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Composition and Biological Activity of Picea pungens and Picea orientalis Seed and Cone Essential Oils
Authors:Anna Wajs‐Bonikowska  Łukasz Szoka  Ewa Karna  Anna Wiktorowska‐Owczarek  Monika Sienkiewicz
Institution:1. Institute of General Food Chemistry, Biotechnology and Food Sciences, Lodz University of Technology, ?ód?;2. Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Medical University of Bialystok, Bia?ystok;3. Pharmacology and Toxicology Department, Medical University of Lodz, ?ód?;4. Department of Allergology and Respiratory Rehabilitation, Medical University of Lodz, ?ód?
Abstract:The increasing consumption of natural products lead us to discover and study new plant materials, such as conifer seeds and cones, which could be easily available from the forest industry as a waste material, for their potential uses. The chemical composition of the essential oils of Picea pungens and Picea orientalis was fully characterized by GC and GC/MS methods. Seed and cone oils of both tree species were composed mainly of monoterpene hydrocarbons, among which limonene, α‐ and β‐pinene were the major, but in different proportions in the examined conifer essential oils. The levorotary form of chiral monoterpene molecules was predominant over the dextrorotary form. The composition of oils from Ppungens seeds and cones was similar, while the hydrodistilled oils of Porientalis seeds and cones differed from each other, mainly by a higher amount of oxygenated derivatives of monoterpenes and by other higher molar mass terpenes in seed oil. The essential oils showed mild antimicrobial action, however Porientalis cone oil exhibited stronger antimicrobial properties against tested bacterial species than those of Ppungens. Effects of the tested cone essential oils on human skin fibroblasts and microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC‐1) were similar: in a concentration of 0 – 0.075 μl/ml the oils were rather safe for human skin fibroblasts and 0 – 0.005 μl/ml for HMEC‐1 cells. IC50 value of Picea pungens oils was 0.115 μl/ml, while that of Picea orientalis was 0.105 μl/ml. The value of IC50 of both oils were 0.035 μl/ml for HMEC‐1 cells. The strongest effect on cell viability had the oil from Picea orientalis cones, while on DNA synthesis the oil from Picea pungens cones.
Keywords:   Picea pungens        Picea orientalis     Spruce  Essential oils
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