Molecules (Jul 2020)

Variability of Major Phenyletanes and Phenylpropanoids in 16-Year-Old <i>Rhodiola rosea</i> L. Clones in Norway

  • Abdelhameed Elameen,
  • Vera M. Kosman,
  • Mette Thomsen,
  • Olga N. Pozharitskaya,
  • Alexander N. Shikov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25153463
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 15
p. 3463

Abstract

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Rhodiola rosea L. (roseroot) is an adaptogen plant belonging to the Crassulaceae family. The broad spectrum of biological activity of R. rosea is attributed to its major phenyletanes and phenylpropanoids: rosavin, salidroside, rosin, cinnamyl alcohol, and tyrosol. In this study, we compared the content of phenyletanes and phenylpropanoids in rhizomes of R. rosea from the Norwegian germplasm collection collected in 2004 and in 2017. In general, the content of these bioactive compounds in 2017 was significantly higher than that observed in 2004. The freeze-drying method increased the concentration of all phenyletanes and phenylpropanoids in rhizomes compared with conventional drying at 70 °C. As far as we know, the content of salidroside (51.0 mg g−1) observed in this study is the highest ever detected in Rhodiola spp. Long-term vegetative propagation and high genetic diversity of R. rosea together with the freeze-drying method may have led to the high content of the bioactive compounds observed in the current study.

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