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Discovery of the photosynthetic relatives of the "Maltese mushroom" Cynomorium. | LitMetric

Discovery of the photosynthetic relatives of the "Maltese mushroom" Cynomorium.

BMC Evol Biol

Department of Plant Biology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901-6509, USA.

Published: June 2005

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies have clarified the relationships among holoparasitic plants, particularly the families Balanophoraceae and Cynomoriaceae, revealing that they do not share a close genetic relationship.
  • Molecular analyses indicate that Cynomorium, a known parasitic plant, is more closely related to the Saxifragales order, while Balanophoraceae is linked to Santalales.
  • The study raises conservation concerns due to the increasing collection of wild Cynomorium for herbal use and calls for further research to identify its related photosynthetic species for potential cultivation.

Article Abstract

Background: Although recent molecular phylogenetic studies have identified the photosynthetic relatives of several enigmatic holoparasitic angiosperms, uncertainty remains for the last parasitic plant order, Balanophorales, often considered to include two families, Balanophoraceae and Cynomoriaceae. The nonphotosynthetic (holoparasitic) flowering plant Cynomorium coccineum has long been known to the Muslim world as "tarthuth" and to Europeans as the "Maltese mushroom"; C. songaricum is known in Chinese medicine as "suo yang." Interest in these plants is increasing and they are being extensively collected from wild populations for use in herbal medicines.

Results: Here we report molecular phylogenetic analyses of nuclear ribosomal DNA and mitochondrial matR sequence data that strongly support the independent origin of Balanophoraceae and Cynomoriaceae. Analyses of single gene and combined gene data sets place Cynomorium in Saxifragales, possibly near Crassulaceae (stonecrop family). Balanophoraceae appear related to Santalales (sandalwood order), a position previously suggested from morphological characters that are often assumed to be convergent.

Conclusion: Our work shows that Cynomorium and Balanophoraceae are not closely related as indicated in all past and present classifications. Thus, morphological features, such as inflorescences bearing numerous highly reduced flowers, are convergent and were attained independently by these two holoparasite lineages. Given the widespread harvest of wild Cynomorium species for herbal medicines, we here raise conservation concerns and suggest that further molecular phylogenetic work is needed to identify its photosynthetic relatives. These relatives, which will be easier to cultivate, should then be examined for phytochemical activity purported to be present in the more sensitive Cynomorium.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1182362PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-5-38DOI Listing

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