Flavour and Fragrance Journal

Flavour Fragr. J. 2006; 21: 222-224

Analysis of the essential oil from leaves of Croton zambesicus Muell. Arg. growing in Benin.

S. Block, G. Flamini, D. Brkic, I. Morelli, J. Quetin-Leclercq

 

The leaves of Croton zambesicus are widely used in African folk medicine as a water decoction to treat hypertension, microbial infections and fever associated with malaria. Cytotoxic trachylobane and pimarane diterpenes have been isolated from a dichloromethane extract of the leaves. In order to check whether these compounds are present in the essential oil, we have analysed its composition by GC-FID and GC-MS. The major constituents of the oil are caryophyllene oxide (19.5%), beta-caryophyllene (10.8%), alpha-copaene (6.3%), linalool (6.1%) and beta-pinene (5.2%). Only the less polar diterpenes are present in the oil: ent-trachyloban-3-one (3.0%), ent-trachyloban-3beta-ol (0.5%), isopamara-7,15-dien-3beta-ol (1.0%), ent-trachylobane (0.7%), sandaracopimaradiene (0.4%) and kaurene (2.1%).