Phytochemical investigation of alpine plants : the cottonsedges Eriophorum scheuchzeri Hoppe, E. angustifolium Honck. and E. latifolium Hoppe (CYPERACEAE)

Résumé: Alpine plants living at high altitudes undergo a series of climatic stress factors (chilling, enhanced UV radiation, short growing season, low nutriment supply.) which may influence their secondary compounds composition. Many publications showed in these last years that plants under stress c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Maver, M.
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Université de Lausanne, Faculté des sciences 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://serval.unil.ch/notice/serval:BIB_CDD96B001597
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Summary:Résumé: Alpine plants living at high altitudes undergo a series of climatic stress factors (chilling, enhanced UV radiation, short growing season, low nutriment supply.) which may influence their secondary compounds composition. Many publications showed in these last years that plants under stress conditions do synthesize a range of specific defence compounds (terpenes, flavonoids, coumarines.). A careful phytochemical investigation of those plants could therefore lead to the discovery of active molecules. Thus, for the biological and chemical screening, about 30 alpine plants have been collected above 2000 metres, in the alpine grass-lands. Eriophorum scheuchzeri Hoppe (Cyperaceae), not yet investigated phytochemically, revealed in its lipophilic and polar extracts the presence of various radical scavengers in a TLC autography with the DPPH (2,2-dipheny1-1- picrylhydrazyl) radical as spray reagent, as well as several antifungal compounds acitve against Cladosporium cucumerinum and Candida albi cans. The first part of this study consisted in the detection, isolation and characterization of the bioactive natural compounds present in the lipophilic extract of Eriophorum scheuchzeri. Among the eight isolated compounds, six were isoflavones. No isoflavones have been reported in the Cyperaceae family yet, nor in related families such as Poaceae or Juncaceae. Besides, isoflavones are generally rare in the plant kingdom and and they occur only in some families, such as Fabaceae, Rosaceae or Myristicaceae. In addition, out of these six isoflavones, three were new isoflavones. The known compounds were parvisoflavone A and B and cajanin which are already known isoflavones in the Fabaceae family. Two of the new isoflavones were particular, as they were C-methylated on the B-ring at the C-3' position. Methylated flavonoids are particularly rare in the plant kingdom. At present, no C-methylated isoflavones with methyl groups on the B-ring have ever been reported. The fourth new compound was a prenylated flavanone. Flavanones ...