Ethnopharmacological relevance: Mexican people employed infusion of leaves of Choisya ternata Kunth for their antispasmodic and "simulative properties".
Aim of the study:In the present study the detailed GC and GC-MS analyses of the essential oil of Choisya ternata Kunth (Rutaceae) were performed. The presence of a minor constituent isopropyl N-methylanthranilate (1) was revealed among other identified volatiles. A synthesis of 1 was undertaken in order to corroborate this find and obtain gram quantities that would allow the testing of its biological activity (peripheral and central antinociceptive activity).
Material and methods:The oils were investigated by GC and GC-MS. Synthesized compounds were spectrally characterized (UV-Vis, IR, 1D and 2D NMR, MS). The obtained synthetic samples of compounds were assayed for peripheral and central antinociceptive activity in two models (effects on acetic acid induced writhing in mice and the hot plate test for nociception). showed the lowest activity (with the methyl ester at 3 mg/kg still better than acetylsalicylic acid, at 200 mg/kg, in the first, or comparable with morphine, at 5 mg/kg, in the second test).
Conclusion:This study once again revealed that detailed investigations of plant species with ethnopharmacologically documented activity may yield new natural compounds -a new alkaloid (ternanthranin), a volatile simple anthranilate that can be considered responsible for the antinociceptive activity of the crude plant extracts.
The manipulation of DNA is routine practice in botanical research and has made a huge impact on plant breeding, biotechnology and biodiversity evaluation. DNA is easy to extract from most plant tissues and can be stored for long periods in DNA banks. Curation methods are well developed for other botanical resources such as herbaria, seed banks and botanic gardens, but procedures for the establishment and maintenance of DNA banks have not been well documented. This paper reviews the curation of DNA banks for the characterisation and utilisation of biodiversity and provides guidelines for DNA bank management. It surveys existing DNA banks and outlines their operation. It includes a review of plant DNA collection, preservation, isolation, storage, database management and exchange procedures. We stress that DNA banks require full integration with existing collections such as botanic gardens, herbaria and seed banks, and information retrieval systems that link such facilities, bioinformatic resources and other DNA banks. They also require efficient and well-regulated sample exchange procedures. Only with appropriate curation will maximum utilisation of DNA collections be achieved.
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