BIOCHEMICAL SYSTEMATICS AND ECOLOGY, cilt.35, sa.9, ss.569-581, 2007 (SCI-Expanded)
The chemical composition of essential oils isolated from the aerial parts by hydrodistillation of Turkish Tanaceturn aucheranum and Tanacetum chiliophyllum var. chiliophyllun? were analyzed by GC-NIS. The Oils Contain similar major components. The major components of T. aucheranum oil were 1,8-cineole (23.8%), camphor (11.6%), terpinen-4-ol (7.2%), a-terpineol (6.5%), borneol (3.8%), (E)-thujone (3.2%), epi-alpha-cadinol (3.1%), and artemisia ketone (3.0%). Camphor (17.9%),1,8-cineole (16.6%) and borneol (15.4%) were found to be predominant constituents in the oil of T. chiliophyllum. It is interesting to find that ester derivatives of dihydro-alpha-cyclogeranic acid (2,2,6-trimethylcyclohexylcarboxylate), dihydro-alpha-cyclogeranyl hexanoate (10.1%), dihydro-alpha-cyclogeranyl pentanoate (3.0%), dihydro-a-cyclogeranyl butanoate (2.1%) and dihydro-alpha-cyclogeranyl propionate (1.2%) are firstly found as chemotaxonomically important components in T. chiliophyllum oil. From these, dihydro-alpha-cyclogeranyl hexanoate was isolated on silica get column chromatography and its structure was confirmed by spectroscopic methods. This is the first report on the occurrence of ester derivatives of dihydro-alpha-cyclogeranic acid in essential oils of Tanacetum species. The oils were also characterized to have relatively high amounts of oxygenated monoterpenes. Results of the antifungal testing by microbial growth inhibition assays showed that the oils completely inhibit the growth of 30 phytopathogenic fungi. However, their growth inhibition effects were lower than commercial benomyl. The oils tested for antibacterial activity against 33 bacterial strains showed a considerable antibacterial activity over a wide spectrum. Herbicidal effects of the oils on seed germination of Amaranthus retroflexus, Chenopodium album and Rumex crispus were also determined and the oils completely inhibited the seed germination and seedling growth of the plants. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.