relatively variable essential oils, most populations of different Agastache species contain over 50 % of a phenylallyl compound-estragole. Also, other volatile compounds (methyleugenol, pulegone, menthone, isomenthone and spathulenol) were reported in various proportions. Major non-volatile metabolites belong to phenolic compounds, such as caffeic acid derivatives, especially rosmarinic acid as well as several flavones and flavone glycosides like acacetin, tilianin, agastachoside, and a rare dimeric malonyl flavone (agastachin). Two unique lignans-agastenol and agastinol-were also isolated. Terpenoids include triterpenoids of oleanane-type (maslinic acid, oleanolic acid and β-amyrin), ursane-type (ursolic acid, corosolic acid and α-amyrin), and typical plant sterols, as well as abietane-type oxidized diterpenes (e.g., agastaquinone, agastol, and others). The bioactivity of various extracts or individual compounds in vitro and in vivo include antimicrobial, antiviral and anti-mutagenic activity, cytotoxic activity to cancer cell lines, and anti-nociceptive, anti-inflammatory, anti-atherogenic, antioxidant as well as biocidal activity to several foodstuff pests. Biotechnological and molecular studies have focused on in vitro propagation and enhancing the biosynthesis of bioactive metabolites in cell or organ cultures, as well as on the expression of genes involved in phenolic biosynthesis.Entities:
Keywords: Essential oil; Estragole; Giant hyssop; Phenylpropanoids; Tilianin
Year: 2014 PMID: 24899872 PMCID: PMC4032471 DOI: 10.1007/s11101-014-9349-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phytochem Rev ISSN: 1568-7767 Impact factor: 5.374
Comparison of selected botanical traits of six Agastache species
| Species | Common name | Distribution | Corolla color | Height [cm] | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Blue (giant) hyssop, anise hyssop | Northern Great Plains *** Western Great Lakes*** | Blue | Less than 100 | Lint and Epling ( |
|
| Yellow/catnip (giant) hyssop | Southern New England Southern Great Lakes*** Ohio River Basin Ozarks | Greenish yellow | 100 or more | Lint and Epling ( |
|
| Wrinkled (giant) hyssop, Korean mint | Korea, East China Japan, Manchuria and Russian Far East | Purplish blue | 100 or more | Lint and Epling ( |
|
| Purple (giant) hyssop, figwort (giant) hyssop, prairie hyssop | Southern New England Southern to Western South Carolina Western to Northern Missouri Southern Minnesota | Pale pink to purple | Up to 210 | Lint and Epling ( |
|
| Nettle-leaf (giant) hyssop, horse nettle | Sierra Nevada Eastern Cascades Great Basin Northern Rockies*** | Bright purple and pink | 100–200 or more | Lint and Epling ( |
|
| Mexican (giant) hyssop, toronjil morado/rojo/colorado, nahuatl, tepehua | Cuijingo and Ozumba, Mexico | Purplish red to red | 50–150 | Sanders ( |
* Sect. Agastache
** Sect. Brittonastrum
*** USA/Canada
Yield of essential oil (from dried herbal material) obtained from different Agastache species
| Species | Oil yield (% v/w) d.w. | References |
|---|---|---|
|
| 0.07–3.00 | Charles et al. ( |
| 0.02–0.74 | Svoboda et al. ( | |
| 1.87 | Omidbaigi and Sefidkon ( | |
| 1.5–1.8 | Mallavarapu et al. ( | |
| 2.0 | Omidbaigi and Sefidkon ( | |
| 0.5–0.8 | Suchorska-Tropilo and Pióro-Jabrucka ( | |
| 2.1–2.88 | Omidbaigi et al. ( | |
| 2.3 | Omidbaigi and Mahmoodi ( | |
|
| 1.45 | Svoboda et al. ( |
| 0.4–0.6 | Suchorska-Tropilo and Pióro-Jabrucka ( | |
|
| 1.53–2.73 | Charles et al. ( |
| 0.92–2.28 | Svoboda et al. ( | |
| 0.5–0.8 | Dung et al. ( | |
| 0.19 | Maruyama et al. ( | |
| 0.3–1.0 | Suchorska-Tropilo and Pióro-Jabrucka ( | |
| 0.37 | Wang ( | |
| 0.29–0.57 | Gong et al. ( | |
| 0.32 | Li et al. ( | |
|
| 0.99 | Svoboda et al. ( |
|
| 0.89 | Svoboda et al. ( |
Fig. 1Structures of typical monoterpenoids from Agastache
Fig. 2Sesquiterpenoids from Agastache
Fig. 3Structures of volatile phenolic compounds from Agastache
Fig. 4Non-volatile phenolic compounds from various Agastache species. a Phenylpropanoids. b Flavonoids
Fig. 5Structures of diterpenoids and pentacyclic triterpenes from Agastache
Overview of biological activities of Agastache species
| Species | Source plant part | Extract type/compound/fraction | Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Roots | Agastaquinone (diterpenoid quinone), its oxime derivative | Nonspecific cytotoxicity against human cancer cell lines | Lee et al. ( |
| Roots | Rosmarinic acid, rosmarinic and caffeic acids methyl esters | In vitro anticomplementary | Oh et al. ( | |
| Leaves | 4′,5-Dihydroxy-3,3′,7-trimethoxyflavone | Antiviral against poliovirus | Sandoval and Carrasco ( | |
| Not reported | Essential oil | Antibacterial against skin bacteria | Depo et al. ( | |
| Roots | Rosmarinic acid | Antiviral against human immunodeficiency virus (anti HIV-1 integrase) | Kim et al. ( | |
| Aerial parts | Estragole | Antifungal | Błaszczyk et al. ( | |
| Aerial parts | Tilianin | Inhibition of TNF-α-induced expression of VCAM-1 | Hong et al. ( | |
| Flowers | Essential oil, limonene, anise aldehyde | Anticancerogenic, antimutagenic, cytotoxic | Kim et al. ( | |
| Aerial parts | Essential oil | Antibacterial, antifungal | Song et al. ( | |
| Whole plant extract | Agastinol, agastenol | Inhibition of caspase-3 induction in U937 leukemia cells | Lee et al. ( | |
| Whole plant | Whole plant methanolic extract | Insecticidal against | Kim et al. ( | |
| Whole plant | Whole plant methanolic extract | Insecticidal against | Kim et al. ( | |
| Aerial parts | Essential oil | Antifungal | Shin and Kang ( | |
| Aerial parts | Estragole, essential oil | Antifungal against | Shin ( | |
| Aerial parts | Estragole | Antifungal against Candida | Shin and Pyun ( | |
| Aerial parts | Tilianin | Anti-atherogenic | Nam et al. ( | |
| Leaves | Leaf lyophilized water extract | Inhibition of iNOS expression and NO production in ROS 17/2.8 cells | Oh et al. ( | |
| Leaves | Tilianin | Antioxidant | Oh et al. ( | |
| Whole plant | Whole plant methanolic Extract | Source of mite control fumigants for | Kim et al. ( | |
| Calyx | Essential oil | Antioxidant | Tian et al. ( | |
|
| Aerial parts | Tilianin, methanolic extracts | Antihypertensive (vasorelaxant), NO production stimulating | Hernandez-Abreu et al. ( |
| Leaves | Aqueous extracts | Reduce fever, premenstrual symptoms | Cano Asseleih ( | |
| Leaves | Aqueous extracts | Antidepressant and anxiogenic | Molina-Hernandez et al. ( | |
| Whole plant | Aqueous extracts | Vasoactive, antioxidant | Ibarra-Alvarado et al. ( | |
| Inflorescences | Ursolic acid, acacetin | Spasmolytic, antinociceptive | Gonzalez-Trujano et al. ( | |
| Aerial parts | Ursolic acid | Antinociceptive | Verano et al. ( | |
|
| Herb | Essential oil, water and carbon dioxide (supercritical) extracts | Antioxidant (β-Carotene bleaching) | Dapkevicius et al. ( |
| Aerial parts, seeds, roots | Water extract | Antioxidant (FRAP) | Dragland et al. ( | |
| Aerial parts | Essential oil | Insecticidal against | Ebadollahi et al. ( |
Examples of herbal formulae containing Agastache rugosa
| Name of the formula | Plant material | Use/indications | Country | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ya-hom | Whole plant | Stomach discomfort | Thailand | Suvitayavat et al. ( |
| One of the 600 types of plant materials | Whole plant | Food uses | Taiwan | Chau and Wu ( |
| Sopoongsan | Not reported | Anti-inflammatory Anti-microbial Anti-allergy Anticancer activity In human skin | Korea | Lee et al. ( |
| Gan-lu-xiao-du-dan | Not reported | Chronic hepatitis | Taiwan (Republic of China) | Chen et al. ( |
| QWBZP | Leaves | Infantile diarrhea caused by rotavirus | China (P.R.C.) | Wu et al. ( |