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Seed Total Protein Profiling in Discrimination of Closely Related Pines: Evidence from the Pinus mugo Complex.


ABSTRACT: The Pinus mugo complex includes several dozen closely related European mountain pines. The discrimination of specific taxa within this complex is still extremely challenging, although numerous methodologies have been used to solve this problem, including morphological and anatomical analyses, cytological studies, allozyme variability, and DNA barcoding, etc. In this study, we used the seed total protein (STP) patterns to search for taxonomically interesting differences among three closely-related pine taxa from the Pinus mugo complex and five more distant species from the Pinaceae family. It was postulated that STP profiling can serve as the backup methodology for modern taxonomic research, in which more sophisticated analyses, i.e., based on the DNA barcoding approach, have been found to be useless. A quantitative analysis of the STP profiles revealed characteristic electrophoretic patterns for all the analyzed taxa from Pinaceae. STP profiling enabled the discrimination of closely-related pine taxa, even of those previously indistinguishable by chloroplast DNA barcodes. The results obtained in this study indicate that STP profiling can be very useful for solving complex taxonomic puzzles.

SUBMITTER: Celinski K 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7412326 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Seed Total Protein Profiling in Discrimination of Closely Related Pines: Evidence from the <i>Pinus mugo</i> Complex.

Celiński Konrad K   Sokołowska Joanna J   Zemleduch-Barylska Agata A   Kuna Roman R   Kijak Hanna H   Staszak Aleksandra Maria AM   Wojnicka-Półtorak Aleksandra A   Chudzińska Ewa E  

Plants (Basel, Switzerland) 20200709 7


The <i>Pinus mugo</i> complex includes several dozen closely related European mountain pines. The discrimination of specific taxa within this complex is still extremely challenging, although numerous methodologies have been used to solve this problem, including morphological and anatomical analyses, cytological studies, allozyme variability, and DNA barcoding, etc. In this study, we used the seed total protein (STP) patterns to search for taxonomically interesting differences among three closely  ...[more]

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