The intensive selection process applied to cannabis produces strains with diverse molecular signatures, and this is particularly apparent when examining terpene profiles. These specificities can be useful for characterizing a strain or extract, highlighting what makes it unique compared to other varieties. Based on our extensive experience with cannabis terpenes, let's explore some interesting molecular trends in this plant.
Chemotypes and cannabis
The production of molecules in a plant follows a metabolic logic. A rough parallel can be drawn with human eye color: depending on an individual's genetic characteristics, our body may or may not have the capacity to generate pigments that, in turn, determine the hue of the iris. This hue (although with many nuances) can be classified into a limited number of categories, such as blue eyes. To study plants, the concept of chemotype can be used to describe this phenomenon where molecules are present in some individuals and not (or only in small quantities) in others. Polatoglu suggested the following definition for this concept: organisms categorized as belonging to the same species […] and exhibiting differences in the quantity and quality of their component(s) in their total chemical signature, these differences being linked to genetics or to differences in gene expression [1].
In cannabis, cannabinoid expression tends to follow chemotypic patterns, where one or two dominant cannabinoids are observed and can vary from one strain to another. In The Handbook of Cannabis, de Meijer proposes a model comprising three genetic factors and one morphological factor that can lead a given variety to express one of nine possible chemotypes (or even more, since mixed chemotypes can be observed where two molecules are codominant, most typically THCA and CBDA) [2]. This model is summarized in Figure 1 below, where the term "locus" refers to a region of a chromosome in the cannabis plant where the genes present will influence the metabolic expression of cannabinoids.







