4.7 Article

Hydrosols from Rosmarinus officinalis, Salvia officinalis, and Cupressus sempervirens: Phytochemical Analysis and Bioactivity Evaluation

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11030349

Keywords

Rosmarinus officinalis; Salvia officinalis; Cupressus sempervirens; aromatic water; hydrosol; hydrolate; fingerprinting analysis; cytotoxicity; in silico analysis

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This study evaluated the aromatic waters of rosemary, sage, and cypress and found that they have antimycotic and cytotoxic effects. The exhaustive analysis techniques used in this study provided valuable insights into the metabolite fingerprint differences of these commercial products. The results suggest that these hydrosols could be a significant source of phytochemicals with pharmacological potential.
The present work evaluates the aromatic waters of rosemary (Salvia rosmarinus Spenn. syn. Rosmarinus officinalis L.), sage (Salvia officinalis L.), and cypress (Cupressus sempervirens L.) obtained as innovative commercial products of a hydrodistillation process. All extracts were exhaustively analysed by GC-MS, H-1-NMR, and LC-MS in order to evaluate potential metabolite fingerprint differences. GC-MS appears to be the most exhaustive technique for the qualitative identification of the single constituents, although in this case, the use of H-1-NMR and LC-MS techniques allowed some useful considerations in semi-quantitative terms. Antimycotic effects were studied against Tricophyton, Candida, and Arthroderma species, resulting in weak activity. The toxicological impact was partly evaluated in vitro by means of allelopathy and brine shrimp lethality. Cytotoxicity was investigated in human colon cancer cells (HCT116) and in hypothalamic cells (Hypo-E22) challenged with hydrogen peroxide. Sage and rosemary hydrosols were the most effective antimycotics, whereas all hydrosols displayed antiradical effects. Cytotoxic effects against HCT116 cells (at 500 mu L/mL) were related in silico to the endovanilloid TRPM8 and TRPV1 receptors. At lower concentrations (5-50 mu L/mL), the hydrosols protected hypothalamic neurons Hypo-E22 cells from hydrogen peroxide-induced toxicity. The overall experience indicates that hydrolates are an important source of relevant phytochemicals with significant pharmacological potential.

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