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  4. Components from Sri Lankan Piper betle L. leaf oil and their analogues showing toxicity against the housefly, Musca domestica
 
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Components from Sri Lankan Piper betle L. leaf oil and their analogues showing toxicity against the housefly, Musca domestica

Auteur(s)
Mohottalage, Susantha
Tabacchi, Raffaele 
Institut de chimie 
Guerin, Patrick 
Institut de biologie 
Date de parution
2007
In
Flavour and Fragrance Journal
Vol.
2
No
22
De la page
130
A la page
138
Mots-clés
  • Piper betle L.
  • leaf essential oil composition
  • Musca domestica
  • safrole
  • isosafrole
  • dihydrosafrole
  • insecticidal activity
  • LC50
  • H-1-NMR
  • C-13-NMR
  • PHYTOCHEMISTRY
  • TENEBRIONIDAE
  • COLEOPTERA
  • Piper betle L.

  • leaf essential oil co...

  • Musca domestica

  • safrole

  • isosafrole

  • dihydrosafrole

  • insecticidal activity...

  • LC50

  • H-1-NMR

  • C-13-NMR

  • PHYTOCHEMISTRY

  • TENEBRIONIDAE

  • COLEOPTERA

Résumé
The essential oil extracted from Piper betle L. leaf using pilot plant steam distillation was tested against the adult housefly, Musca domestica, for insecticidal activity. LC50 values at the end of 24 and 48 h exposure periods were 10.3 and 8.7 mg/dm(3), respectively. Ceylon citronella oil (Cymbopogon nardus) used as a standard showed LC(50)s of 26.5 and 24.2 mg/dm(3) for the same exposure periods. Bioassay-guided fractionation of P. betle leaf oil revealed safrole and eugenol as the active principles against M. domestica, safrole showing LC50 values of 4.8 and 4.7 mg/dm(3), and eugenol 7.3 and 6.2 mg/dm(3) for the 24 and 48 h exposure periods, respectively, while citronellal (synthetic standard) showed equal LC50 values of 14.3 mg/dm(3) for the same exposure periods. Using safrole as the starting compound, eight analogues were prepared to study structure-activity relationships. Among the eight analogues, dihydrosafrole gave almost equal mortality at LC50 4.7 mg/dm(3) as that of the parent compound safrole after 24 and 48 h exposure, but isosafrole was twice as active as safrole, showing LC50 values of 2.3 and 2.2 mg/dm(3) for the 24 and 48 h exposure periods. Our GC-MS studies on Sri Lankan P. betle leaf oil show that it contains safrole (52.7%), allyllpyrocatechol diacetate (15.4%), eugenol (6.4%) and eugenyl acetate (5.8%) as the major components. Here we also present the GC-MS profile of fractions of Sri Lankan P. betle leaf oil. Copyright (c) 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/12602
Type de publication
journal article
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