4.7 Article

Wax Composition of Serbian Dianthus spp. (Caryophyllaceae): Identification of New Metabolites and Chemotaxonomic Implications

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants12112094

Keywords

Dianthus; wax; branched long-chain benzoates; beta-diketones; triacontane-14,16-dione; dotriacontane-14,16-dione; tetratriacontane-16,18-dione; eicosyl tiglate; 30-methylhentriacontan-1-ol; chemotaxonomy

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GC-MS analysis, synthesis, and chemical transformations were used to identify 275 constituents of Dianthus species and one Petrorhagia taxon from Serbia, including 17 completely new compounds. Multivariate statistical analysis revealed that the chemical profile of Dianthus taxa's surface waxes is influenced by both genetic and ecological factors, with ecological factors playing a more important role in the studied samples.
Although ethnopharmacologically renowned, wax constituents of Dianthus species were sporadically studied. A combination of GC-MS analysis, synthesis, and chemical transformations enabled the identification of 275 constituents of diethyl-ether washings of aerial parts and/or flowers of six Dianthus taxa (Dianthus carthusianorum, D. deltoides, D. giganteus subsp. banaticus, D. integer subsp. minutiflorus, D. petraeus, and D. superbus) and one Petrorhagia taxon (P. prolifera) from Serbia. Seventeen of these constituents (nonacosyl benzoate, additional 12 benzoates with anteiso-branched 1-alkanols, eicosyl tiglate, triacontane-14,16-dione, dotriacontane-14,16-dione, and tetratriacontane-16,18-dione) and two additional synthesized eicosyl esters (angelate and senecioate) represent completely new compounds. The structures of the tentatively identified beta-ketones were confirmed by analysis of the mass fragmentation of the corresponding pyrazoles and silyl enol ethers obtained by transformations of crude extracts and extract fractions. Silylation allowed the identification of 114 additional constituents, including a completely new natural product (30-methylhentriacontan-1-ol). The results obtained by multivariate statistical analyses showed that the chemical profile of Dianthus taxa's surface waxes is subject to both genetic and ecological factors, whereas the latter seemingly takes a more important role for the studied Dianthus samples.

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