Search results for "Hula"
showing 10 items of 41 documents
Selection and long-term cultures of high-yielding Digitalis obscura plants: RAPD markers for analysis of genetic stability
1996
Fifteen wild-growing plants of Digitalis obscura collected in three differents regions were characterized according to their capacities to biosynthesize cardenolides and to proliferate in vitro. Great genotype-dependent variabilities were found in both parameters. Selected genotypes were differentiated using randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers. Once an elite genotype with high-yielding properties was isolated and micropropagated during 2 years, identity of the donor plant and the regenerants was confirmed by RAPD analysis.
Molecular systematics and phytochemistry of Rehmannia (Scrophulariaceae)
2007
Abstract The relationships between the six known species of Rehmannia were investigated. With regard to the content of iridoid glucosides, caffeoyl phenylethanoid glycosides (CPGs) and ionone glucosides, no conclusions could be drawn. Phylogenetic analysis of DNA sequence data (ITS region, trnL-F region and rps 16 intron) reveal a well-resolved topology in which Rehmannia glutinosa and Rehmannia solanifolia and Rehmannia piasezkii and Rehmannia elata are well-supported species pairs. Rehmannia chingii is sister to the rest of the genus, which is congruent with its distribution distant to the other species of the genus.
Essential oil composition and antifeedant properties of Bellardia trixago (L.) All. (sin. Bartsia trixago L.) (Scrophulariaceae)
2008
Tipificación de dos nombres del género Verbascum incluidos en la subsect. Singuliflora (Scrophulariaceae)
2020
Se designan los tipos nomenclaturales de Verbascum barnadesii y V. fontqueri (≡ Celsia valentina (Scrophulariaceae) a partir de especímenes conservados en los herbarios C y BC, respectivamente.
Relationships among soil characteristics, plant macronutrients, and cardenolide accumulation in natural populations of Digitalis obscura
2005
In the present study, we have investigated relationships among several soil parameters (pH, organic matter, total carbonate, macronutrients, electrical conductivity, cation-exchange capacity) and macronutrient and cardenolide contents in leaves of wild Digitalis obscura plants. Young and mature leaves and soil samples were collected in ten different areas, corresponding to three Mediterranean bioclimatic belts (thermo-, meso-, and supramediterranean belts). Soil and leaf macronutrient (N, P, K, Ca, and Mg) contents and leaf cardenolide contents were determined. Bioclimatic conditions influenced the development of D. obscura, biomass being lowest in plant populations of the supramediterranea…
Cardenolides of Digitalis obscura: The effect of phosphate and manganese on growth and productivity of shoot-tip cultures
1997
Abstract Cardenolide composition of leaves from wild and micropropagated elite plants of Digitalis obscura (genotype T4) has been investigated and no qualitative differences were found among their major cardenolides (series A). All of the detected glycosides belong to the digitoxose-type cardenolides. Genins represented less than 2% of the overall content, while lanatoside A was the predominant cardenolide ( ca. 65%) in all samples. The cardenolide yield of micropropagated D. obscura plants depended on the age and development of the cultures, but productivity of long-term cultures (2 years) was quite similar to that of the parent plant. Changes in the concentrations of phosphate or manganes…
LC-NMR applied to the characterisation of cardiac glycosides from three micropropagatedIsoplexisspecies
2002
Species of the genus Isoplexis are of particular interest with respect to the biochemical pathway leading to the cardenolides. It is important to determine whether or not 5β-configured compounds, typically produced by Digitalis species and used in medicine, are present together with their respective α-isomers in Isoplexis spp. Structure elucidation by LC-NMR of the products isolated from in vitro regenerated Isoplexis canariensis, I. chalcantha and I. isabelliana was carried out, and similarities were observed among the products of the three species, including the presence of digitoxigenin-type cardenolides in I. canariensis and xysmalogenin and canarigenin derivatives in I. chalcantha neve…
Cardenolide variation within and among natural populations of Digitalis obscura
1999
Summary Cardenolide content in 49 wild-growing Digitalis obscura plants from six natural populations on the Iberian Peninsula was determined by HPLC. Series A and B glycosides were the predominant cardenolides in all samples, but absolute values varied among and within populations. Hierarchic analysis of variance showed that the proportion of variation attributable to individuals was significantly higher than that attributable to population differences. Furthermore, analyses from greenhouse-grown plants, generated from seeds collected from selected parental genotypes, attributed nearly all the variability in cardenolide content to single plants. Some individual plants showed a leaf content …
Population genetic study in the Balearic endemic plant speciesDigitalis minor(Scrophulariaceae) using RAPD markers
2001
Digitalis minor (Scrophulariaceae) is a cardenolide-producing plant endemic to the eastern Balearic Islands (Mallorca, Menorca, and Cabrera) that occurs in two morphologically distinct varieties: D. minor var. minor (pubescent) and D. minor var. palaui (glabrous). Levels and patterns of genetic diversity in 162 individuals from 17 D. minor populations across the entire geographic range were assessed using random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers. Comigrating RAPD fragments tested were found to be homologous by Southern hybridization in both var. minor and var. palaui. To avoid bias in parameter estimation, analyses of population genetic structure were restricted to those RAPD bands t…
Isolation, culture and plant regeneration from mesophyll protoplasts of Digitalis obscura
1987
High yields of protoplasts were obtained from mesophyll tissue of Digitalis obscura L. Osmotic potential of the isolation medium and Ca2+ were important in obtaining a high viability of the preparations. In different culture techniques employed, liquid-over-agar-solidified medium was superior to liquid medium alone. Agar plating technique was ineffective. On Murashige and Skoog modified medium with casein hydrolysate and several indoleacetic acid and benzyladenine combinations, isolated protoplasts underwent sustained mitotic division and produced calli. The calli formed shoots when transferred to regeneration media. Regenerated shoots could be easily rooted and developed into whole plants …