4.6 Article

Volatiles Profiling in Medicinal Licorice Roots Using Steam Distillation and Solid-Phase Microextraction (SPME) Coupled to Chemometrics

期刊

JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE
卷 77, 期 11, 页码 C1179-C1184

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1750-3841.2012.02927.x

关键词

essential oil; GC/MS; Glycyrrhiza glabra L.; Glycyrrhiza inflata L.; Glycyrrhiza echinata L.

资金

  1. Alexander von Humboldt-foundation, Germany

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Licorice (Glycyrrhiza glabra L.) is a plant of considerable commercial importance in traditional medicine and for the flavor and sweets industry. Although Glycyrrhiza species are very competitive targets for phytochemical studies, very little is known about the volatiles composition within that genus, although such knowledge can be suspected to be relevant for understanding the olfactory and taste properties. To provide insight into Glycyrrhiza species aroma composition and for its use in food and pharmaceutical industry, volatile constituents from G. glabra, G. inflata, and G. echinata roots were profiled using steam distillation and solid-phase microextraction. Two phenols, thymol and carvacrol, were found exclusively in essential oil and headspace samples of G. glabra, and with highest amounts for samples that originated from Egypt. In G. echinata oil, (2E, 4E)-decadienal (21%) and beta-caryophyllene oxide (24%) were found as main constituents, whereas 1 alpha, 10 alpha-epoxyamorpha-4-ene (13%) and beta-dihydroionone (8%) predominated G. inflata. Principal component and hierarchical cluster analyses clearly separated G. echinata and G. inflata from G. glabra; with phenolics and aliphatic aldehydes contributing mostly for species segregation.

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