Litcius/Paper detail

Chloroplast genome sequencing based on genome skimming for identification of Eriobotryae Folium

Fang Li, Xuena Xie, Rong Huang, Enwei Tian, Chan Li, Zhi Chao

2021BMC Biotechnology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Whole chloroplast genome (cpDNA) sequence is becoming widely used in the phylogenetic studies of plant and species identification, but in most cases the cpDNA were acquired from silica gel dried fresh leaves. So far few reports have been available to describe cpDNA acquisition from crude drugs derived from plant materials, the DNA of which usually was seriously damaged during their processing. In this study, we retrieved cpDNA from the commonly used crude drug Eriobotryae Folium (Pipaye in Chinese, which is the dried leaves of Eriobotrya japonica, PPY) using genome skimming technique. RESULTS: We successfully recovered cpDNA sequences and rDNA sequences from the crude drug PPY, and bioinformatics analysis showed a high overall consistency between the cpDNA obtained from the crude drugs and fresh samples. In the ML tree, each species formed distinct monophyletic clades based on cpDNA sequence data, while the phylogenetic relationships between Eriobotrya species were poorly resolved based on ITS and ITS2. CONCLUSION: Our results demonstrate that both cpDNA and ITS/ITS2 are effective for identifying PPY and its counterfeits derived from distantly related species (i.e. Dillenia turbinata and Magnolia grandiflora), but cpDNA is more effective for distinguishing the counterfeits derived from the close relatives of Eriobotrya japonica, suggesting the potential of genome skimming for retrieving cpDNA from crude drugs used in Traditional Chinese Medicine for their identification.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyGenomeIdentification (biology)Computational biologyFolium of DescartesChloroplastEvolutionary biologyGeneticsGeneBotanyHigh-performance liquid chromatographyChromatographyChemistryGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesPlant Disease Resistance and GeneticsPlant-Microbe Interactions and Immunity