Abstract

Ocimum tenuiflorum Linn. (Lamiaceae) is an aromatic plant with a lot of potential medicinally, industrially and domestically. There are different morpho-types of O. tenuiflorum, with different shades of purple pigment on their leaves. Very few studies have been done to study the genetic variation among O. tenuiflorum morpho-types. Thus, in the present study, four O. tenuiflorum morpho-types that varied in pigmentation were characterised using RAPD marker as a molecular tool. Eight different primers collectively amplified 64 bands in the four morpho-types analysed. The RAPD technique revealed that the varied amount of purple pigment in O. tenuiflorum morpho-types is not due to environmental factor alone. The UPGMA clustering algorithm based on RAPD data grouped the four morpho-types into two major groups, with O. tenuiflorum (T2) with very light purple leaves and stem morpho-type, more related to O. tenuiflorum (T3) that have deep purple leaves and stem. The result was able to show the phylogenetic relationships within the species. The low level of genetic diversity observed in O. tenuiflorum can be attributed to the mode of reproduction and the reproductive biology of the species, due to the fact that they are likely to be natural hybrids produced through cross pollination.

Highlights

  • Ocimum tenuiflorum Linn. (Lamiaceae) is an aromatic plant with about 150 variants

  • Four O. tenuiflorum morpho-types were surveyed with RAPD marker system

  • The Unweighted Pair Group Method with Arithmetic averages (UPGMA) clustering algorithm based on RAPD data grouped the four morpho-types into two major groups (Fig. 1), with O. tenuiflorum (T1) morpho-type and O. tenuiflorum (T4) morpho-type in one group and O.tenuiflorum (T2) morpho-type and O. tenuiflorum (T3) morpho-type in the other group

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Summary

Introduction

Ocimum tenuiflorum Linn. (Lamiaceae) is an aromatic plant with about 150 variants. It is one of the most famous perennial herbs which are native to India and widespread as a cultivated plant and an escaped weed, covering the entire Indian sub-continent (Kirtikar and Basu, 1984). O. tenuiflorum is known as O. sanctum It is called Indian’s holy basil in English, ‘Kala-Tulsi’ among the Hindi-speaking people of India and ‘Efinrin wewe’ among the Yoruba speaking people of South-western Nigeria (Mohan et al, 2011). It is an erect, tall, sub-shrub plant, with hairy subquadrangular branches. The inflorescence has purplish-white, hermaphroditic and zygomorphic flowers arranged in elongate racemes in close whorls They produce numerous tiny seeds which are dark brownish and globose-subglobose in shape with shinny seed coat. O. tenuiflorum is readily distinguished from the other species in the genus Ocimum by their characteristically spreading pedicels and the internally glaborous calyces (Malav, 2015)

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