
| What was discovered? | Why it’s exciting |
|---|---|
| 79 phenolic compounds (tentative IDs) | Reveals chemical complexity beyond cannabinoids |
| 25 compounds never before seen in cannabis | Expands the known cannabis chemotype palette |
| 16 rare flavoalkaloids in leaves of one strain | New molecule class, brand-new to cannabis |
You know the buzz: THC, CBD, terpenes. But what if I told you that a whole new class of compounds, so rare that even scientists barely recognize them, was just discovered in cannabis?
Researchers at Stellenbosch University in South Africa used an advanced chemistry method—two-dimensional liquid chromatography combined with high-resolution mass spectrometry (HILIC × RP-LC-HR-MS)—to analyze cannabis flower and leaf samples from three commercial strains. With this razor-sharp technique, they tentatively identified 79 phenolic compounds, a family that includes flavonoids and related molecules.
Of those, 25 had never before been reported in cannabis.
But the standout moment of the study? The detection of flavoalkaloids, a rare hybrid class that mixes flavonoid and alkaloid chemistry.
These are not garden-variety molecules. Flavoalkaloids are extremely rare in nature and had never before been documented in cannabis until now.
The team tentatively identified 16 flavoalkaloid compounds, grouped into four structural categories—found mainly in the leaf extracts of just one strain.
Photo by Esteban López on Unsplash
<p>The post Weed’s Next Big Secret: Scientists Just Discovered a New Family of Molecules Hiding in Cannabis Leaves first appeared on High Times.</p>