Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0012872 (
DNA marker
)
929
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acacia
species are very important tree species in tropical and subtropical countries of the World for their economic and medicinal benefits. Precise identification of
Acacia
is very important to distinguish the invasive species from rare species however, it is difficult to differentiate
Acacia
species based on morphological charcters. In addition, precise identification is also important for wood charcterization in the forest industry as these species are declining due to illegal logging and deforestation. To overcome thsese limitations of morphological identification, DNA barcoding is being used as an efficient and quick approach for precise identification of tree species. In this study, we selected two chloroplast and plastid base DNA markers (
rbcL
and
matK
) for the identification of five selected tree species of
Acacia
(A. albida, A. ampliceps, A. catechu, A. coriacea and A. tortilis)
. The genomic DNA of the selected
Acacia
species was extracted, amplified through PCR using specific primers and subsequently sequenced through Sanger sequencing. In
matK
DNA marker
the average AT nucleotide contents were higher (59.46%) and GC contents were lower (40.44%) as compared to the AT (55.40%) and GC content (44.54%) in
rbcL
marker. The means genetic distance K2P between the
Acacia
species was higher in
matK
(0.704%) as compared to
rbcL
(0.230%). All
Acacia
species could be identified based on unique SNPs profile. Based on SNP data profiles, DNA sequence based scannable QR codes were developed for accurate identification of
Acacia
species. The phylogenetic analysis based on both markers (
rbcL
and
matK
) showed that both
A. coriacea
and
A. tortilis
were closely related with each other and clustered in the same group while other two species
A. albida
and
A. catechu
were grouped together. The specie
A. ampliceps
remained ungrouped distantly, compared with other four species. These finding highlights the potential of DNA barcoding for efficient and reproducible identification of
Acacia
species.
...
PMID:Development of DNA barcodes for selected
Acacia
species by using
rbcL
and
matK
DNA markers. 3330 85