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Rapid comparison of metabolic equivalence of standard medicinal parts from medicinal plants and their in vitro-generated adventitious roots using FT-IR spectroscopy
Author(s) -
Myung Suk Ahn,
Sung Ran Min,
Eun Yee Jie,
Eun Jin So,
So Yeon Choi,
Byeong Cheol Moon,
Young Min Kang,
SoYoung Park,
Suk Weon Kim
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of plant biotechnology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.246
H-Index - 8
eISSN - 1598-6365
pISSN - 1229-2818
DOI - 10.5010/jpb.2015.42.3.257
Subject(s) - biology , equivalence (formal languages) , in vitro , traditional medicine , botany , mathematics , genetics , pure mathematics , medicine
To determine whether metabolite fingerprinting for whole cell extracts based on Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy can be used to discriminate and compare metabolic equivalence, standard medicinal parts from four medicinal plants (Cynanchum wilfordii Hemsley, Atractylodes japonica Koidz, Polygonum multiflorum Thunberg and Astragalus membranaceus Bunge) and their in vitro-produced adventitious roots were analyzed by FT-IR spectroscopy. The principal component analysis (PCA) and partial least square discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) from the FT-IR spectral data showed that the whole metabolic pattern from Cynanchum wilfordii was highly similar to Astragalus membranaceus. However, Atractylodes japonica and Polygonum multiflorum showed significantly different metabolic patterns. Furthermore, adventitious roots from Cynanchum wilfordii and Astragalus membranaceus also showed similar metabolic patterns compared to their standard medicinal parts. These results clearly show that mass proliferation of adventitious roots may be applied to aquire novel supply of standard medicinal parts from medicinal plants. However, the whole metabolic pattern from adventitious roots of Atractylodes japonica and Polygonum multiflorum were not similar to their standard medicinal parts. Furthermore, FT-IR spectroscopy combined with multivariate analyses established in this study may be applied as an alternative tool to discriminate the whole metabolic equivalence from several standard medicinal parts. Thus, we suggest that these metabolic discrimination systems may be applied for metabolic standardization of herbal medicinal resources.

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