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1.
Mol Biol Rep ; 48(10): 6769-6777, 2021 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34476739

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Aconitum heterophyllum Wall. ex Royle and Aconitum balfourii Stapf, are two highly important, threatened medicinal plants of the Indian Himalayan Region. Root-tubers of Aconites have occupied an important place in Indian pharmacopoeia from very ancient times. India is a hub of the wild-collected medicinal herbs industry in Asia and these two aconites are known to have been heavily traded from the region in illicit manner. Prosecution of these illegal trading crimes is hampered by lack of pharma-forensic expertise and tools. METHODS AND RESULTS: Present study was conducted to evaluate the discriminatory potential of rbcL, a Chloroplast based DNA barcode marker for the authentication of these two Himalayan Aconites. Fresh plant samples were collected from their natural distributional range as well as raw materials were procured from herbal market and a total of 32 sequences were generated for the rbcL region. Analysis demonstrated that rbcL region can successfully be used for authentication and importantly, both the aconites, were successfully discriminated by rbcL locus with high bootstrap support (> 50%). CONCLUSION: Molecular markers could certainly be relied upon morphological and chemical markers being tissue specific, having a higher discriminatory power and not age dependent. Phylogenetic analysis using Maximum Likelihood Method revealed that the rbcL gene could successfully discriminate Himalayan Aconites to species level and have potential to be used in pharma-forensic applications as well as to curb illicit trade of these invaluable medicinal plants.


Assuntos
Aconitum/genética , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Código de Barras de DNA Taxonômico , Sequência de Bases , Geografia , Índia , Filogenia , Polimorfismo Genético , Ribulose-Bifosfato Carboxilase
2.
3 Biotech ; 10(12): 534, 2020 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33214981

RESUMO

The study was conducted to evaluate the discriminatory potential of selected chloroplast-based DNA barcode regions for identifying and resolving phylogeny of the Indian bamboos. Among 11 chloroplast markers screened, only four, namely matK, rbcL, psbK-I and rps16-trnQ showed successful amplification in 88 genotypes of 30 Indian bamboo taxa under Bambuseae and Arundinarieae tribes. A total of 244 sequences were generated for the four chloroplast regions. Tree-based analysis demonstrated that none of the tested regions successfully discriminated the taxa under Bambuseae tribe. Importantly, our highly concerned Himalayan temperate bamboo species under Arundinarieae tribe, were successfully discriminated by matK locus with high bootstrap support (>60%). Sequence comparisons revealed that the discriminatory power demonstrated by matK region actually lies in the few unique fixed nucleotides (UFNs) despite the overall DNA polymorphism. Although, rps16-trnQ region was found to be the most polymorphic and revealed high genetic divergence among different taxonomic levels, it could not successfully discriminated the taxa with strong statistical support. In a taxonomically difficult plant group like bamboos, whose genome is relatively more complex and has a slow rate of molecular evolution, it is difficult to get a universal marker. Further, highly variable barcode regions utilized in other species may not be informative, and thus, the development of DNA barcodes for different taxonomic levels, such as lineages or tribes could be a viable approach.

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