Abstract

The Anacardiaceae is an important and worldwide distributed family of ecological and socio-economic relevance. Notwithstanding that, molecular studies in this family are scarce and problematic because of the particularly high concentration of secondary metabolites—i.e. tannins and oleoresins—that are present in almost all tissues of the many members of the group, which complicate the purification and amplification of the DNA. The objective of this work was to improve an available DNA isolation method for Schinopsis spp. and other related Anacardiaceae, as well as the PCR protocols for DNA amplification of the chloroplast trnL-F, rps16 and ndhF and nuclear ITS–ETS fragments. The modifications proposed allowed the extraction of 70–120 µg of non-degraded genomic DNA per gram of dry tissue that resulted useful for PCR amplification. PCR reactions produced the expected fragments that could be directly sequenced. Sequence analyses of amplicons showed similarity with the corresponding Schinopsis accessions available at GenBank. The methodology presented here can be routinely applied for molecular studies of the group aimed to clarify not only aspects on the molecular biology but also the taxonomy and phylogeny of this fascinating group of vascular plants.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s40064-016-2118-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The Anacardiaceae is a cosmopolitan family including 81 genera and approximately 800 species (Pell et al 2011)

  • Many genera are important for having edible fruits (Anacardium, Mangifera, Pistacia, Sclerocarya, Spondias), ornamental use (Cotinus, Rhus, Schinus), or quality timber (Astronium, Schinopsis)

  • Based on Permingeat et al (1998), we developed an adapted new protocol to isolate DNA from dried Schinopsis leaves

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Summary

Introduction

The Anacardiaceae is a cosmopolitan family including 81 genera and approximately 800 species (Pell et al 2011). Many genera are important for having edible fruits (Anacardium, Mangifera, Pistacia, Sclerocarya, Spondias), ornamental use (Cotinus, Rhus, Schinus), or quality timber (Astronium, Schinopsis). Some genera have resiniferous channels accumulating tannins, phenolic compounds and oils that increase the wood resistance. The South American small genus Schinopsis Engl. Is economically important given its extremely tough and durable timber. Its species have ecological relevance since they are usually forest dominants (Barberis et al 2012).

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