| Literature DB >> 26294929 |
Loh Teng Hern Tan1, Learn Han Lee1, Wai Fong Yin2, Chim Kei Chan3, Habsah Abdul Kadir3, Kok Gan Chan2, Bey Hing Goh1.
Abstract
Ylang-ylang (Cananga odorata Hook. F. & Thomson) is one of the plants that are exploited at a large scale for its essential oil which is an important raw material for the fragrance industry. The essential oils extracted via steam distillation from the plant have been used mainly in cosmetic industry but also in food industry. Traditionally, C. odorata is used to treat malaria, stomach ailments, asthma, gout, and rheumatism. The essential oils or ylang-ylang oil is used in aromatherapy and is believed to be effective in treating depression, high blood pressure, and anxiety. Many phytochemical studies have identified the constituents present in the essential oils of C. odorata. A wide range of chemical compounds including monoterpene, sesquiterpenes, and phenylpropanoids have been isolated from this plant. Recent studies have shown a wide variety of bioactivities exhibited by the essential oils and the extracts of C. odorata including antimicrobial, antibiofilm, anti-inflammatory, antivector, insect-repellent, antidiabetic, antifertility and antimelanogenesis activities. Thus, the present review summarizes the information concerning the traditional uses, phytochemistry, and biological activities of C. odorata. This review is aimed at demonstrating that C. odorata not only is an important raw material for perfume industry but also considered as a prospective useful plant to agriculture and medicine.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26294929 PMCID: PMC4534619 DOI: 10.1155/2015/896314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
The common names of C. odorata from different regions.
| Regions | Common names |
|---|---|
| General | Ylang-ylang, perfume tree, |
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| Oceania | Canang odorant (French) |
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| South East Asia | Ilang-ilang, alang-ilang (Philippines) |
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| India | Apurvachampaka, chettu sampangi, karumugai (India) |
Adapted from [9] with slight modifications.
The morphological features of C. odorata leaves, stems, flowers, fruits, and seeds.
| Part | Descriptions |
|---|---|
| Leaves | Colour: dark shiny green (above), duller and lighter green (beneath) |
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| Twigs/petiole | Petiole colour: light green; twig colour: light green (young), brown (old) |
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| Flowers | Odor: highly fragrant |
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| Fruits | Colour: dark green to black (ripe) |
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| Seeds | Shape: hard, flattened, ovoid, and pitted |
Summarized from [9] with slight modifications.
Figure 1Morphology of C. odorata. (a) Mature C. odorata flower with yellow petals, (b) young yellowish-green C. odorata flower, (c) young C. odorata plant in Rimba Ilmu Botanic Garden, University of Malaya, and (d) leaves of C. odorata plant (images are obtained from Dr. Sugumaran (a) and Mr. Cheah ((b)–(d)) from University of Malaya).
The constituents identified from the essential oil of C. odorata.
| Class | Constituents | Plant parts | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monoterpenes | ( | Leaf, fruit | [ |
| ( | Leaf, fruit | [ | |
| 1,8-Cineole | Leaf, flower, fruit | [ | |
| Bornyl acetate | Leaf | [ | |
| Camphene | Leaf, flower | [ | |
| Geraniol | Leaf, flower | [ | |
| Geranyl acetate | Flower | [ | |
| Limonene | Leaf, flower, fruit | [ | |
| Linalool | Leaf, flower | [ | |
| Linalyl acetate | Leaf | [ | |
| Myrcene | Leaf, fruit | [ | |
| Neral | Flower | [ | |
| Nerol | Flower | [ | |
| Neryl acetate | Flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf, fruit | [ | |
| Plinol a | Flower | [ | |
| Plinol d | Flower | [ | |
| Sabinene | Leaf, fruit | [ | |
| Terpinen-4-ol | Leaf, fruit | [ | |
| Terpinolene | Leaf, fruit | [ | |
| Thujanol | Fruit | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf, fruit | [ | |
|
| Leaf, flower, fruit | [ | |
|
| Fruit | [ | |
|
| Leaf, fruit | [ | |
|
| Leaf, fruit | [ | |
|
| Leaf, fruit | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf | [ | |
|
| Leaf, flower, fruit | [ | |
|
| Leaf, fruit | [ | |
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| |||
| Sesquiterpenes | ( | Leaf | [ |
| ( | Leaf, flower | [ | |
| ( | Flower | [ | |
| ( | Leaf | [ | |
| (2 | Flower | [ | |
| (2 | Flower | [ | |
| 1,10-diepi-Cubenol | Flower | [ | |
| 1 | Flower | [ | |
| 1-epi-Cubenol | Flower | [ | |
| 5-Indanol | Flower | [ | |
| Aromadendrene | Leaf | [ | |
| Bicycloelemene | Flower | [ | |
| Bicyclogermacrene | Leaf | [ | |
| Calamene | Flower | [ | |
| Caryophyllene epoxide | Leaf | [ | |
| Caryophyllene oxide | Leaf, flower | [ | |
| Cedrol | Flower | [ | |
| Copaborneol | Flower | [ | |
| Cyperene | Flower | [ | |
| Germacrene D | Leaf, flower, fruit | [ | |
| Globulol | Leaf | [ | |
| Guaiol | Flower | [ | |
| Isogermacrene D | Flower | [ | |
| Jejunol | Flower | [ | |
| Levoglucosenone | Flower | [ | |
| Selina-4(15),5-diene | Flower | [ | |
| Spathulenol | Leaf | [ | |
|
| Leaf | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
| Viridiflorol | Leaf | [ | |
| Zonarene | Flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf, flower | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf | [ | |
|
| Leaf | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf, flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf | [ | |
|
| Leaf | [ | |
|
| Leaf, flower, fruit | [ | |
|
| Leaf | [ | |
|
| Leaf, flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf, flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf, flower, fruit | [ | |
|
| Leaf | [ | |
|
| Leaf, flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf | [ | |
|
| Leaf | [ | |
|
| Flower, fruit | [ | |
|
| Leaf, flower | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
|
| Flower | [ | |
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| |||
| Aliphatic compounds | (2 | Flower | [ |
| ( | Leaf | [ | |
| ( | Leaf, flower | [ | |
| ( | Leaf, flower | [ | |
| 2-Hexenyl acetate | Flower | [ | |
| 2-Methyl-3-buten-2-ol | Flower | [ | |
| 3-Hexenyl acetate | Flower | [ | |
| 3-Methyl-2-buten-1-ol | Flower | [ | |
| 3-Methyl-2-buten-1-yl acetate (prenyl acetate) | Flower | [ | |
| Benzyl alcohol | Flower | [ | |
| Decane | Flower | [ | |
| Diethyl 1,5-pentanedioate | Flower | [ | |
| Dodecane | Flower | [ | |
| Methyl 3-methylbutanoate | Flower | [ | |
| Methyl caprylate | Flower | [ | |
|
| Leaf, fruit | [ | |
| Heptanal | Flower | [ | |
| Tetracosane | Flower | [ | |
| Tricosane | Flower | [ | |
| Undecane | Flower | [ | |
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| |||
| Phenylpropanoids | ( | Flower | [ |
| 1,4-Dimethylbenzene | Flower | [ | |
| 1-Methoxy-1-propylbenzene | Flower | [ | |
| 1-Phenyl-2-propen-1-ol | Flower | [ | |
| 1-Phenylallyl acetate | Flower | [ | |
| 2-Methoxy-4-methylphenol | Flower | [ | |
| 2-Phenylethyl acetate | Flower | [ | |
| 3,4-Dimethoxytoluene | Flower | [ | |
| 3-Buten-2-ol benzoate | Flower | [ | |
| 3-Hexen-1-ol benzoate | Flower | [ | |
| 3-Methyl-2-buten-1-yl benzoate | Flower | [ | |
| 4-(2-Propenyl)-phenol | Flower | [ | |
| 4-Allyl-phenyl-acetate | Flower | [ | |
| 4-Methoxy benzaldehyde | Flower | [ | |
| 4-Methoxyphenyl acetate | Flower | [ | |
| Anethol | Flower | [ | |
| Benzyl acetate | Flower | [ | |
| Benzyl benzoate | Flower | [ | |
| Benzyl salicylate | Flower | [ | |
| Benzylaldehyde | Flower | [ | |
| Benzyl-n-butyrate | Flower | [ | |
| Butyl benzoate | Flower | [ | |
| Cinnamyl alcohol | Flower | [ | |
| Ethyl benzoate | Flower | [ | |
| Isoeugenol | Flower | [ | |
| Methoxyphenol | Flower | [ | |
| Methyl benzoate | Flower | [ | |
| Methyl-2-methoxybenzoate | Flower | [ | |
| Methyl-4-methoxybenzoate | Flower | [ | |
| Methyleugenol | Flower | [ | |
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| Flower | [ | |
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| Flower | [ | |
| Vanillin | Flower | [ | |
| Veratrole | Flower | [ | |
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| Nitrogen-bearing compounds | Phenylacetonitrile | Flower | [ |
| 2-Phenyl-1-nitroethane | Flower | [ | |
| Methyl anthranilate | Flower | [ | |
Figure 2The molecular structures of the constituents isolated from different part of C. odorata.
The identified chemical constituents from different extracts of C. odorata.
| Extracts | Family | Name of constituents | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Methanolic extract of | Quinoline alkaloids | (+)-Ushinsunine- | [ |
| Cleistopholine | [ | ||
| Liriodenine | [ | ||
| (−)-Anonaine | [ | ||
| (+)-Nornuciferine | [ | ||
| (+)- | [ | ||
| (−)-Ushinsunine | [ | ||
| (−)-Norushinsunine | [ | ||
| (−)-Asimilobine | [ | ||
| (+)-Reticuline | [ | ||
| Lyscamine | [ | ||
| (−)-Anaxagoreine | [ | ||
| Phytosterols | Stigmasterol | [ | |
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| [ | ||
| Phenylpropanoids |
| [ | |
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| [ | ||
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| Chloroform extract of | Quinoline alkaloids | Liriodenine | [ |
| Sampangine | [ | ||
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| Methanolic extract of | Guaipyridine alkaloids | Cananodine | [ |
| Cycloeudesmane sesquiterpenoids | Cryptomeridiol 11- | [ | |
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| [ | ||
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| [ | ||
| Quinoline alkaloids | Cleistopholine | [ | |
| (+)-Ushinsunine- | [ | ||
| Lyscamine | [ | ||
| Phenylpropanoids |
| [ | |
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| Acetone extract of | Lactones | Isosiphonodine | [ |
| Canangone | [ | ||
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| Methanol extract of dried leaves of | Megastigmane glycoside | Canangaionoside | [ |
| Breyniaionoside A | [ | ||
| Citroside A | [ | ||
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Methanol extract of flower buds of | Lignans | Canangalignan I | [ |
| Canangalignan II | [ | ||
| Canangaterpene I | [ | ||
| Terpenoids | Canangaterpene II | [ | |
| Canangaterpene III | [ | ||
| Canangaterpene IV | [ | ||
| Canangaterpene V | [ | ||
| Canangaterpene VI | [ | ||
| (3R,3aR,8aS)-3-Isopropyl-8a-methyl-8-oxo-1,2,3,3a,6,7,8,8a-octahydroazulene-5-carbaldehyde | [ | ||
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| Methanol extract of leaves of | Monoterpene glucosides | Canangafruticoside A | [ |
| Canangafruticoside B | [ | ||
| Canangafruticoside C | [ | ||
| Canangafruticoside D | [ | ||
| Canangafruticoside E | [ | ||
| Ionone glucosides | Corchoionoside C | [ | |
| Lignans | (+)-Syringaresinol 4- | [ | |
Bioactivities of C. odorata essential oils and extracts.
| Bioactivities | Part used | Type of extracts | Dosage/Results | Suggested constituents with respective activities | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antimicrobial | (i) Whole plant | (i) Essential oil | (i) Well diffusion assay: 100–400 | (i) Linalool | [ |
| (ii) Disc diffusion assay: 200–400 | [ | ||||
| (iii) 0.23 mg/mL (MIC90%) against | [ | ||||
| (iv) 12.5 ± 3.9 | [ | ||||
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| Antibiofilm | Flower | Essential oil | (i) 0.01% (v/v) showed 80% inhibition against biofilm for | (i) | [ |
| (ii) Inhibit adherence phase of both clinical strains of | |||||
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| Antioxidant | (i) Bark | (i) Ethyl acetate | (i) 79% DPPH inhibition tested at 50 ppm | (i) n/a | [ |
| (ii) 290.0 ± 13.1% of ferric reducing power at 0.5 | (ii) n/a | [ | |||
| (iii) 63.8 ± 0.45% of DPPH inhibition | (iii) n/a | [ | |||
| (iv) 75.5 ± 0.51% inhibition in the | |||||
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| Insecticidal | Flower | Essential oil | (i) Tested 1%, 5%, and 10% (w/v) on | (i) n/a | [ |
| (ii) 10% in soybean oil exhibited oviposition-deterrent and ovicidal activities | (ii) n/a | [ | |||
| (iii) 0.1 mg/mL showed larvicidal activity against | (iii) n/a | [ | |||
| (iv) LD50 at 52.96 ppm against immature stage of | (iv) n/a | [ | |||
| (iv) | (v) Prepared in ethyl alcohol, LT50 of 52.08 hours, and LC50 of 29.36% towards | (v) n/a | [ | ||
| (v) | (vi) 2 mg/filter showed 18.0 ± 5.8% and 94.0 ± 4.0% mortalities after 2 and 7 days of exposure | (vi) n/a | [ | ||
| (vi) | (vii) LD50 value of 33.14 | (vii) Linalool | [ | ||
| (viii) LD50 value of 14.77 mg/L (vapour phase toxicity bioassay) | |||||
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| Insect repellent | (i) Flower | Essential oil | (i) Prepared in soybean oil, ED50 of 0.045, 2.149, and <0.003 mg/cm2against | (i) Linalool | [ |
| (ii) Protection time towards | |||||
| (iii) Prepared in ethyl alcohol, protection time against | (ii) n/a | [ | |||
| (iv) Strongest repellent effect at 5 | (iii) n/a | [ | |||
| (v) 98% repellency after 2 and 4 hours exposure | |||||
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| Antimelanogenesis | (i) Flower bud | Methanolic | (i) Inhibition on melanin production in B16 melanoma 4A5 cells | (i) Canangaterpenes I | [ |
| (ii) Terpenoid derivatives, canangaterpenes I (IC50 = 3.6 | |||||
| (ii) Seed | (iii) Inhibition on tyrosinase protein expression in mouse B16 melanoma cells | (iii) | [ | ||
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| Anti-inflammatory | (i) n/a | (i) Essential oil | (i) Strong lipoxygenase inhibitory effect (~80%) at 0.5 | (i) Linalool | [ |
| (ii) Inhibition on nitric oxide release in RAW264.7 (97.9 ± 14.6%) at 50 | (ii) Linalyl acetate | [ | |||
| (iii) In carrageenan induced paw edema model, paw volume inhibition of 62.9% at 100 mg/kg | (iii) n/a | [ | |||
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| Sedative, relaxing, and harmonizing effect | n/a | Essential oil | (i) Reduced systolic and diastolic BP through sniffing | (i) n/a | [ |
| (ii) Decreased pulse rate and stress level | |||||
| (iii) Increased alertness | |||||
| (iv) Transdermal administration resulted decrease in both physiological and behavioural level | (ii) n/a | [ | |||
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| Effect on mood and cognitive performance | n/a | Essential oil | Reduced alertness mood and calmness but without increased cognitive performance | n/a | [ |
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| Spermatotoxic | Root bark | Ethanolic | (i) Immobilized rat's sperm within seconds | (i) A 52 kd protein | [ |
| (ii) 50 mg/100 g body weight/day reduced sperm motility | (ii) n/a | [ | |||
| (iii) 100 mg/100 g body weight/day caused 94% abnormal sperm morphology | |||||
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| Antihyperglycemic | (i) Leaf and stem | (i) Dichloromethane | (i) Alpha-amylase inhibitory effect with 22.6 ± 1.3% (leaf) and 25.3 ± 3.3% (stem) inhibition at 7.8 | (i) n/a | [ |
| (ii) Aldose reductase inhibitory effect, IC50 at 1.2, 1.5, and 0.8 | (ii) Canangaterpene I | [ | |||
IC50: half maximal inhibitory concentration.
LD50: median lethal dose.
LT50: median lethal time.
ED50: median effective dose.
n/a: not available.
The antimicrobial activities screening of different C. odorata extracts.
| Plant part | Extracts | Pathogens tested | Screening assay | Reference |
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| Bark | n/a | Gram-positive bacteria | Disc diffusion assay | [ |
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| Gram-negative bacteria | ||||
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| Gram-positive bacteria | Well diffusion assay | [ | |
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| Fungi | ||||
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| Ethyl acetate | Gram-positive bacteria | [ | ||
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| Fungi | ||||
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| Ethanolic | Gram-positive bacteria | [ | ||
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| Fungi | ||||
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| Ethanolic | Protozoan parasite |
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| Cyclohexane |
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| Methylene chloride | ||||
| Methanolic | ||||
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| Whole plant | Essential oils | Gram-positive bacteria | Disc diffusion assay | [ |
| Methicillin-resistant | ||||
| Gram-positive bacteria | [ | |||
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| Gram-negative bacteria | ||||
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| Fungi | [ | |||
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| Leaf | Methanolic | Gram-positive bacteria | Well diffusion assay | [ |
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| Gram-negative bacteria | ||||
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| Fungi | ||||
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| Protozoan parasite |
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| Petroleum ether | Gram-positive bacteria | Well diffusion assay | [ | |
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| Gram-negative bacteria | ||||
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| Fungi | ||||
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| Chloroform | Gram-positive bacteria | Well diffusion assay | [ | |
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| Gram-negative bacteria | ||||
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| Fungi | ||||
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| Ethanolic | Protozoan parasite |
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| Cyclohexane |
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| Methylene chloride | ||||
n/a: not available.