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Identification of volatile compounds in thinning discards from plum trees (Prunus salicina Lindl.) cultivar Harry Pickstone

Identificação de compostos voláteis de frutos de raleio de ameixeira (Prunus salicina Lindl.) cultivar Harry Pickstone

Abstracts

Plum (Prunus salicina Lindl. cv. Harry Pickstone), a China indigenous fruit, is widely produced and consumed in countries such as Japan and Brazil. The practice of thinning is common in horticulture and the fruits removed are discarded as waste. Like the great majority of vegetables, these thinning discards also contain essential oils which have not been investigated until the present time. The extraction of the plum thinning discards volatile oil, through the hydrodistillation method, produced a yield of 0.06% (m/m) and a total of 21 components were identified, with 11 of them being responsible for 72,9% of the total oil composition. The major compounds determined through GC and GC-MS were Z-α-bisabolene (13.7%), n-hexadecanoic acid (12.7%), phytol (12.7%), and β-caryophyllene (10.4%).

plum; thinning; essential oils


A ameixa (Prunus salicina Lindl. cv. Harry Pickstone), originária da China, é amplamente produzida e consumida em países como o Japão e o Brasil. A prática do raleio é comum na fruticultura e as frutas que são removidas são descartadas como resíduo. Como a grande maioria dos vegetais, estes frutos de raleio também contêm óleos essenciais; porém, eles não foram investigados. A extração do óleo volátil de ameixa de raleio, pelo método de hidrodestilação, obteve rendimento de 0,06% (m/m) e um total de 21 componentes foram identificados, dos quais 11 são responsáveis por 72,9% da composição total do óleo. Os principais componentes determinados por CG-DIC e CG-EM foram Z-α-bisaboleno (13,7%), ácido n-hexadecanoico (12,7%), fitol (12,7%) e β-cariofileno (10,4%).

ameixa; raleio; óleos essenciais


ORIGINAL PAPERS

Identification of volatile compounds in thinning discards from plum trees (Prunus salicina Lindl.) cultivar Harry Pickstone

Identificação de compostos voláteis de frutos de raleio de ameixeira (Prunus salicina Lindl.) cultivar Harry Pickstone

Rossana PodestáI; Cristiane Manfé PagliosaII; Manoela Alano VieiraII; João Gustavo ProvesiII; Edna Regina AmanteII, * * Corresponding author ; Ana Lúcia Bertarello ZeniIII; Ismael RaitzIV; Ricardo Andrade RebeloIV

IDepartment of Food Engineering, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Campus Universitário, Trindade, CEP 88040-900, Florianópolis, SC, Brazil

IIDepartment of Food Science and Technology, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Rod. Admar Gonzaga, 1346, Itacorubi, CEP 88034-001, Florianópolis, SC, Brazil, e-mail: eamante@cca.ufsc.br

IIIDepartment of Natural Sciences, Regional University of Blumenau, Campus I, Rua Antônio da Veiga, 140, Victor Konder, CEP 89012-900, Blumenau, SC, Brazil

IVDepartment of Chemistry, Regional University of Blumenau, Campus I, Rua Antônio da Veiga, 140, Victor Konder, CEP 89012-900, Blumenau, SC, Brazil

ABSTRACT

Plum (Prunus salicina Lindl. cv. Harry Pickstone), a China indigenous fruit, is widely produced and consumed in countries such as Japan and Brazil. The practice of thinning is common in horticulture and the fruits removed are discarded as waste. Like the great majority of vegetables, these thinning discards also contain essential oils which have not been investigated until the present time. The extraction of the plum thinning discards volatile oil, through the hydrodistillation method, produced a yield of 0.06% (m/m) and a total of 21 components were identified, with 11 of them being responsible for 72,9% of the total oil composition. The major compounds determined through GC and GC-MS were Z-α-bisabolene (13.7%), n-hexadecanoic acid (12.7%), phytol (12.7%), and β-caryophyllene (10.4%).

Keywords: plum; thinning; essential oils.

RESUMO

A ameixa (Prunus salicina Lindl. cv. Harry Pickstone), originária da China, é amplamente produzida e consumida em países como o Japão e o Brasil. A prática do raleio é comum na fruticultura e as frutas que são removidas são descartadas como resíduo. Como a grande maioria dos vegetais, estes frutos de raleio também contêm óleos essenciais; porém, eles não foram investigados. A extração do óleo volátil de ameixa de raleio, pelo método de hidrodestilação, obteve rendimento de 0,06% (m/m) e um total de 21 componentes foram identificados, dos quais 11 são responsáveis por 72,9% da composição total do óleo. Os principais componentes determinados por CG-DIC e CG-EM foram Z-α-bisaboleno (13,7%), ácido n-hexadecanoico (12,7%), fitol (12,7%) e β-cariofileno (10,4%).

Palavras-chave: ameixa; raleio; óleos essenciais.

1 Introduction

The plum tree Prunus salicina Lindl., China indigenous, was developed in Japan for alimentary purposes. It is considered one of the most productive plum species for the climatic conditions in the south of Brazil (STEINBERG, 1990). As in the other species in the Prunus genus, manual thinning of plum trees is performed annually to assure better growth of their fruits. This process eliminates part of the fruits, sometimes even the flowers, and it seeks to improve the quality of the remaining fruits, increase their size, prevent branches from breaking, alternate pests and diseases production control, and to preserve the levels of nutrients. It also provides better formation and growth of shoots for production in the following year (FAUST, 1989). Most fruit growers remove 80 to 90% of the plants fruits. According to Augustí et al. (1999) in studies with peach trees, the best effects of thinning are achieved when 60 to 80% of the fruits are eliminated. Such procedure is very costly and it generates thinning discards, which have had no commercial value so far (GONZÁLEZ-ROSSIA et al., 2006). Essential oils, also referred to as volatile oils, are mixtures of several compounds, such as terpene hydrocarbons, alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, phenols, esters, lactones, among others (SIMÕES; SPITZER, 2004). The interest in volatile compounds is increasing because they greatly influence the flavour and aroma of foods (FLAMINI; TEBANO; CIONI, 2008). Even when in small concentrations in vegetables, they have multiple applications which justify such great interest in different fields, such as the chemical, pharmaceutical, and food industries (WANNES; MHAMDI; MARZOUK, 2009). Like the great majority of vegetables, the thinning discards also contain essential oils; however, they have not been investigated until the present moment. Thus, this study is the first to propose investigation of the composition of essential oils in the thinning discards from plum trees (Prunus salicina Lindl.).

2 Materials and methods

2.1 Plant material

After 45 days of floration, thinning discards from the plum tree Prunus salicina Lindl. cv. Harry Pickstone (crop of 2007) were collected manually and randomly in four orchards in Frei Rogério, State of Santa Catarina, Brazil, following the thinning procedures adopted by local fruit growers. The samples collected from the four orchards were mixed (pool), frozen in a freezer (Frigostrela, model PF-5) at - 40 °C, packaged in airtight plastic bags and aluminium packed, they were then stored at - 20 °C and submitted to hydrodistilation and analysis in GC-MS.

2.2 Extraction of essential oil

The samples (500 g of vegetable material) were placed in a 600 mL round bottom flask with 2,000 mL of distilled water and adapted to a modified Clevenger-type apparatus (GOTTLIEB; MAGALHÃES, 1960). The hydrodistillation was carried out for 3 hours under nitrogen atmosphere. The steam distillates were extracted 3 times with 10 mL of bi-distilled dichloromethane. A small fraction of water in the combined organic phase was removed by the addition of a small amount of anhydrous magnesium sulphate, which was removed by filtration. The volatiles were then concentrated by evaporating dichloromethane with nitrogen gas. The yields were calculated based on the dry weight of the plant materials (JANTAN et al., 2005; REHMAN et al., 2008).

2.3 Identification of volatile compounds

The GC-FID (Gas Chromatography - Flame Ionization Detector) was performed using a Shimadzu 14-B gas chromatograph with a capillary column (Simplicity-1/Supelco, 30 m × 0.25 mm i.d. × 0.25 µm film thickness). The following analytical conditions were employed: sample injection (0.5 µL); carrier gas helium at 100 kPa constant pressure, flow rate 1 mL/minute; split mode; injector temperature 220 °C; and FID 240 °C. The oven temperature was programmed from 60 °C (0 minute) to 195 °C at 3 °C minute gradient, it was then increased at a rate of 20 °C minute from 195 to 235 °C, which was held for 30 minutes. The components quantification was based on their GC peak areas, with no correction for response factors. The qualitative analysis was conducted in a Varian CP-3800 gas chromatograph equipped with a Saturn 2000 mass selective detector set at 70 eV and with a capillary column (CP-Sil 8 CB, 30 m × 0.25 mm i.d. × 0.25 µm film thickness). The operation conditions were the same as previously described. The components identification was made through computer library search based on the matching of MS spectra (NIST 2002), comparison with literature data (ADAMS, 2007) and experimental arithmetic indices (AI) calculated according to Dool and Kratz equation (1963), with reference to an homologous series of n-alkanes (C10-C25) analyzed under the same GC-FID conditions described above.

3 Results and discussion

Through hydrodistillation, the average yield of the essential oil in dry weight basis was 0.06% (m/m). Twenty one compounds were identified in the essential oil of thinning discards from Prunus salicina Lindl. cv. Harry Pickstone; 11 of these compounds made up approximately 72.9% of the essential oil - shown in Table 1, with their respective arithmetic indices (AI). Satisfactory correlation was observed for the calculated AI and the literature values (ADAMS, 2007), providing an efficient tool to discriminate between isomeric sesquiterpenes with similar mass spectra. The major compounds found were Z-α-bisabolene (13.7%), phytol (12.7%), n-hexadecanoic acid (12.7%), and β-caryophyllene (10.4%). Utsunomiya et al. (2005), analysed barks of the Japanese apricot tree Prunus mume and also reported Z-α-bisabolene (7.49%) among its major compounds.

The presence of a compound corresponding to 3.6% of the sample, with a mass spectrum presenting a mass/charge ratio of 149 (base peak, C8H5O3), can be related to a phthalate derivative (SILVERSTEIN; WEBSTER; KIEMLE, 2007). Alkyl phthalates are common plasticizers for polyvinyl chloride and are also employed as addictive in oil machinery (DI BELLA et al., 2004); therefore, they are both considered sources of contamination.

In a certain species, the concentration of each one of the compounds of its volatile oil can vary during the development of the vegetable (SIMÕES; SPITZER, 2004). This fact hinders a comparison between the thinning discards and the ripe fruits of plums of the same species. Besides, there are few studies involving the investigation of volatile compounds of Prunus salicina Lindl. Lozano et al. (2008) stated that cultivars of Japanese plums showed a relatively small number of volatile compounds when compared to other members of the Prunus genus, such as peach and nectarine. Other works found several compounds with six carbons (C6) in ripe plums, such as hexanol, hexanal, and their esters, which are important in the aroma of the fruit (HORVAT et al., 1992; GOMEZ; LEDBETTER; HARTSELL, 1993; LOZANO et al., 2008). The presence of C6 compounds may happen because of the activity of the lipoxygenase enzyme on the linoleic and linolenic acids, which make up the lipid membrane (HATANAKA, 1993). These compounds were found in small amount in the essential oil of thinning discards from plum trees. Such fact is probably related to the fruit maturation stage, because the process of flavour and aroma formation is dynamic and it increases during the more advanced stages of maturation through a series of biochemical processes that lead to the generation of volatile compounds (PEREZ et al., 1992; GOMEZ; LEDBETTER, 1997).

The predominant chemotype in the oil analyzed was characterized by its terpene compounds, with distinction for the sesquiterpenes, many of which being of great interest to cosmetics and foods. Researches show that volatile oils with high levels of sesquiterpenes show antifungal and antibacterial activities (CHENG et al., 2004; CHENG; LIN; CHANG, 2005; CAKIR et al., 2005; VALERO; FRANCES, 2006). The presence of naphthalene derivatives is also described in other studies involving essential oil of ripe plums, and it can indicate possible fungistatic potential (ISMAIL; WILLIAMS; TUCKNOTT, 1981; GOMEZ; LEDBETTER; HARTSELL, 1993). In spite of their occurrence in all the regions where plum is produced, the thinning discards (Prunus salicina Lindl. Cv. Harry Pickstone) are fruits that are considered to have no economical value and correspond to about 90% of the unripe fruits.

4 Conclusions

The essential oil of thinning discards differs from the oil extracted from ripe fruits due to the prevalence of sesquiterpenes in the former, with possible antimicrobial potential - a fact that must be investigated in further studies. Besides its other properties, there are also possible applications for this essential oil in the chemical, pharmaceutical and nutrition industries, enabling the conversion of these solid residues from orchards into raw material for ingredients with high added value.

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to the Federal University of Santa Catarina, the Regional University of Blumenau, and to the Japanese community in Frei Rogerio, State of Santa Catarina, Brazil.

Received 7/11/2009

Accepted 5/6/2010 (004509)

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  • *
    Corresponding author
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      21 Oct 2011
    • Date of issue
      Sept 2011

    History

    • Accepted
      05 June 2010
    • Received
      07 Nov 2009
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