Perilla frutescens var. frutescens in northern Laos |
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Authors: | Michiho Ito Gisho Honda Kongmany Sydara |
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Affiliation: | (1) Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kyoto University, 46-29 Yoshida-Shimoadachi, Sakyo, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan;(2) Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Himeji Dokkyo University, 7-2-1 Kami-Ohno, Himeji, Hyogo 670-8524, Japan;(3) Ministry of Public Health, Traditional Medicine Research Center, Vientiane, Lao PDR |
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Abstract: | Twenty-eight samples of mericarps of Perilla frutescens var. frutescens were collected through fieldwork performed in Phongsali and Xieng Khouang provinces in northern Laos. No perilla samples were collected from Savannakhet province in the south although more than 20 sites were investigated. Perilla plants are mostly grown mixed with dry-paddy rice by slash-and-burn cultivation in Laos. The most popular local name for perilla mericarps in the area was “Ma Nga Chan”. Weight of 1,000 grains and hardness of the mericarps were measured, and all mericarps were found to be large (weight of 1,000 grains around 2 g) and soft (limit load weight under 300 g), which were preferred for culinary use in Laos. The composition of the essential oils obtained from the herbaceous plants raised from the mericarps was divided into five types, perillaketone, elemicine plus myristicine, shisofuran, piperitenon, and myristicine, and GC–MS analysis of these Laotian perilla samples showed that they were similar to those of corresponding types of known Japanese perilla strains. One of the shisofuran-type perilla contained large amounts of putative α-naginatene, which is likely to be an intermediate of the biosynthesis of naginataketone. The farmers' indifference to the oil type of the leaf seems to leave Laotian perilla as a good genetic resource for studies of the biosynthesis of oil compounds. |
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Keywords: | Perilla frutescens var. frutescens Fieldwork Northern Laos Essential oil Mericarps |
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