RESUMEN
Medicinal plant species has a valuable economic importance because of its usage as pharmaceuticals, nutritional, as well as its use in popular medication. For DNA-based techniques, nanogram quantities of the purified DNA are requisite to amplify and yield sufficient amounts of PCR products. SDS-based DNA isolation method was used to extract DNA from 11 species of different aromatic and medicinal plants collected from Saudi Arabia. Three hundred milligrams of fresh shredded plant material was necessary. The DNA purity was further confirmed by agarose gel, restriction endonuclease digestion and microsatellite primed-polymerase chain reaction (MP-PCR). DNA yields ranged from 10-20 µg (in 100-µL elution volumes) from all plant material evaluated. The DNA obtained was free of any contaminating proteins, polysaccharides and colored pigments. The extracted genomic DNA was found suitable for restriction digestion and PCR amplification. Our experimental procedure provides an easy, suitable, non-toxic, cheap, and quick process for the amplification of DNA from medical plant tissue.
Asunto(s)
ADN de Plantas/aislamiento & purificación , Técnicas de Amplificación de Ácido Nucleico/métodos , Plantas Medicinales/genética , Artemisia/genética , Citrullus/genética , ADN de Plantas/análisis , ADN de Plantas/genética , Genómica , Repeticiones de Microsatélite , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa/métodosRESUMEN
Twenty-one isolates of Rhizoctonia solani were categorized into three anastomosis groups consisting of AG-4-HG-I (eight isolates), AG-2-2 (nine isolates) and AG-5 (four isolates). Their pathogenic capacities were tested on cotton cultivar Giza 86. Pre-emergence damping-off varied in response to the different isolates; however, the differences were not significant. Soluble proteins of the fungal isolates were electrophoresed using SDS-PAGE and gel electrophoreses. A dendrogram of the protein banding patterns by the UPGMA of arithmetic means placed the fungal isolates into distinct groups. There was no evidence of a relationship between protein dendrogram, anastomosis grouping or level of virulence or geographic origin. The dendrogram generated from these isolates based on PCR analysis with five RAPD-PCR primers showed high levels of genetic similarity among the isolates from the same geographical locations. There was partially relationship between the genetic similarity and AGs or level of virulence or geographic origin based on RAPD dendrogram. These results demonstrate that RAPD technique is a useful tool in determining the genetic characterization among isolates of R. solani.