Chemical composition and antimicrobial evaluation of Achillea aucheri essential oil
Background and objectives: The majority of the Achillea spp. are used as medicinal plants with therapeutic applications worldwide. Achillea aucheri was selected in our study to assess its essential oil chemical composition along with antimicrobial evaluation. Methods: The essential oil of A. aucheri...
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Iranian Society of Pharmacognosy
2017-11-01
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doaj-347ece55db9044bdbc02b14f0fe5610a2020-11-24T23:30:23ZengIranian Society of PharmacognosyResearch Journal of Pharmacognosy2345-44582345-59772017-11-014Supplement11611653364Chemical composition and antimicrobial evaluation of Achillea aucheri essential oilBackground and objectives: The majority of the Achillea spp. are used as medicinal plants with therapeutic applications worldwide. Achillea aucheri was selected in our study to assess its essential oil chemical composition along with antimicrobial evaluation. Methods: The essential oil of A. aucheri achieved through hydrodistillation, was analyzed via gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Afterwards, the microbial growth inhibitory property of the A. aucheri essential oil was determined using the agar disk-diffusion method against five Gram-positive strains (Staphylococus aureus, Staphylococus epidermidis, Micrococcus luteus, Bacillus subtilis, Bacillus cereus), three Gram-negative bacteria (Eschrichia coli, Psedumonas aeruginosa, Salmonella typhi) and a fungus (Candida albicans). Besides, minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of the sensitive strains were determined by broth dilution method to evaluate the inhibitory properties.Results: The GC-MS analysis, allowed us to identify 28 compounds, representing 98.1% of the total essential oil. The main components of the oil were identified as α-thujone (45.6%), artemisia alcohol (26.5%) and yomogi alcohol (8.8%). The findings of the antimicrobial assay indicated that S. aureus was the most sensitive strain with the strongest inhibition zone of 31.5 ± 0.5 and MIC of 2.5 % v/v, followed by S. epidermidis and M. luteus, respectively.Conclusion: Overall, A. aucheri essential oil possessed potential antibacterial and antioxidant activities that could be attributed to the high content of oxygenated monoterpenes present in the oil which requisite for further exploration of the compounds in charge, considering the growing statistics of bacterial resistance worldwide.http://www.rjpharmacognosy.ir/article_53364_84759ae0c1610b3c0ea317a205f34ce6.pdfasteraceaemonoterpenoidsα-thujone |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
title |
Chemical composition and antimicrobial evaluation of Achillea aucheri essential oil |
spellingShingle |
Chemical composition and antimicrobial evaluation of Achillea aucheri essential oil Research Journal of Pharmacognosy asteraceae monoterpenoids α-thujone |
title_short |
Chemical composition and antimicrobial evaluation of Achillea aucheri essential oil |
title_full |
Chemical composition and antimicrobial evaluation of Achillea aucheri essential oil |
title_fullStr |
Chemical composition and antimicrobial evaluation of Achillea aucheri essential oil |
title_full_unstemmed |
Chemical composition and antimicrobial evaluation of Achillea aucheri essential oil |
title_sort |
chemical composition and antimicrobial evaluation of achillea aucheri essential oil |
publisher |
Iranian Society of Pharmacognosy |
series |
Research Journal of Pharmacognosy |
issn |
2345-4458 2345-5977 |
publishDate |
2017-11-01 |
description |
Background and objectives: The majority of the Achillea spp. are used as medicinal plants with therapeutic applications worldwide. Achillea aucheri was selected in our study to assess its essential oil chemical composition along with antimicrobial evaluation. Methods: The essential oil of A. aucheri achieved through hydrodistillation, was analyzed via gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Afterwards, the microbial growth inhibitory property of the A. aucheri essential oil was determined using the agar disk-diffusion method against five Gram-positive strains (Staphylococus aureus, Staphylococus epidermidis, Micrococcus luteus, Bacillus subtilis, Bacillus cereus), three Gram-negative bacteria (Eschrichia coli, Psedumonas aeruginosa, Salmonella typhi) and a fungus (Candida albicans). Besides, minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of the sensitive strains were determined by broth dilution method to evaluate the inhibitory properties.Results: The GC-MS analysis, allowed us to identify 28 compounds, representing 98.1% of the total essential oil. The main components of the oil were identified as α-thujone (45.6%), artemisia alcohol (26.5%) and yomogi alcohol (8.8%). The findings of the antimicrobial assay indicated that S. aureus was the most sensitive strain with the strongest inhibition zone of 31.5 ± 0.5 and MIC of 2.5 % v/v, followed by S. epidermidis and M. luteus, respectively.Conclusion: Overall, A. aucheri essential oil possessed potential antibacterial and antioxidant activities that could be attributed to the high content of oxygenated monoterpenes present in the oil which requisite for further exploration of the compounds in charge, considering the growing statistics of bacterial resistance worldwide. |
topic |
asteraceae monoterpenoids α-thujone |
url |
http://www.rjpharmacognosy.ir/article_53364_84759ae0c1610b3c0ea317a205f34ce6.pdf |
_version_ |
1725541369936609280 |