Abstract

Two selected brown algae (Taonia atomaria and Padina pavonica from the family Dictyotaceae, order Dictyotales) growing in the same area (island Vis, central Adriatic Sea) were collected at the same time. Their phytochemical composition of the headspace volatile organic compounds (HS-VOCs; first time report) was determined by headspace solid-phase microextraction (HS-SPME). Hydrodistillation was applied for the isolation of their volatile oils (first report on T. atomaria volatile oil). The isolates were analyzed by gas chromatography (GC-FID) and mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The headspace and oil composition of T. atomaria were quite similar (containing germacrene D, epi-bicyclosesquiphellandrene, β-cubebene and gleenol as the major compounds). However, P. pavonica headspace and oil composition differed significantly (dimethyl sulfide, octan-1-ol and octanal dominated in the headspace, while the oil contained mainly higher aliphatic alcohols, trans-phytol and pachydictol A). Performed research contributes to the knowledge of the algae chemical biodiversity and reports an array of different compounds (mainly sesquiterpenes, diterpenes and aliphatic compounds); many of them were identified in both algae for the first time. Identified VOCs with distinctive chemical structures could be useful for taxonomic studies of related algae.

Highlights

  • Marine secondary metabolites possess outstanding structural and functional diversity related to their different metabolic pathways [1]

  • P. pavonica headspace and oil composition differed significantly

  • In order to investigate the chemical diversity of the headspace and volatile oil composition from two brown algae of the family Dictyotaceae, order Dictyotales collected from the Adriatic Sea from the same area, two complementary methods were used: headspace solid-phase microextraction (HS-SPME) and hydrodistillation (HD) followed by gas chromatography and mass spectrometry (GC-flame ionization detector (FID); GC-MS) analysis

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Marine secondary metabolites possess outstanding structural and functional diversity related to their different metabolic pathways [1]. While the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) of terrestrial plants have attracted attention since antiquity, the VOCs of marine algae have been much less investigated. The target of the present research are VOCs of two brown seaweeds from family Dictyotaceae, order Dictyotales: Taonia atomaria (Woodward) J. 1848 and Padina pavonica (Linnaeus) Thivy, 1960. T. atomaria (family Dictyotaceae, order Dictyotales, class Phaeophyceae) is a brown seaweed widespread in the Mediterranean Sea. Taondiol and atomaric acid, cyclised meroditerpenoids, were isolated from this alga collected in Canary Islands [2,3,4]. The chemical investigation of T. atomaria from

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call