Chemical and Genetic Diversity of Ligularia kanaitzensis in the Hengduan Mountains Area. Chemical Relationship with L. subspicata.
Ryo HanaiYasuko OkamotoTakuya HashidaKosuzu ShiojiriAyumi OhsakiYoshinori SaitoMotoo ToriXun GongChiaki KurodaPublished in: Chemistry & biodiversity (2021)
Root chemicals and the sequences of the internal transcribed spacers (ITSs) were analyzed for 9 Ligularia kanaitzensis and 3 L. subspicata samples collected in northwestern Yunnan and southwestern Sichuan, China. Subspicatins A and C were isolated from two L. kanaitzensis samples. Introgression of genes responsible for these compounds from L. subspicata was suggested by their strong connection with L. subspicata/L. lamarum and the geographical proximity of the samples to L. subspicata. DNA analysis of a set of 27 L. kanaitzensis samples including those analyzed previously showed that they belong to two clades, designated A and B. Together with the presence/absence of furanoeremophilane, the 27 samples were sorted into three groups: clade A/furan, clade B/furan, and clade B/non-furan. The ancestral plant presumably belonged to clade B/non-furan, because furanoeremophilanes are biosynthesized from eremophilan-8-ones. 1β-Angeloyloxyfukinone, a likely intermediate between fukinone and subspicatin C, was isolated for the first time. This finding allowed us to propose plausible biosynthetic pathways of subspicatins A and C.