Journal article
Eucalyptus subgenus Eucalyptus (Myrtaceae) trees are abundant sources of medicinal pinocembrin and related methylated flavanones
JQD Goodger, SL Senaratne, P van der Peet, R Browning, SJ Williams, D Nicolle, IE Woodrow
Industrial Crops and Products | ELSEVIER | Published : 2019
Abstract
Plant-derived flavanones such as pinocembrin and related methylated forms are of interest for their potential medicinal use. Commercial sources of these compounds are limited, but some trees in genus Eucalyptus subgenus Eucalyptus (family Myrtaceae) show promise due to their high foliar flavanone content and growth rate, particularly when grown in coppice cultivation. As a first step to developing commercial Eucalyptus plantations for flavanone production, this research aimed to identify high-yielding species. Foliar flavanones were quantified in 41 species and subspecies from three major sections within the subgenus. Pinocembrin concentrations were highest in two subspecies of E. preissiana..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
The authors thank Mr. Alistair Cumming, CEO of Gretals Australia for supporting the research, Metabolomics Australia for LCMS analyses, and Ms. Ros Gall, Director of the Dookie Campus, University of Melbourne for the use of land and facilities for the trial plot. The work was funded by an Australian Research Council grant to IW and JG (LP160101307). The NMR work was supported by Australian Research Council grants to SJW (DP160100597, DP180101957).