Abstract

Plants of the genus Chaenomeles Lindl. (Rosaceae) naturally grow in Southeast Asia and represent the richest resource of biologically active compounds with beneficial properties for humans. Plants of C. japonica (Thunb.) Lindl. and C. speciosa (Sweet) Nakai species, and interspecific hybrid C. × superba (Frahm) Rehder (C. japonica × C. speciosa, Superba group) have been successfully introduced in the steppe zone of Ukraine and bear fruits. In this study, we evaluated chemical composition of fruit cuticular waxes and antimicrobial activity of fruit extracts. The soluble waxes were characterized using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), and 26–36 compounds, representing 91.7–96.6% of the total soluble cuticular waxes, were identified. Waxes of Chaenomeles fruits belonged to six classes, namely fatty acids, alcohols, aldehydes, esters, ethers and alkanes. Aldehydes 7-hexadecenal and heptacosanal, and alkanes hexatriacontane and tetrapentacontane were the main constituents in the soluble cuticular waxes of C. speciosa and C. × superba fruits, accounting for more than half of the total contents. However, alkane tetrapentacontane, alcohol 8,10-hexadecadien-1-ol and heptacosanal prevailed in C. japonica fruit waxes. Isopropanolic fruit extracts exhibited dose-dependent antimicrobial activity against four Gram-negative bacteria, five Gram-positive bacteria and one fungal strain in the disc diffusion assay. In general, extracts from the Chaenomeles fruits demonstrated higher activity against Gram+ bacteria than Gram- strains. The strongest inhibiting activity was shown against Staphylococcus epidermidis (by the fruit extracts of C. × superba and C. speciosa), Micrococcus lysodeikticus and Candida albicans (both by C. × superba fruit extract). Results of the study confirmed accumulation of the bioactive compounds in the fruit waxes of different Chaenomeles species and antimicrobial ability of Chaenomeles fruits as well. These findings revealed the bioactive compounds in fruit cuticular waxes and suggested health-promoting properties of introduced Chaenomeles species.

Highlights

  • Genus Chaenomeles Lindley (Rosaceae) consist of five species originated in Southern-East Asia, namely C. speciosa, C. sinensis, and C. thibetica which are the endemics in China, and C. cathayensis and C. japonica (Yang et al, 2015)

  • Gas chromatography – mass spectrometry assays showed a similar distribution of phytochemicals on the chromatograms of chloroformic extracts of the soluble cuticular waxes from the fruits of three different Chaenomeles species (Fig. 1)

  • The compounds of fruit cuticular waxes of all studied plant species were classified into six chemical classes, namely fatty acids, aldehydes, alcohols, alkanes, esters, and ethers

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Summary

Introduction

Genus Chaenomeles Lindley (Rosaceae) consist of five species originated in Southern-East Asia, namely C. speciosa, C. sinensis, and C. thibetica which are the endemics in China, and C. cathayensis and C. japonica (Yang et al, 2015). Miao et al (2016) represented two common Chaenomeles fruits in China (C. speciosa and C. sinensis) as a rich resource of phenolic acids (vanillic, gallic, chlorogenic, ferulic and pcoumaric acids), triterpenes (oleanolic and ursolic acids), flavonoids (rutin, catechin and epicatechin) and other compounds contributing to high antioxidant capacity of Chaenomeles fruits. Urbanaviciute et al (2020) tested different extraction conditions for the fruits of the new Japanese quince (C. japonica) cultivars by studying variability of phenolic compounds and free radical scavenging activity of plant extracts, in which isoquercitrin, rutin, (+)-catechin, (–)-epicatechin, and chlorogenic acid were identified. The leaf extracts of the same C. japonica new cultivars can efficiently reduce glioblastoma cell viability while preserving non-cancerous cells, and are worth further investigations as potential anticancer drugs (Zvikas et al, 2021)

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