Bioactive constituents in Prunus africana: Geographical variation throughout Africa and associations with environmental and genetic parameters

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dc.contributor.author Muluvi, Geoffrey M.
dc.contributor.author Kadu, Caroline A. C.
dc.contributor.author Parich, Alexandra
dc.contributor.author Schueler, Silvio
dc.contributor.author Konrad, Heino
dc.contributor.author Eyog-Matig, Oscar
dc.contributor.author Muchugi, Alice
dc.contributor.author Williams, Vivienne L.
dc.contributor.author Rarnarnonjisoa, Lolona
dc.contributor.author Kapinga, Consolatha
dc.contributor.author Foahom, Bernard
dc.contributor.author Katsvanga, Cuthbert
dc.contributor.author Hafashirnana, David
dc.contributor.author Obama, Crisantos
dc.contributor.author Vinceti, Barbara
dc.contributor.author Schumacher, Rainer
dc.contributor.author Ceburek, Thomas
dc.date.accessioned 2014-11-20T06:08:45Z
dc.date.available 2014-11-20T06:08:45Z
dc.date.issued 2012
dc.identifier.citation Elsevier en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/92
dc.description http://dx.doi.org/10.l 016/j.phytochem.2012.0G.001 en_US
dc.description.abstract Prunus ojricana - an evergreen tree found in Afromontane forests - is used in traditional medicine to cure benign prostate hyperplasia. Different bioactive constituents derived from bark extracts from 20 tree populations sampled throughout the species' natural range in Africa were studied by means of GC-MSD. The average concentration [rngjkg w/w] in increasing order was: lauric acid (18). myristic acid (22). n-docosanol (25). ferulic acid (49). /i-sitostenone (198), fl-sitosterol (490). and ursolic acid (743). The concentrations of many bark constituents were significantly correlated and concentration of n-docosanol was highly significantly correlated with all other analytes. Estimates of variance components revealed the highest variation among populations for ursolic acid (66%) and the lowest for fl-sitosterol (20%). In general, environmental parameters recorded (temperature, precipitation, alt itude) for the samples sites were not correlated with the concentration of most constituents; however. concentration of ferulic acid was significantly correlated with annual precipitation'[Because the concentration of compounds in bark extracts may be affected by tree size. the diameter of sampled plants at 1.3 m tree height (as proxy of age) was recorded. The only relationship with tree diameter was a negative correlation with ursolic acid. Under the assumption that genetically less variable populations have less variable concentrations of bark compounds, correlations between variation parameters of the concentration and the respective genetic composition based on chloroplast and nuclear DNA markers were assessed. Only variation of /i-sitosterol concentration was significantly correlated with haplotypic diversity. The fixation index (Fls) was positively correlated with the variation in concentration of ferulic acid. Principal Components Analysis (PCA) indicated a weak geographic pattern. Mantel tests, however, revealed associations between the geographic patterns of bioactive constituents and the phylogenetic relationship among the populations sampled. This suggests an independent evolution of bark metabolism within different phylogeographical lineages, and the molecular phylogeographic pattern is partly reflected in the variation in concentration of bark constituents. The results have important implications for the design of strategies for the sustainable use and conservation of this important African tree species. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Elsevier en_US
dc.subject Pygeutn ojricanuit en_US
dc.subject Barks extracts en_US
dc.subject Chemotypes en_US
dc.subject Genetic Variation en_US
dc.title Bioactive constituents in Prunus africana: Geographical variation throughout Africa and associations with environmental and genetic parameters en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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