Abstract

A study was carried out to determine the species limits of the endemic genus Hortonia by DNA barcoding with a view to establishing conclusive molecular evidence regarding the speciation of Hortonia in Sri Lanka. Total DNA was extracted from all three species and the purity of the extracted DNA was confirmed. Internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region and the trnH-psbA region were first amplified by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with specific primers and ligated to a pBlueScript vector followed by plasmid purification. The purified plasmids containing the DNA of interest were subjected to sequencing. Sequence homology of ITS and trnH-psbA from all three species were compared using MacVector software. Between H. ovalifolia and H. floribunda, the ITS region showed a 2.37 % sequence divergence and the trnH-psbA region showed a 1.5 % sequence divergence. Between H. ovalifolia and H. angustifolia, the ITS region and trnH-psbA region showed a 3.36 % and 1.89 % sequence divergences, respectively. The percentage sequence divergence between ITS and trnH-psbA regions of H. floribunda and H. angustifolia were 3.36 % and 2.65 %, respectively. The high sequence divergence values clearly indicate that the genus Hortonia has three different species. Considering the percentage sequence divergence values, H. ovalifolia and H. floribunda are more closely related to each other than to H. angustifolia . Doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.4038/jnsfsr.v40i4.5048 J.Natn.Sci.Foundation Sri Lanka 2012 40 (4): 345-349

Highlights

  • Despite its relatively small size, Sri Lanka possesses a high level of biodiversity because of its topographic and climatic heterogeneity as well as its coastal influence

  • Internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region and the trnH-psbA region were first amplified by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with specific primers and ligated to a pBlueScript vector followed by plasmid purification

  • Between H. ovalifolia and H. floribunda, the ITS region showed a sequence difference in 19 base pairs accounting for 2.37 % sequence divergence and the trnH-psbA region showed a sequence difference in 8 base pairs accounting for 1.5 % sequence divergence

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Summary

Introduction

Despite its relatively small size, Sri Lanka possesses a high level of biodiversity because of its topographic and climatic heterogeneity as well as its coastal influence. Hortonia is considered as a surviving genus of the ancestral plants from which the Monimiaceae alliance has evolved Plants of this family are trees or shrubs and rarely climbers, and it comprises about 39 genera, where 440 species are widely spread in the tropical and subtropical regions of America (Leitao et al, 2000). This family occurs in Sri Lanka, Oceania, Polynesia, Australia, Malaysia, Madagascar and South America (Leitao et al, 2000). It is very rare in Africa and not reported from India

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