Essential oil production in shoot cultures versus field-grown plants of Thymus caespititius

2013 
Thymus caespititius Brot. is an important aromatic species, due to synthesis and production of essential oils for the pharmaceutical and food industries. In the present study, levels of essential oils from two chemotypes, including carvacrol/thymol (CT) and sabinene/carvacrol (SC), were evaluated in proliferating shoot cultures (6–12 subcultures following establishment) and compared to those from field-grown plants. The essential oils were isolated by hydrodistillation and analysed by gas chromatography (GC) and GC–mass spectrometry (GC–MS). Cultures grown under in vitro culture conditions, evaluated over six subcultures, were found to maintain stable composition of essential oils. For the CT chemotype, carvacrol (42 %) and thymol (23 %) were the main essential oil components detected in field-grown plants; in proliferating shoot cultures the levels detected attained 17–25 % in the case of carvacrol and 18–23 % in that of thymol, closely followed by carvacryl acetate (15–23 %) and thymyl acetate (11–15 %). For the SC chemotype, carvacrol (13–28 %), sabinene (18–45 %), and thymol (9–12 %) were the main essential oil components detected in both field-grown and proliferating shoot cultures. Our experiments showed that the essential oil composition in proliferating shoot cultures was not only stable, but also qualitatively similar to that of field-grown plants, notwithstanding minor quantitative differences.
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