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      Aroma characterisation and UV elicitation of purple basil from different plant tissue cultures.

      Food Chemistry
      Ocimum basilicum, chemistry, radiation effects, Plant Structures, Ultraviolet Rays, Volatile Organic Compounds

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          Abstract

          Exposure to stressful environmental conditions can induce severe metabolic variations in basil (Ocimum basilicum) aroma. The aromatic profiles of Dark Opal and Red Rubim varieties (in vivo plants, in vitro shoots, callus, and suspension cultures) were investigated for the first time. The established calli represented the most interesting miniaturised aromatic plant systems, as they were able to emit many typical basil volatiles with very low amounts of phenylpropanoids (1-2%). The hydrocarbon monoterpenes and oxygenated volatiles emitted from calli of both varieties were greatly and conversely affected by UV-C and UV-B, in comparison with the non-irradiated samples. As calli of both varieties still maintained very low levels of phenylpropanoids even after UV elicitation, they might be regarded not only as efficient in vitro plant models to study volatile compounds under UV stress conditions, but also as safe aromatic biomass in comparison with in vivo basil plants. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          23790847
          10.1016/j.foodchem.2013.02.081

          Chemistry
          Ocimum basilicum,chemistry,radiation effects,Plant Structures,Ultraviolet Rays,Volatile Organic Compounds

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