A dominating natural plant chemical in
Reseda luteola is glucobarbarin, named for its occurrence in a distantly related plant,
Barbarea vulgaris. Glucobarbarin is a
glucosinolate, the characteristic chemicals in the order
Brassicales (Cabbages, mustards etc.) that
Reseda luteola belongs to. When the plant is crushed, glucobarbarin is converted by an enzyme into barbarin (5-phenyl-1,3-oxazolidine-2-thione). This compound is sometimes (inappropriately) named resedinine, a name coined by Soviet researchers that rediscovered the compound in
Reseda luteola (Lutfullin et al., 1976) apparently without being aware of the previous discovery and naming in the west around two decades earlier. Yet another enzyme slowly converts barbarin into resedine (5-phenyl-1,3-oxazolidin-2-one), this chemical discovered and named by the same Soviet researchers (Lutfullin et al., 1976), giving it a name that is still valid. Barbarin and resedine can also be called alkaloids, but they are not typical alkaloids, in that they do not exist in the intact plant but are only formed after crushing the plant physically. Glucobarbarin, like other
glucosinolates, is known to attract cabbage butterflies for egg-laying. Any ecological, medical or health effects of barbarin and resedine are poorly understood. File:3- Reseda leaves for Yellow.jpg|Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre annual wool dyeing with reseda File:Wool Dyed with Reseda. (1).jpg|Wool dyed with reseda at Wissa Wassef Art Centre, Giza, Egypt, 2016 ==References==