Maximizing seedling and root tuber production in Polygonum multiflorum for use in ethnomedicine

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Title
Maximizing seedling and root tuber production in Polygonum multiflorum for use in ethnomedicine
Author(s)
Y Kang; K Lee; J Choi; R Komakech; J Min; S Ju; Suk Weon Kim; C Youn; Y G Kim; B C Moon
Bibliographic Citation
South African Journal of Botany, vol. 119, pp. 119-131
Publication Year
2018
Abstract
There is need for a robust production mechanisms to meet the ever increasing demand for herbal medicine in the world today. In this study, we developed a standard protocol for the in vitro culture of Polygonum multiflorum to rapidly produce seedlings and promote the enlargement of its medicinal root tubers. Seeds were grown on Murashige and Skoog (MS) basal medium to obtain 1-week-old microseedlings. The ideal growth medium for these seedlings was determined by subculturing in different culture media. Maximal growth was observed on WPM, with a growth index of 160% after 5 weeks. Wood Plant Medium (WPM) supplemented with the kinetin and indole-3-acetic acid hormones yielded the highest average seedling shoot elongation, root initiation, and root elongation after 6 weeks. At 16 weeks after planting in the field, seedlings cultured in WPM + kinetin (1.0 mg/l) and IAA (1.0 mg/l) produced enlarged root tubers with an average dry weight of 31.10 g, as compared to 10.10 and 16.80 g for root tubers from plants propagated from P. multiflorum seed and stem cuttings, respectively. Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and hierarchical cluster analyses of the enlarged root tubers revealed that their chemical composition was the same as that of tubers sold on the market and from plants propagated through seeds and stem cuttings. Our findings provide a basis for large-scale in vitro propagation of P. multiflorum as a resource for traditional Chinese medicine.
Keyword
In vitro cultureNodal explantPlantletsPolygonum multiflorumTraditional medicineTuber enlargement
ISSN
0254-6299
Publisher
Elsevier
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sajb.2018.08.016
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Jeonbuk Branch Institute > Biological Resource Center > 1. Journal Articles
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