| Literature DB >> 29534498 |
Noura S Dosoky1, William N Setzer2,3.
Abstract
Conradina (Lamiaceae) is a small genus of native United States (US) species limited to Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee and Kentucky. Three species of Conradina are federally listed as endangered and one is threatened while two are candidates for listing as endangered. The purpose of the present review is to highlight the recent advances in current knowledge on Conradina species and to compile reports of chemical constituents that characterize and differentiate between Conradina species.Entities:
Keywords: Conradina; antileishmanial; antimicrobial; cytotoxicity; essential oil; phylogenetic analysis; ursolic acid
Year: 2018 PMID: 29534498 PMCID: PMC5874608 DOI: 10.3390/plants7010019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Locations of known populations of Conradina species.
Morphological characteristics of Conradina species.
| Species | Morphological Characteristics | References |
|---|---|---|
| Small shrub, up to 1 m high. Leaves are 7 to 20 mm long, mostly longer than the internodes. Leaf blades are pubescent on both sides. One to three flowers per axil, lower corolla-lip 8–10-mm long; lateral lobes longer than wide. Calyx-tube hirsute or villiou-hirsute. | [ | |
| Small shrub, up to 1 m high. Leaves are short fleshy 6.0 to 8.2 mm long, mostly shorter than the internodes, covered with short downy hairs and many tiny glands on the upper side. One to six lavender flowers per axil. | [ | |
| Straight slender shrub, about 1.5 m high. Leaves have hairy, veiny, glandular blades 1.5–3 cm long and 3–9 mm wide with tightly rolled edges. Three to seven flowers per axil. Pink to lavender in color with darker dotted lower petal. | [ | |
| Small shrub, about 80 cm high but some individuals reach up to 2 m. Leaves are opposite, up to 1.5 cm long, hairless on the upper surface. Two to three flowers per axil. Corolla is 1.5–2 cm long, white to pale lavender in color with a band of purple dots on the lower lip. | [ | |
| Erect shrub, 1.5–2.0 m high, with hairy branches and twigs. Leaves are hairy, glandular, up to 1.5 cm long. Year-round hairy lavender flowers with darker lavender spots, lower lip is 12–15 mm long with lateral lobes longer than wide. This species has the largest flowers of genus | [ | |
| Erect shrub, 0.5 m high with reclining branches. Leaves are about 2.5 cm long, very narrow, and arranged in tight bunches that appear as whorls around the stems. Flowers are 2.5 cm long, purple to white and borne in leaf-like clusters of bracts at the ends of the stems. | [ | |
| Short shrub less than 0.5 m high with diffuse branches. Leaves are narrowly linear, 5–16 mm long. Leaf blades are glabrous on the upper surface. Minute flowers with corolla 3.5–4 mm long. Calyx-tube hirsutulous. | [ | |
| Short shrub of about 0.5 m high with numerous slender branches. Leaves are narrowly linear but strongly revolute and clavate, 12–20 mm long. Calyx-tube minutely canescent, 5–7 mm long. Flowers appear in racemes of 2–6 per axil, with corolla 4–5 mm long. | [ | |
| Virgate shrub up to 1 m high, branches are erect to spreading, internodes 5–43 mm long. Leaves persistent, appearing fascicled- verticillate; narrowly obovate, 9–33 mm long. The abaxial leaf surface is densely-covered by simple unicellular hairs. Cymes carry 1–5 subsessile flowers, densely pubescent, 1.3–12.5 mm long. Large calyx of 8.5–11 mm long; densely covered with simple hairs, upper lip upcurved, 3.6–4.4 mm long, lower lip 4.3–5.5 mm long. Corolla strongly bilabiate, 20–29 mm long, lavender, shading to white in throat, with purple spots; abaxial surface of upper lip darker lavender. | [ |
a C. brevifolia and C. puberula are sometimes treated as synonyms to C. canescens, b C. montana is sometimes thought as a synonym to C. verticillata.
Chemical composition of essential oils of Conradina species.
| Species | Major Oil Components (%) | Unique Component(s) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Camphor (9.7–17.54%) and 1,8-cineole (1.97–4.86%) | α- and β-farnesene | [ | |
| Camphor (0.27–23.64%), 1,8-cineole (0.17–3.34%), cis-pinocamphone (0–8.74%) | none | [ | |
| 1,8-cineole (5.2–25.2%), camphor (5.7–8.0%), α-pinene (3.2–5.6%), | - | [ | |
| Camphor (30.55–35.65%), limonene (3.77–6.33%), camphene (2.92–3.75%), and β-caryophyllene (2.95–6.54%) | β-elemene, 4-carene and α-terpineol | [ | |
| 1,8-cineole (2.38–7.34%) and camphor (11.78–15.88%) | Dolcymene and bornyl acetate | [ | |
| β-pinene (4.38–5.81%) and β-cubebene (1.95–6.56%) | Calarene and β-pinone | [ | |
| 1,8-cineole (3.15–3.78%) and camphor (5.81–8.35%) | Germacrene B and 2,5,6-trimethyl-1,3,6-heptatriene | [ | |
| Data not available | N/A | N/A |
a Essential oil obtained by solvent extraction, b essential oil obtained by hydrodistillation.
Figure 2Chemical structures of common components found in six species of Conradina.
Figure 3Chemical structures of nonvolatile components isolated from Conradina canescens.