Abstract

Curculin, a sweet protein found in Curculigo latifolia fruit has great potential for the pharmaceutical industry. This protein interestingly has been found to have both sweet taste and taste-modifying capacities comparable with other natural sweeteners. According to our knowledge this is the first reported case on the isolation of microsatellite loci in this genus. Hence, the current development of microsatellite markers for C. latifolia will facilitate future population genetic studies and breeding programs for this valuable plant. In this study 11 microsatellite markers were developed using 3′ and 5′ ISSR markers. The primers were tested on 27 accessions from all states of Peninsular Malaysia. The number of alleles per locus ranged from three to seven, with allele size ranging from 141 to 306 bp. The observed and expected heterozygosity ranged between 0.00–0.65 and 0.38–0.79, respectively. The polymorphic information content ranged from 0.35 to 0.74 and the Shannon’s information index ranged from 0.82 to 1.57. These developed polymorphic microsatellites were used for constructing a dendrogram by unweighted pair group method with arithmetic mean cluster analysis using the Dice’s similarity coefficient. Accessions association according to their geographical origin was observed. Based on characteristics of isolated microsatellites for C. latifolia accessions all genotype can be distinguished using these 11 microsatellite markers. These polymorphic markers could also be applied to studies on uniformity determination and somaclonal variation of tissue culture plantlets, varieties identification, genetic diversity, analysis of phylogenetic relationship, genetic linkage maps and quantitative trait loci in C. latifolia. Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s11033-012-1853-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Lemba (Curculigo latifolia Dryand) a monocotyledonous perennial herb belongs to the Hypoxidaceae family

  • The binary data attained from scoring of microsatellite markers were analyzed using NTSYS-pc 2.1 in order to reveal the genetic variability and associations among C. latifolia accessions

  • Among the 68 randomly-selected clones of inserted fragments amplified from the five ISSR markers, a total of 50 clones were selected for sequence analyses

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Summary

Introduction

Lemba (Curculigo latifolia Dryand) a monocotyledonous perennial herb belongs to the Hypoxidaceae family. The genus Curculigo comprising of about 20 species is distributed in the tropical regions of Asia and Africa [1]. Curculin, which is extracted from fruits of C. latifolia has been found to have a sweet taste with sweetness-modifying characteristics of natural sweeteners and has been shown to be a good lowcalorie sweetener [2, 3]. It has been proven that curculin is up to 9,000 times sweeter than sucrose [4] and has antidiabetic properties [5]. This plant has great potential for the pharmaceutical and food industries. The beneficial characteristics of the species can be further enhanced through plant breeding, but characterization of

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