Chemical Composition and in Vitro Bioactivity of The Volatile and Fixed Oils of Nigella Sativa L. Extracted by Supercritical Carbon Dioxide
Chemical Composition and in Vitro Bioactivity of The Volatile and Fixed Oils of Nigella Sativa L. Extracted by Supercritical Carbon Dioxide
Chemical Composition and in Vitro Bioactivity of The Volatile and Fixed Oils of Nigella Sativa L. Extracted by Supercritical Carbon Dioxide
Corresponding author. Tel.: +39 070 675 4124; fax: +39 070 675 4032.
E-mail address: anrosa@unica.it (A. Rosa).
(Cheikh-Rouhou et al., 2007). The composition and properties of
this species have been fairly well investigated.
The seeds contain a yellowish volatile oil, a xed oil, proteins,
amino acids, reducing sugars, mucilage, alkaloids, organic acids,
tannins, resins, toxic glucoside, metarbin, bitter principles, glycosi-
dal saponins, crude ber, minerals, and vitamins (Ramadan, 2007).
Several authors have investigatedthe volatile oil of nigella seeds
and isolated and identied active constituents that have benecial
clinical effects. Egyptians believe that nigella seeds increase human
immunity. The volatile oil has been produced by pressing the raw
or roasted seeds (Atta, 2003).
Nigella seed xed oil is considered as one among newer sources
of edible oils, thanks to its important role in human nutrition and
0926-6690/$ see front matter 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.indcrop.2013.02.013
318 A. Piras et al. / Industrial Crops and Products 46 (2013) 317323
health. Black cumin crude xed seed oil is a valuable source of
essential fatty acids, glycolipids, phospholipids, and bioactive phy-
tosterols (Ramadan, 2007; Ramadan et al., 2012a). This oil has
been reported to possess antitumor activity, antioxidant activity,
anti-inammatory activity, antibacterial activity and a stimulatory
effect on the immune system. Actually, a great deal of attention has
been focused on black cumin seed oils, and thus their consumption
has increased, especially in Middle East countries. The oil has been
usually produced by a hot solvent extraction method at 4060
C
and even at 70
C in the second one. The extraction of the xed oil was run on
the same samples of N. sativa previously treated at 90bar; the xed
oil was obtained working at 300bar and 40
C) to recover
the extract.
2.4. GC and GCMS analysis of essential oil
Analyzes of the volatile extracts were carried out by gas chro-
matography (GC) and by gas chromatographymass spectrometry
(GCMS). Analytical GC was carried out in a gas chromatograph
(Agilent, Model 7890A, Palo Alto, CA), equipped with a ame ion-
ization detector (FID), an autosampler (Agilent, Model 7683B),
Agilent HP5 fused silica column (5% phenyl-methylpolysiloxane),
30m0.25mm i.d., lm thickness 0.25m, and a Agilent Chem-
Station software system. Oven temperature was settled at 60
C,
raising at 3
C/min to 250
C; injec-
tor temperature: 250
C.
GCMS analyses were carried out in a gas chromatograph (Agi-
lent, Model 6890N, Palo Alto, CA) equipped with a splitsplitless
injector, an autosampler Agilent model 7683 and two dif-
ferent Agilent fused silica capillary columns (30m0.25mm
i.d., lm thickness 0.25m) of different polarities (HP-5, 5%
phenyl-methylpolysiloxane; DB-WAXetr, polyethylene glycol). GC
conditions used were: programmed heating from 60 to 250
C
at 3
C. The identi-
cation of fatty acids and HP was made using standard compounds
and the second derivative, as well as conventional UV spectra, gen-
erated with the Agilent Chemstation A.10.02 software. Calibration
curves of all of the compounds were constructed using standards
and were found to be linear with correlation coefcients >0.995.
2.5.3. GC analysis
Fatty acid methyl esters were measured on a gas chro-
matograph Hewlett-Packard HP-6890 (Hewlett-Packard, Palo
Alto, USA) with a ame ionization detector and equipped
with a cyanopropyl methyl-polysiloxane HP-23 FAME column
(30m0.32mm0.25m) (Hewlett-Packard). Nitrogenwas used
as carrier gas at a ow rate of 2mL/min. The oven temperature
was set at 175
C; and
the detector temperature was set at 300
C.
2.6.2. Microorganisms and inoculumpreparation
Antibacterial activity and antifungal activity tests were car-
ried out against standard (ATCC; American type culture collection,
RSKK; Culture collectionof Rek SaydamCentral Hygiene Institute;
NCPF; National Collection of Pathogenic Fungi) and isolated strains
(clinical isolate obtainedfromDepartment of Microbiology, Faculty
of Medicine, Gazi University).
As standards; gram negative strains of Escherichia coli (ATCC
35218), Pseudomonas aeroginosa (ATCC 10145), Acinetobacer bau-
mannii (RSKK02026), andas grampositive strains of Staphylococcus
aureus (ATCC 25923), and Enterococcus faecalis (ATCC 29212), B.
subtilis (ATCC 6633) were used for the determination of antibac-
terial activity. Candida albicans (ATCC 10231), C. tropicalis (ATCC
13803), and C. krusei (ATCC 6258) were used for the determination
of antifungal activity.
Mueller Hinton Broth (MHB; Difco) and Mueller Hinton Agar
(MHA; Oxoid) were applied for growing and diluting of the bacteria
suspensions. The synthetic medium RPMI-1640 with l-glutamine
was buffered to pH 7 with 3-[N-morpholino]-propansulfonic acid
and culture suspensions were prepared as described previously
(Koca et al., 2010). The microorganism suspensions used for inoc-
ulation were prepared at 10
5
cfu (colony forming unit/mL) by
diluting freshcultures at McFarland0.5density(10
8
cfumL
1
). Sus-
pensions of bacteria and fungi were added in each well of the
diluted extracts, density of 10
5
cfumL
1
for fungi, and for bacte-
ria. The bacterial suspensions used for inoculation were prepared
at 10
5
cfumL
1
by diluting fresh cultures at McFarland 0.5 density
(10
8
cfumL
1
). The fungi suspension was prepared by the spec-
trophotometric method of inoculums (zc elik et al., 2012).
2.6.3. Antibacterial and antifungal tests
The microdilution method was employed for antibacterial and
antifungal activity tests. Media were placed into each 96 wells of
the microplates. Volatile and xed oils at 512gmL
1
were added
into rst rows of microplates and two fold dilutions of the sam-
ples (2560.125gmL
1
) were made by dispensing the solutions
to the remaining wells. The culture suspensions (10L) were inoc-
ulated into all the wells. All organisms were tested in triplicate in
each run of the experiments. The sealed microplates were incu-
bated at 35
C.
Fatty acid T1 T2 T3 E1
12:0 0.07 0.03 0.11 0.04 0.09 0.03 0.05 0.01
14:0 0.29 0.01 0.27 0.02 0.33 0.03 0.30 0.03
16:0 12.30 0.52 12.27 0.14 13.31 0.33 13.51 0.55
16:1 0.29 0.06 0.26 0.01 0.31 0.05 0.26 0.02
18:0 2.79 0.06 2.64 0.08 2.69 0.04 2.83 0.26
18:1 n7 0.59 0.04 0.51 0.22 0.49 0.04 0.48 0.08
18:1 n9 22.75 0.50 22.55 0.43 22.29 0.13 22.53 0.51
18:2 n6 55.20 1.31 54.20 0.63 55.51 0.36 55.31 0.67
18:3 n3 0.30 0.03 0.25 0.00 0.25 0.00 0.25 0.02
20:0 0.16 0.04 0.12 0.00 0.14 0.02 0.14 0.01
20:1 n9 0.26 0.02 0.24 0.01 0.23 0.03 0.24 0.02
20:2 2.75 0.07 2.81 0.42 2.305 0.19 2.39 0.18
SFA 15.60 0.50 15.41 0.16 16.57 0.32 16.86 0.68
MUFA 23.89 0.59 23.57 0.54 23.31 0.11 23.51 0.49
PUFA 58.90 1.25 58.11 0.46 58.29 0.32 58.15 0.59
SFA, saturated fatty acids; MUFA, monounsaturated fatty acids; PUFA, polyunsaturated fatty acids. Data are mean values (4 samples) with standard deviations (sd).
Table 3
Unsaturated fatty acid (UFA) composition (mg/g weight) by HPLC of Nigella sativa xed oils obtained by SFE at 300bar and 40
C.
UFA T1 T2 T3 E1
18:1 231.22 9.10 228.38 13.60 222.43 12.85 201.13 4.72
18:2 n6 525.26 16.89 519.83 27.74 523.85 26.59 479.41 23.63
18:3 n3 3.00 0.09 3.13 0.17 2.95 0.08 2.60 0.16
Data are mean values (4 samples) with standard deviations (sd).
component for nutritional application (Ramadan, 2013; Ramadan
and Wahdan, 2012b).
3.3. Antimicrobial activity
The xedandvolatile oils extractedfromdifferent N. sativa sam-
ples were evaluated for their antimicrobial activities (Tables 47).
Antibacterial activity was evaluated by employing standard strains
of E. coli, P. aeroginosa, A. baumannii, S. aureus, E. faecalis, and
B. subtilis via broth microdilution method; in vitro antifungal
activity of the samples against C. albicans, C. tropicalis, and
C. krusei were evaluated by comparing ketoconazole, and u-
conazole as control agents. As for anti-mycobacterium activity,
the breakpoint concentration (gmL
1
) was determined against
standard strains of M. tuberculosis H37Rv and M. avium (ATCC
15769) by means of the colorimetric resazurin microtiter assay
(REMA).
Antimicrobial activity toward of standard and isolated strains
is reported in Tables 47. All tested samples were determined as
ineffective against isolated strains (MIC; >256gmL
1
). The most
effective MIC values of 16 and 32gmL
1
against gram negative
bacteria were seen with volatile and xed oil of E1, respectively,
such as E. coli and P. aeruginosa. Similarly E1 showed moderate
activity against A. baumannii at MIC values of 32 and 64gmL
1
for
volatile andxedoil, respectively. Onthe other hand, all the volatile
and xed oils (T1, T2, T3, E1) exhibited antifungal effect against
C. krusei at 64gmL
1
, which is close to the effect of the control
uconazole (Table 4). Less effective concentration was obtained
against C. albicans and C. tropicalis at 16 and 32gmL
1
inhibition
concentration for volatile and xed oil, respectively, which was not
different for both strains. In addition, the controls showed different
activity values in the range 264gmL
1
.
For gram positive bacteria (S. aureus, E. faecalis, B. subtilis), E1
showed the best activity against all standard strains at 32 and
64gmL
1
, for volatile and xed oil respectively, the rest of the
tested xed oils were ineffective against all of the strains. All sam-
ples (volatile and xed oils T1, T2, T3, and E1) demonstrated an
elevated activity against M. avium with MIC values of 8gmL
1
.
All the volatile oil samples had shown similar effect against M.
tuberculosis (Table 7), on the other hand, all xed oil samples were
less active were less active against M. tuberculosis with MIC values
of 16gmL
1
, which the controls (isoniazid, ethambutol, strepto-
mycin) showed inhibitory activity between the 0.1252gmL
1
MIC values (Table 5).
Table 4
Screening for xed oil antimicrobial activity against gram-negative bacteria and fungi (MIC in gmL
1
).
Extracts Gram-negative bacteria Fungi
E. coli P. aeruginosa A. baumannii C. albicans/C. tropicalis C. krusei
ATCC 35218 Isolated strain ATCC 10145 Isolated strain RSKK 02026 Isolated strain ATCC 10231/ATCC 13803 ATCC 6258
T1 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 32/32 64
T2 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 32/32 64
T3 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 32/32 64
E1 32 >256 32 >256 64 >256 32/32 64
AMP <0.12 >128 0.5 >128 0.12 0.5 32/32 64
LVX 0.25 128 0.5 32
GN 0.5 2
KET 0.5/2 4
FLU 2/4 64
AMP, ampicilline; LVX, levooxacin; GM, gentamicine; KET, ketaconazole; FLU, uconazole; E. coli isolates; (+ESLs enzyme), P. aeruginosa isolates (resist to trimethoprim-
sulfamethoxazole, tazobactam), A. baumannii isolates (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole resist).
322 A. Piras et al. / Industrial Crops and Products 46 (2013) 317323
Table 5
Screening for xed oil antimicrobial activity against gram-positive bacteria and antitubercular (MIC in gmL
1
).
Gram-positive bacteria Mycobacterium
S. aureus E. faecalis B. subtilis M. tuberculosis M. avium
ATCC 25923 Isolated strain ATCC 29212 Isolated strain ATCC 6633 Isolated strain ATCC 27294 ATCC 15769
T1 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 16 8
T2 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 16 8
T3 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 >256 16 8
E1 64 >256 64 >256 64 >256 16 8
AMP <0.12 >128 0.5 >128 0.12 0.5
LVX 0.25 128 0.5 32
INH 0.125 0.125
EMB 2 2
SM 1 2
AMP, ampicilline; LVX, levooxacin; INH, Isoniazid; EMB, ethambutol; SM, streptomycin; isolated strain of S. aureus (methicillin resist; MRSA), isolated strain of E. faecalis
(cephalosporin resist), isolated strain of B. subtilis (ceftriaxon resist).
Table 6
Screening for volatile oil antimicrobial activity against gram-negative bacteria and fungi (MIC in gmL
1
).
Extracts Gram-negative bacteria Fungi
E. coli P. aeruginosa A. baumannii C. albicans/C. krusei C. tropicalis
ATCC 35218 Isolated strain ATCC 10145 Isolated strain RSKK 02026 Isolated strain ATCC 10231/ATCC 13803 ATCC 6258
T1
vol
128 >256 128 >256 128 >256 32/16 64
T2
vol
128 >256 128 >256 128 >256 32/16 64
T3
vol
128 >256 128 >256 128 >256 32/16 64
E1
vol
16 >256 16 >256 32 >256 32/16 64
AMP <0.12 >128 0.5 >128 0.12 0.5
LVX 0.25 128 0.5 32
GN 0.5 2
KET 0.5/2 4
FLU 2/4 64
AMP, ampicilline; LVX, levooxacin; GM, gentamicine; KET, ketaconazole; FLU, uconazole; E. coli isolates; (+ESLs enzyme), P. aeruginosa isolates (resist to trimethoprim-
sulfamethoxazole, tazobactam), A. baumannii isolates (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole resist).
Table 7
Screening for volatile oil antimicrobial activity against gram-positive bacteria and antitubercular (MIC in gmL
1
).
Extracts Gram-positive bacteria Mycobacterium
S. aureus E. faecalis B. subtilis M. tuberculosis M. avium
ATCC 25923 Isolated strain ATCC 29212 Isolated strain ATCC 6633 Isolated strain ATCC 27294 ATCC 15769
T1
vol
64 >256 64 >256 64 >256 8 8
T2
vol
64 >256 64 >256 64 >256 8 8
T3
vol
64 >256 64 >256 64 >256 8 8
E1
vol
32 >256 32 >256 32 >256 8 8
AMP <0.12 >128 0.5 >128 0.12 0.5
LVX 0.25 128 0.5 32
INH 0.125 0.125
EMB 2 2
SM 1 2
AMP, ampicilline; LVX, levooxacin, INH, isoniazid, EMB, ethambutol; SM, streptomycin; isolated strain of S. aureus (methicillin resist; MRSA), isolated strain of E. faecalis
(cephalosporin resist), isolated strain of B. subtilis (ceftriaxon resist).
As a result, all the volatile oil samples were two fold more
effective against gram negative bacteria, fungi C. albicans and C.
Tropicalis, and M. tuberculosis, additionally, volatile oil samples are
four more fold effective against gram positive bacteria. Previous
studies on the antimicrobial activity of N. sativa seeds had shown
that volatile oil is much more effective than the xed oil, which
is in accordance with our results; moreover, the phenolic frac-
tion or different solvent extracts fromN. sativa seeds demonstrated
antimicrobial activity (Toppozada et al., 1965; Agarwal et al., 1979;
Hasan et al., 1989; Hanafy et al., 1991).
4. Conclusions
Chemical composition of essential and xed oils extracted
by SFE from the seeds of N. sativa, collected in four diverse
locations, had been investigated. The oxygenated monoterpene
thymoquinone and the essential fatty acid 18:2 n6 were the
major constituents of essential and xed oils, respectively, in all
four samples. All volatile andxedoils displayedinteresting antitu-
berculosis and antifungal activities. Egyptian Nigella sativa volatile
and xed oils showed the best antimicrobial activity. Further stud-
ies will be performed to better clarify the relationship between
chemical composition and observed biological activity.
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