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Dive into the research topics where Lorenzo Boggia is active.

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Featured researches published by Lorenzo Boggia.


Phytochemistry | 2015

Determination of free and glucosidically-bound volatiles in plants. Two case studies: L-menthol in peppermint (Mentha x piperita L.) and eugenol in clove (Syzygium aromaticum (L.) Merr. & L.M.Perry).

Barbara Sgorbini; Cecilia Cagliero; Alberto Pagani; Marla Sganzerla; Lorenzo Boggia; Carlo Bicchi; Patrizia Rubiolo

This study arises from both the todays trend towards exploiting plant resources exhaustively, and the wide quantitative discrepancy between the amounts of commercially-valuable markers in aromatic plants and those recovered from the related essential oil. The study addresses the determination of both the qualitative composition and the exhaustive distribution of free and glucosidically-bound L-menthol in peppermint aerial parts (Mentha x piperita L., Lamiaceae) and of eugenol in dried cloves (Syzygium aromaticum (L.) Merr. & L.M.Perry, Myrtaceae), two plants known to provide widely ranging essential oil yields. The two markers were investigated in essential oils and residual hydrodistillation waters, before and after enzymatic hydrolysis. Their amounts were related to those in the headspace taken as reference. The results showed that the difference between marker compound in headspace and in essential oil amounted to 22.8% for L-menthol in peppermint, and 16.5% for eugenol in cloves. The aglycones solubilised in the residual hydrodistillation waters were 7.2% of the headspace reference amount for L-menthol, and 13.3% for eugenol, respectively representing 9.3% and 15.9% of their amounts in the essential oil. The amount of L-menthol from its glucoside in residual hydrodistillation waters was 20.6% of that in the related essential oil, while eugenol from its glucoside accounted for 7.7% of the amount in clove essential oil. The yield of L-menthol, after submitting the plant material to enzymatic hydrolysis before hydrodistillation, increased by 23.1%, and for eugenol the increase was 8.1%, compared to the amount in the respective conventional essential oils. This study also aimed to evaluate the reliability of recently-introduced techniques that are little applied, if at all, in this field. The simultaneous use of high-concentration-capacity sample preparation techniques (SBSE, and HS-SPME and in-solution SPME) to run quali-quantitative analysis without sample manipulation, and direct LC-MS glucoside analysis, provided cross-validation of the results.


BMC Plant Biology | 2015

Direct Contact - Sorptive Tape Extraction coupled with Gas Chromatography - Mass Spectrometry to reveal volatile topographical dynamics of lima bean (Phaseolus lunatus L.) upon herbivory by Spodoptera littoralis Boisd.

Lorenzo Boggia; Barbara Sgorbini; Cinzia M. Bertea; Cecilia Cagliero; Carlo Bicchi; Massimo Maffei; Patrizia Rubiolo

BackgroundThe dynamics of plant volatile (PV) emission, and the relationship between damaged area and biosynthesis of bioactive molecules in plant-insect interactions, remain open questions. Direct Contact-Sorptive Tape Extraction (DC-STE) is a sorption sampling technique employing non adhesive polydimethylsiloxane tapes, which are placed in direct contact with a biologically-active surface. DC-STE coupled to Gas Chromatography – Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS) is a non-destructive, high concentration-capacity sampling technique able to detect and allow identification of PVs involved in plant responses to biotic and abiotic stresses. Here we investigated the leaf topographical dynamics of herbivory-induced PV (HIPV) produced by Phaseolus lunatus L. (lima bean) in response to herbivory by larvae of the Mediterranean climbing cutworm (Spodoptera littoralis Boisd.) and mechanical wounding by DC-STE-GC-MS.ResultsTime-course experiments on herbivory wounding caused by larvae (HW), mechanical damage by a pattern wheel (MD), and MD combined with the larvae oral secretions (OS) showed that green leaf volatiles (GLVs) [(E)-2-hexenal, (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol, 1-octen-3-ol, (Z)-3-hexenyl acetate, (Z)-3-hexenyl butyrate] were associated with both MD and HW, whereas monoterpenoids [(E)-β-ocimene], sesquiterpenoids [(E)-nerolidol] and homoterpenes (DMNT and TMTT) were specifically associated with HW. Up-regulation of genes coding for HIPV-related enzymes (Farnesyl Pyrophosphate Synthase, Lipoxygenase, Ocimene Synthase and Terpene Synthase 2) was consistent with HIPV results. GLVs and sesquiterpenoids were produced locally and found to influence their own gene expression in distant tissues, whereas (E)-β-ocimene, TMTT, and DMNT gene expression was limited to wounded areas.ConclusionsDC-STE-GC-MS was found to be a reliable method for the topographical evaluation of plant responses to biotic and abiotic stresses, by revealing the differential distribution of different classes of HIPVs. The main advantages of this technique include: a) in vivo sampling; b) reproducible sampling; c) ease of execution; d) simultaneous assays of different leaf portions, and e) preservation of plant material for further “omic” studies. DC-STE-GC-MS is also a low-impact innovative method for in situ PV detection that finds potential applications in sustainable crop management.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2018

Dynamics of Metabolite Induction in Fungal Co-cultures by Metabolomics at Both Volatile and Non-volatile Levels

A Azzollini; Lorenzo Boggia; Julien Boccard; Barbara Sgorbini; Nicole Lecoultre; Pierre-Marie Allard; Patrizia Rubiolo; Serge Rudaz; Katia Gindro; Carlo Bicchi; Jean-Luc Wolfender

Fungal co-cultivation has emerged as a promising way for activating cryptic biosynthetic pathways and discovering novel antimicrobial metabolites. For the success of such studies, a key element remains the development of standardized co-cultivation methods compatible with high-throughput analytical procedures. To efficiently highlight induction processes, it is crucial to acquire a holistic view of intermicrobial communication at the molecular level. To tackle this issue, a strategy was developed based on the miniaturization of fungal cultures that allows for a concomitant survey of induction phenomena in volatile and non-volatile metabolomes. Fungi were directly grown in vials, and each sample was profiled by head space solid phase microextraction gas chromatography mass spectrometry (HS-SPME-GC-MS), while the corresponding solid culture medium was analyzed by liquid chromatography high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) after solvent extraction. This strategy was implemented for the screening of volatile and non-volatile metabolite inductions in an ecologically relevant fungal co-culture of Eutypa lata (Pers.) Tul. & C. Tul. (Diatrypaceae) and Botryosphaeria obtusa (Schwein.) Shoemaker (Botryosphaeriaceae), two wood-decaying fungi interacting in the context of esca disease of grapevine. For a comprehensive evaluation of the results, a multivariate data analysis combining Analysis of Variance and Partial Least Squares approaches, namely AMOPLS, was used to explore the complex LC-HRMS and GC-MS datasets and highlight dynamically induced compounds. A time-series study was carried out over 9 days, showing characteristic metabolite induction patterns in both volatile and non-volatile dimensions. Relevant links between the dynamics of expression of specific metabolite production were observed. In addition, the antifungal activity of 2-nonanone, a metabolite incrementally produced over time in the volatile fraction, was assessed against Eutypa lata and Botryosphaeria obtusa in an adapted bioassay set for volatile compounds. This compound has shown antifungal activity on both fungi and was found to be co-expressed with a known antifungal compound, O-methylmellein, induced in solid media. This strategy could help elucidate microbial inter- and intra-species cross-talk at various levels. Moreover, it supports the study of concerted defense/communication mechanisms for efficiently identifying original antimicrobials.


Flavour and Fragrance Journal | 2015

Parallel dual secondary-column-dual detection comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography: a flexible and reliable analytical tool for essential oils quantitative profiling

Barbara Sgorbini; Cecilia Cagliero; Lorenzo Boggia; Erica Liberto; Stephen E. Reichenbach; Patrizia Rubiolo; Chiara Cordero; Carlo Bicchi


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2017

Artemisia umbelliformis Lam. and Génépi Liqueur: Volatile Profile as Diagnostic Marker for Geographic Origin and To Predict Liqueur Safety

Lorenzo Boggia; Giuseppe Pignata; Barbara Sgorbini; Maria Laura Colombo; Arianna Marengo; Silvana Nicola; Carlo Bicchi; Patrizia Rubiolo


Planta Medica | 2016

Detection and dynamics of volatile/non-volatile metabolite induction in fungal co-culture through a miniaturised MS-based metabolomic approach

A Azzollini; Lorenzo Boggia; Julien Boccard; Barbara Sgorbini; N Lecoutre; Patrizia Rubiolo; Serge Rudaz; Katia Gindro; Carlo Bicchi; Jean-Luc Wolfender


II International Plant Science Conference | 2015

Total volatile profile of Artemisia umbelliformis Lam. as a predictive marker of thujones amount in genepì liqueur

Lorenzo Boggia; Barbara Sgorbini; Cecilia Cagliero; Giuseppe Pignata; Maria Laura Colombo; Silvana Nicola; Carlo Bicchi; Patrizia Rubiolo


8th Brazilian Symposium on Essential Oils (SBOE) | 2015

Green technologies applied to the analysis of plant volatiles

Barbara Sgorbini; Cecilia Cagliero; Alberto Pagani; Marla Sganzerla; Lorenzo Boggia; Carlo Bicchi; Patrizia Rubiolo


46th International Symposium on Essential Oils | 2015

Determination of free and glucosidically-bound volatiles in plants

Barbara Sgorbini; Cecilia Cagliero; Lorenzo Boggia; Carlo Bicchi; Patrizia Rubiolo


International Plant Science Conference (IPSC) | 2014

TOPOGRAPHICAL DYNAMICS OF DAMAGE-RELATED VOLATILE EMISSION IN PHASEOLUS LUNATUS L.

Lorenzo Boggia; Barbara Sgorbini; Cinzia M. Bertea; Cecilia Cagliero; Maria Laura Colombo; Carlo Bicchi; Massimo Maffei; Patrizia Rubiolo

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A Azzollini

University of Lausanne

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