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      Molecular identification of Uncaria ( Gouteng) through DNA barcoding

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          Abstract

          Background

          While DNA barcoding is an important technology for the authentication of the botanical origins of Chinese medicines, the suitable markers for DNA barcoding of the genus Uncaria have not been reported yet. This study aims to determine suitable markers for DNA barcoding of the genus Uncaria ( Gouteng).

          Methods

          Genomic DNA was extracted from the freshly dried leaves of Uncaria plants by a Bioteke’s Plant Genomic DNA Extraction Kit. Five candidate DNA barcode sites (ITS2, rbcL, psbAtrnH, ITS, and matK) were amplified by PCR with established primers. The purified PCR products were bidirectionally sequenced with appropriate amplification primers in an ABI-PRISM3730 instrument. The candidate DNA barcodes of 257 accessions of Uncaria in GenBank were aligned by ClustalW. Sequence assembly and consensus sequence generation were performed with CodonCode Aligner 3.7.1. The identification efficiency of the candidate DNA barcodes was evaluated with BLAST and nearest distance methods. The interspecific divergence and intraspecific variation were assessed by the Kimura 2-Parameter model. Genetic distances were computed with Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis 6.0.

          Results

          The accessions of the five candidate DNA barcodes from 11 of 12 species of Uncaria in China and four species from other countries were included in the analysis, while 54 of total accessions were submitted to GenBank. In a comparison of the interspecific genetic distances of the five candidate barcodes, psbAtrnH exhibited the highest interspecific divergence based on interspecific distance, theta prime, and minimum interspecific distance, followed by ITS2. The distribution of the interspecific distance of ITS2 and psbAtrnH was higher than the corresponding intraspecific distance. Additionally, psbAtrnH showed 95.9 % identification efficiency by both the BLAST and nearest distance methods regardless of species or genus level. ITS2 exhibited 92.2 % identification efficiency by the nearest distance method, but 87 % by the BLAST method.

          Conclusion

          While psbAtrnH and ITS2 (used alone) were applicable barcodes for species authentication of Uncaria, psbAtrnH was a more suitable barcode for authentication of Uncaria macrophylla.

          Electronic supplementary material

          The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13020-015-0072-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

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          Most cited references33

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          Use of DNA barcodes to identify flowering plants.

          Methods for identifying species by using short orthologous DNA sequences, known as "DNA barcodes," have been proposed and initiated to facilitate biodiversity studies, identify juveniles, associate sexes, and enhance forensic analyses. The cytochrome c oxidase 1 sequence, which has been found to be widely applicable in animal barcoding, is not appropriate for most species of plants because of a much slower rate of cytochrome c oxidase 1 gene evolution in higher plants than in animals. We therefore propose the nuclear internal transcribed spacer region and the plastid trnH-psbA intergenic spacer as potentially usable DNA regions for applying barcoding to flowering plants. The internal transcribed spacer is the most commonly sequenced locus used in plant phylogenetic investigations at the species level and shows high levels of interspecific divergence. The trnH-psbA spacer, although short ( approximately 450-bp), is the most variable plastid region in angiosperms and is easily amplified across a broad range of land plants. Comparison of the total plastid genomes of tobacco and deadly nightshade enhanced with trials on widely divergent angiosperm taxa, including closely related species in seven plant families and a group of species sampled from a local flora encompassing 50 plant families (for a total of 99 species, 80 genera, and 53 families), suggest that the sequences in this pair of loci have the potential to discriminate among the largest number of plant species for barcoding purposes.
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            Validation of the ITS2 Region as a Novel DNA Barcode for Identifying Medicinal Plant Species

            Background The plant working group of the Consortium for the Barcode of Life recommended the two-locus combination of rbcL + matK as the plant barcode, yet the combination was shown to successfully discriminate among 907 samples from 550 species at the species level with a probability of 72%. The group admits that the two-locus barcode is far from perfect due to the low identification rate, and the search is not over. Methodology/Principal Findings Here, we compared seven candidate DNA barcodes (psbA-trnH, matK, rbcL, rpoC1, ycf5, ITS2, and ITS) from medicinal plant species. Our ranking criteria included PCR amplification efficiency, differential intra- and inter-specific divergences, and the DNA barcoding gap. Our data suggest that the second internal transcribed spacer (ITS2) of nuclear ribosomal DNA represents the most suitable region for DNA barcoding applications. Furthermore, we tested the discrimination ability of ITS2 in more than 6600 plant samples belonging to 4800 species from 753 distinct genera and found that the rate of successful identification with the ITS2 was 92.7% at the species level. Conclusions The ITS2 region can be potentially used as a standard DNA barcode to identify medicinal plants and their closely related species. We also propose that ITS2 can serve as a novel universal barcode for the identification of a broader range of plant taxa.
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              A Two-Locus Global DNA Barcode for Land Plants: The Coding rbcL Gene Complements the Non-Coding trnH-psbA Spacer Region

              Background A useful DNA barcode requires sufficient sequence variation to distinguish between species and ease of application across a broad range of taxa. Discovery of a DNA barcode for land plants has been limited by intrinsically lower rates of sequence evolution in plant genomes than that observed in animals. This low rate has complicated the trade-off in finding a locus that is universal and readily sequenced and has sufficiently high sequence divergence at the species-level. Methodology/Principal Findings Here, a global plant DNA barcode system is evaluated by comparing universal application and degree of sequence divergence for nine putative barcode loci, including coding and non-coding regions, singly and in pairs across a phylogenetically diverse set of 48 genera (two species per genus). No single locus could discriminate among species in a pair in more than 79% of genera, whereas discrimination increased to nearly 88% when the non-coding trnH-psbA spacer was paired with one of three coding loci, including rbcL. In silico trials were conducted in which DNA sequences from GenBank were used to further evaluate the discriminatory power of a subset of these loci. These trials supported the earlier observation that trnH-psbA coupled with rbcL can correctly identify and discriminate among related species. Conclusions/Significance A combination of the non-coding trnH-psbA spacer region and a portion of the coding rbcL gene is recommended as a two-locus global land plant barcode that provides the necessary universality and species discrimination.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                tangyinlin2008@163.com
                wuyaosheng03@sina.com , wuyaosheng2012@gxmu.edu.cn
                hrs.3130064@163.com
                hurry211625@163.com
                12229281@qq.com
                xupeng2009@163.com
                scottssdssd@126.com
                danzhaoc@sohu.com
                luoyu2005@126.com
                Journal
                Chin Med
                Chin Med
                Chinese Medicine
                BioMed Central (London )
                1749-8546
                3 February 2016
                3 February 2016
                2016
                : 11
                : 3
                Affiliations
                [ ]Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Guangxi Medical University, 530021 Nanning, Guangxi China
                [ ]Key Laboratory of Biological Molecular Medicine Research of Guangxi Higher Education, 530021 Nanning, Guangxi China
                [ ]Clinical Laboratory, Maternal and Child Health Hospital of Guangxi, 530003 Nanning, Guangxi China
                [ ]Guangxi Academy of Minority Nationality Medicine and Pharmacology, 530001 Nanning, Guangxi China
                [ ]School of Pharmacy, Guangdong Medical College, 523808 Dongguan, Guangdong China
                [ ]Liuzhou People’s Hospital, 545006 Liuzhou, Guangxi China
                [ ]Affiliated Cancer Hospital of Guangxi Medical University, 530021 Nanning, Guangxi China
                Article
                72
                10.1186/s13020-015-0072-7
                4739391
                26843891
                8c99379e-f855-4f5f-9cfd-6a777e227e94
                © Tang et al. 2016

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver ( http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

                History
                : 14 January 2015
                : 7 December 2015
                Categories
                Research
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                © The Author(s) 2016

                Complementary & Alternative medicine
                Complementary & Alternative medicine

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