Abstract
Common thyme is regarded as one of the most important culinary plants. The purpose of the work was to determine the intraspecific variability of common thyme with respect to morphological and chemical characters including the content and composition of essential oil and phenolic compounds in the herb. The objects of the study were 12 clones, vegetatively multiplied from randomly selected individual plants of cultivar ‘Standard Winter’. The morphological observations and harvest of raw materials were carried out in the first year plants’ vegetation. The highest differences between clones were on fresh and dry weight of herb (CV = 0.38 and 0.36, respectively), width of leaves (CV = 0.21), and density of glandular trichomes on the abaxial surface of leaves (CV = 0.29). Examined clones were also differentiated as to the chemical features. Essential oil content (performed by hydrodestillation) and composition (by GC-MS and GC-FID) were determined and they ranged from 2.10 to 4.38 g × 100 g−1 DW. Here, thymol, γ-terpinen, and p-cymen were the dominant compounds. Clone no. 4 was distinctive as to the highest content of essential oil followed by the highest share of thymol (54.59%). The total content of phenolic acids and flavonoids (determined according to PPh 6th) also differed among clones (CV = 0.38 and 0.36, respectively). Using a validated HPLC-DAD method, the following compounds were identified: caffeic, rosmarinic, p-coumaric acids, luteolin 7-O-glucoside, naryngenin, and (−)-epicatechin. Here, rosmarinic acid followed by luteolin 7-O-glucoside were present in the highest amounts (611.47–2675.59 and 46.77–325.11 mg × 100 g−1 DW, respectively). The highest differences between clones were the contents of p-coumaric acid (CV = 0.59), luteolin 7-O-glucoside (CV = 0.50) and rosmarinic acid (CV = 0.40). Such a high range of variability can provide problems with raw material standardization. Nevertheless, it opens possibilities for breeders, whereas individual plants/clones may become valuable components for breeding.
Highlights
The genus Thymus, one of the most important taxon of the Lamiaceae family, is widely distributed in the Old World, with the center of origin located in the Mediterranean region
The object of the study were 12 clones of common thyme, vegetatively multiplied from individual plants selected within the cultivar
Investigated clones differed in respect of morphological traits
Summary
The genus Thymus, one of the most important taxon of the Lamiaceae family, is widely distributed in the Old World, with the center of origin located in the Mediterranean region. T. vulgaris (common thyme) is regarded to be the most valuable species of the genus. This aromatic, perennial subshrub is cultivated all over the world, and used both as a spice and a medicine. The species creates different chemotypes distinguished on the bases of the dominant compound in the essential oil. Listed chemotypes are created on the bases of one biosynthetic pathway, where dominant monoterpens are the final products of its various branches. Such a terpenic polymorphism is under strong genetic control, where an epistatic series of five loci are involved [12,13]
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