Abstract

Hemiparasitic plants commonly known as mistletoe (muérdago in Spanish) in the families Santalaceae and Loranthaceae are common in various kinds of plants or trees, and many hemiparasitic plants are used for medicinal purposes in various parts of the world. The objective of the present work, carried out in Psittacanthus linearis (suelda con suelda), a representative species in the seasonally dry forest (SDF) from the north of Perú, was to study aspects of in vitro tissue culture, carry out preliminary phytochemical analysis, and assess antibacterial activity. Seeds of individuals of P. linearis, which used Prosopis pallida (algarrobo) as host plant, were collected and used to induce in vitro seed germination, clonal propagation, callus induction and organogenesis. Stems, leaves and fruits of individuals of P. linearis were dried, powdered, and subjected to ethanol extraction. Posteriorly the extract was first recovered with ethanol and the remnant with chloroform, which formed the ethanolic and chloroformic fraction. A preliminary phytochemical screening was performed and preliminary antibacterial studies with Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were carried out and their results are discussed. This is the first report about in vitro tissue culture, phytochemical analysis and antibacterial activity of P. linearis. The results may have important implications for understanding physiological and biochemical interactions between host and hemiparasitic species as well as P. linearis with P. pallida and other SDF species.

Highlights

  • The order Santalales consists of 10 families and ca. 2000 species

  • The aim of the present study was to evaluate some aspects of in vitro tissue culture, preliminar phytochemical analysis and antibacterial activity of Psittacanthus linearis collected from the host Prosopis pallida, a representative species of the Seasonally Dry Forest of Northern Peru, due to its high tolerance to drought and salinity and produce fruits with high nutritional value

  • Data of the P. linearis seed evaluation are presented in the table 1

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The order Santalales consists of 10 families and ca. The largest family is Loranthaceae (900), followed by the Santalaceae (400), Viscaceae (300), and Olacaceae (250). None of the six remaining families has more than a hundred species (Cronquist,1988). According to the system proposed by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group, the family Loranthaceae is classified with Olacaceae, Balanophoraceae, and Santalaceae, and others families in the order Santalales, Core Superasterids (APG IV, 2016). 65 genera and 900 species of epiphytic, photosynthetic and hemiparasites plants that adhere to branchs of trees by means of haustoria to absorb water and nutrients. Hemiparasitic plants are commonly known as mistletoe (Lorenzi, 2000; Pennington et al, 2004) or ‘suelda con suelda’ (Peruvian vernacular name). Attached to following forest species of the seasonally dry forest: Prosopis pallida (Willd.) Kunth (Fabaceae) (algarrobo), Acacia macracantha Willd. Macbr. attached to following forest species of the seasonally dry forest: Prosopis pallida (Willd.) Kunth (Fabaceae) (algarrobo), Acacia macracantha Willd. (Fabaceae) (faique), Salix humboltiana Willd. (Salicaceae) (sauce) and others species

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call