Quantitation of Fatty Acids, Sterols, and Tocopherols in Turpentine (<i>Pistacia terebinthu</i>s Chia) Growing Wild in Turkey
Bertrand Matthäus, Mehmet Musa Özcan
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Abstract
The chemical composition (fatty acids, tocopherols, and sterols) of the oil from 14 samples of turpentine (Pistacia terebinthus L.) fruits is presented in this study. The oil content of the samples varied in a relatively small range between 38.4 g/100 g and 45.1 g/100 g. The dominating fatty acid of the oil is oleic acid, which accounted for 43.0 to 51.3% of the total fatty acids. The total content of vitamin E active compounds in the oils ranged between 396.8 and 517.7 mg/kg. The predominant isomers were alpha- and gamma-tocopherol, with approximate equal amounts between about 110 and 150 mg/kg. The seed oil of P. terebinthus also contained different tocotrienols, with gamma-tocotrienol as the dominate compound of this group, which amounted to between 79 and 114 mg/kg. The total content of sterols of the oils was determined to be between 1341.3 and 1802.5 mg/kg, with beta-sitosterol as the predominent sterol that accounted for more than 80% of the total amount of sterols. Other sterols in noteworthy amounts were campesterol, Delta5-avenasterol, and stigmasterol, which came to about 3-5% of the total sterols.
Extracted Claims
5 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
alpha-tocopherol is a predominant isomer turpentine (Pistacia terebinthus L.) oil
“The predominant isomers were alpha- and gamma-tocopherol, with approximate equal amounts between about 110 and 150 mg/kg.”
beta-sitosterol is the predominant sterol turpentine (Pistacia terebinthus L.) oil
“The total content of sterols of the oils was determined to be between 1341.3 and 1802.5 mg/kg, with beta-sitosterol as the predominent sterol that accounted for more than 80% of the total amount of st...”
gamma-tocopherol is a predominant isomer turpentine (Pistacia terebinthus L.) oil
“The predominant isomers were alpha- and gamma-tocopherol, with approximate equal amounts between about 110 and 150 mg/kg.”