As a continuation of our study on plants of the Sapindaceae, the chemical composition of the oil extracted from seeds of Allophylus natalensis (Sonder) De Winter and of A. dregeanus (Sonder) De Winter has been investigated. The oil from both species contained approximately equal amounts of TAG and type I cyanolipids (CL), 1-cyano-2-hydroxymethylprop-2-en-1-ol-diesters, with minor amounts of type III CL, 1-cyano-2-hydroxymethylprop-2-en-1-ol-diesters. Structural investigation of the oil components was accomplished by chemical, chromatographic (TLC, CC, GC, and GC-MS), and spectroscopic (IR, NMR) means. GC and GC-MS analysis showed that C-20 FA were dominant in the CL components of the oil from the two species (44-80% vs. 21-26% in TAG), with cis-11-eicosenoic acid (36-46%) and cis 13-eicosenoic acid (paullinic acid, 23-37%) as the major esterified fatty acyl chains in A. natalensis and A. dregeanus, respectively. cis-Vaccenic acid was particularly abundant (11-31%) in the CL from A. dregeanus, whereas eicosanoic acid (10-22%) was also a major component of CL in both species.
Cyanolipid-rich seed oils from Allophylus natalensis and A. dregeanus
AVATO, Pinarosa;
2005-01-01
Abstract
As a continuation of our study on plants of the Sapindaceae, the chemical composition of the oil extracted from seeds of Allophylus natalensis (Sonder) De Winter and of A. dregeanus (Sonder) De Winter has been investigated. The oil from both species contained approximately equal amounts of TAG and type I cyanolipids (CL), 1-cyano-2-hydroxymethylprop-2-en-1-ol-diesters, with minor amounts of type III CL, 1-cyano-2-hydroxymethylprop-2-en-1-ol-diesters. Structural investigation of the oil components was accomplished by chemical, chromatographic (TLC, CC, GC, and GC-MS), and spectroscopic (IR, NMR) means. GC and GC-MS analysis showed that C-20 FA were dominant in the CL components of the oil from the two species (44-80% vs. 21-26% in TAG), with cis-11-eicosenoic acid (36-46%) and cis 13-eicosenoic acid (paullinic acid, 23-37%) as the major esterified fatty acyl chains in A. natalensis and A. dregeanus, respectively. cis-Vaccenic acid was particularly abundant (11-31%) in the CL from A. dregeanus, whereas eicosanoic acid (10-22%) was also a major component of CL in both species.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.