Chemical transformations and phytochemical studies of bioactive components from extracts of rosmarinus officinalis L.
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Date
2010
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University of Fort Hare
Abstract
Variations in the yield, chemical composition, antibacterial, and antioxidant
properties of the essential oils of Rosmarinus officinalis L. cultivated in Alice,
Eastern Cape of South Africa over a period of 12 months using the solvent-free
microwave extraction and traditional hydrodistillation methods were evaluated.
The GC-MS analyses of the essential oils revealed the presence of 33 compounds
with 1,8-cineole, a-pinene, camphor, verbenone, bornyl acetate and
camphene constituting about 80% of the oils throughout the period of investigation,
with the solvent-free microwave extraction method generally yielding
more of the major components than the hydrodistillation method. Each of the
major components of the oils varied in quantity and quality of yield at different
periods of the year. The method of extraction and time of harvest are of importance
to the quantity and quality of essential oil of Rosmarinus officinalis.
Higher amounts of oxygenated monoterpenes such as borneol, camphor, terpene-
4-ol, linalool, a-terpeneol were present in the oil of SFME in comparison
with HD. However, HD oil contained more monoterpene hydrocarbons such as
a-pinene, camphene, β-pinene, myrcene, a-phellanderene, 1,8-cineole, trans-
β-ocimene, γ-teprinene, and cis-sabinene hydrate than SFME extracted oil. Accumulation
of monoterpene alcohols and ketones was observed during maturation
process of Rosmarinus leaves.
Quantitative evaluation of antibacterial activity, minimum inhibitory concentration
values were determined using a serial microplate dilution method. The essential oils obtained using both methods of extraction were active against all
the bacteria tested at a concentration of 10 mg mL-1. The minimum inhibitory
concentrations for the SFME extracted oils ranged between 0.23 and 1.88 mg
mL-1, while those of the HD extracted oils varied between 0.94 and 7.5 mg
mL-1, thus suggesting that the oil obtained by solvent free microwave extraction
was more active against bacteria than the oil obtained through hydrodistillation.
The antioxidant and free radical scavenging activity of the obtained oils were
tested by means of 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl radical (DPPH+) assay and β-
carotene bleaching test. In the DPPH+ assay, while the free radical scavenging
activity of the oil obtained by SFME method showed percentage inhibitions of
between 48.8 % and 67 %, the HD derived oil showed inhibitions of between
52.2 % and 65.30 % at concentrations of 0.33, 0.50 and 1.0 mg mL-1, respectively.
In the β-carotene bleaching assay, the percentage inhibition increased
with increasing concentration of both oils with a higher antioxidant activity of
the oil obtained through the SFME than the HD method.
Thin layer chromatography (TLC) was used to analyze the chemical composition
of the extracts using three eluent solvent systems of varying polarities i. e.
CEF, BEA and EMW and sprayed with vanillin-sulfuric acid. The chemical composition
of the different extracts was similar with the exception of methanol and
water extracts which had only one or two visible compounds after treating with
vanillin-spray reagent. To evaluate the number of antibacterial compounds present
in the fractions, bioautography was used against two most important nos ocomial microorganisms. S. aureus (Gram positive) and E. coli (Gram negative).
Nearly all the crude serial extraction fractions contained compounds that
inhibited the growth of E. coli. The hexane extract had the most lines of inhibition
followed by ethyl acetate.
Bioassay-guided fractionation against E. coli was used to isolate antibacterial
compounds. The largest number of antibacterial compounds occurred in the
hexane fraction. Furthermore we tried to complete the characterization by extracting
and studying other biologically important plant metabolites such as
phenolic compounds to evaluate the antioxidant capacity of Rosmarinus extracts.