Echinacea purpurea


Echinacea purpurea is a North American species of flowering plant in the sunflower family. It is native to parts of eastern North America and present to some extent in the wild in much of the eastern, southeastern and midwestern United States as well as in the Canadian Province of Ontario. It is most common in the Ozarks and in the Mississippi/Ohio Valley. Its habitats include dry open woods, prairies and barrens.

Taxonomy

'Echinacea' is derived from Greek, meaning ‘spiny one’, in reference to the spiny sea urchins 'εχίνοι'. 'Purpurea' means 'reddish-purple'. Originally named Rudbeckia purpurea by Linnaeus in 1753 in Species plantarum 6, it was reclassified in 1794 by Conrad Moench, in a new genus named Echinacea purpurea. In 1818, Thomas Nuttall describes a new variety that he named Rudbeckia purpurea var. serotina. Just two decades later, De Candolle raises him to the rank of species of the other genus Echinacea serotina DC.. In 2002, Binns et al. discovered a misapplication of the name Echinacea purpurea for the taxon correctly named Echinacea serotina in 1836. The authors proposed to retain the names not to cause confusion among gardeners and herbalists.

Description

Echinacea purpurea is an herbaceous perennial up to tall by wide at maturity. Depending on the climate, it blooms throughout summer into autumn. Its cone-shaped flowering heads are usually, but not always, purple in the wild. Its individual flowers within the flower head are hermaphroditic, having both male and female organs in each flower. It is pollinated by butterflies and bees. The alternate leaves, borne by a petiole from 0 to 17 cm, are oval to lanceolate, 5-30 x 5-12 cm; the margin is tightened to toothed.
The inflorescence is a capitulum, 7 to 15 cm in diameter, formed by a prominent domed central protuberance consisting of multiple small yellow florets. These are surrounded by a ring of pink or purple ligulate florets. The tubular florets are hermaphrodite while the ligular florets are sterile. The involucral bracts are linear to lanceolate. The plant prefers well-drained soils in full sun. The fruit is an achene, sought after by birds.

Cultivation

Echinacea purpurea is also grown as an ornamental plant in temperate regions. It is ideal for curbs, walkways or beds. The flowers can also go into the composition of fresh bouquets. Numerous cultivars have been developed for flower quality and plant form. The plant grows in sun or light shade. It thrives in either dry or moist soil and can tolerate drought once established. The cultivars 'Ruby Giant' and ='Elbrook' have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

Propagation

Echinacea purpurea can be propagated either vegetatively or from seeds. Useful vegetative techniques include division, root cuttings, and basal cuttings. Clumps can be divided, or broken into smaller bunches, which is normally done in the spring or autumn. Cuttings made from roots that are "pencil-sized" will develop into plants when started in late autumn or early winter. Cuttings of basal shoots in the spring may be rooted when treated with rooting hormones, such as IBA at 1000 ppm.
Seed germination occurs best with daily temperature fluctuations or after stratification, which help to end dormancy. Seeds may be started indoors in advance of the growing season or outdoors after the growing season has started.

Ecology

s eat this plant. Rabbits will also eat the foliage when young, or shortly after emerging in the spring. Additionally, roots can be damaged and eaten by gophers.

Chemistry

Echinacea purpurea contains multiple secondary metabolites that are produced by this plant. They include: alkamides, caffeic acid derivatives, polysaccharides, and glycoproteins. The secondary metabolites are believed to be biologically and pharmacologically active. More specifically the glycoproteins of echinacea root extract has the ability to activate portions of the immune system, and is what heavily contributes to the immune system stimulation by echinacea. Nicotiflorin is the dominant flavonid in echinacea, followed by the flavonid rutin.

As medicine

Native Americans used the plant to treat many ailments, including wounds, burns, insect bites, toothaches, throat infections, pain, cough, stomach cramps, and snake bites.
The plant is important economically to the pharmaceutical trade. that all parts of the purple coneflower stimulate the immune system. With the increase style of a sedentary lifestyle, herbal drugs have increased in popularity to treat immunodeficient issues. In more recent years, research into immune benefits of Echinacea has been linked to investigating immune benefits with upper respiratory tract infections. Research on immune benefits mostly focus on the roots of Echinacea and extraction through high-performance liquid chromatographic analysis.
Well-controlled trials studying these uses are limited and low in quality. Study results are mixed on whether preparations including Echinacea can be useful for upper respiratory tract infections including colds. More recent studies have showed that the anti-inflammatory effects of this flower is due to its ability to stimulate the innate immune system, thus suggesting innate immunity is improve in the presence of this plant. It has also show a multitude of other biological healthy benefits, such as: anti-anxiety, anti-depression, cytotoxicity, and antimutagenicity effects induced by the plant and has been revealed in various studies. Though while some studies show patients have no side effects, others report sever side effects, such as abdominal pain, angioedema, dyspnea, nausea, pruritus, rash, erythema, and urticaria.
Echinacea purpurea is used in pharmaceutics because of its ability to mobilize leukocytes, activate phagocytosis activation and fibroblast stimulation. It has been implemented in chemotherapy medications and is one of the most widely medical manufactured species of its genus. Secondary metabolite group alkamides, have been linked with being responsible for the plant's immunomodulatory and psychoactive activities. This plant also increase NF-κB activation, which is a protein complex that deals with cell survival. NF-κB is responsible and linked to expression of other genes that are critically important to the immune system. Interestingly enough, studies have shown that in the absence of any natural stimulant of the immune system, like a scrape or injury, the plant has no regulatory effect on NF-kB expression. Therefore evidence indicates that the plant only with its activated secondary metabolites, cause expression of NF-kB, and other major players of the immune system like, macrophages, neutrophils, and DCs. Though results in many studies show without a doubt, an immunity role for Echinacea purpurea it cannot be without out certain that this is the case. Many study results raise even further questions about some contradictory immunity stimulation by Echinacea purpurea.