4.1 Article

Micropropagation of Cleome dendroides (Cleomaceae), an endemic Brazilian species, as a source of glucosinolates

Journal

PLANT BIOSYSTEMS
Volume 155, Issue 2, Pages 281-290

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/11263504.2020.1739161

Keywords

Auxins; chromatographic analysis; cytokinins; in vitro propagation; secondary metabolites

Categories

Funding

  1. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [421538/20163]
  2. Carlos Chagas Filho Foundation for Research Support in the State of Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ) [E-26/010.001019/2016]

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This study successfully established a micropropagation method for Cleome dendroides plants, and identified them as a potential source of glucosinolates. The research findings suggest that this endemic species has potential antineoplastic bioactivity.
This is the first study related to micropropagation and phytochemical analyses of Cleome dendroides, an endemic species of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, a biome affected by human activity. Among the classes of substances produced by the genus Cleome, the glucosinolates are used as chemotaxonomic markers. They have a wide structural diversity, which affords, for example, antineoplastic bioactivity. The micropropagation was established using explants from two sources: seedlings and in vitro plants. The morphogenic response was evaluated on Murashige-Skoog (MS) medium with different concentrations of benzyladenine (BA). Hypocotyl explants from seedlings and stem explants from in vitro plants showed higher capacity of shoot regeneration (56.3-100%). Shoot proliferation (75-100%) was maintained when hypocotyl explant-derived shoots and stem explant-derived shoots were subcultured three times a month. Hypocotyl explant-derived shoots maintained on MS + 2.0 mgL(-1) BA induced the highest shoot production along the subcultures. Shoots were elongated and rooted on growth regulator-free MS medium. Plantlet establishment was successful in the hardening medium composed of Plantmax (R) substrate, reaching 85%survival. The phytochemical studies indicated two glucosinolate derivatives, highlighting the presence of 5,6-dimethyltetrahydro-1,3-oxazine-2-thione, identified for the first time in plants. This work demonstrates an efficient method for in-vitro production of C. dendroides plants, which can be used as a source of glucosinolates.

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