Periploca sepium Bunge as a model plant for rubber biosynthesis study

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Abstract

Periploca sepium Bunge (Chinese silk vine) is a woody climbing vine belonging to the family Asclepiadaceae. It originally comes from Northwest China. Periploca resembles the Para-rubber tree, Hevea brasiliensis, regarding a similar body plan to produce a milky exudate containing rubber latex. The Periploca plant was assessed as a rubber-producing plant by rubber structure elucidation and its molecular weight distribution. A rubber fraction purified from the milky exudate was subjected to 1H NMR analysis, and a characteristic signal derived from cis-polyisoprene was observed. In addition, when the molecular weight distribution of rubber components in the exudate was measured (using size-exclusion chromatography), the number-average molecular weight (Mn), weight-average molecular weight (Mw), and polydispersity (Mw/Mn) were estimated to be Mn = 1.3 × 105, Mw = 4.1 × 10 5, and Mw/Mn = 3.1, respectively. Furthermore, the presence of polyisoprene, with Mn = 4.0 × 104, Mw = 7.6 × 10 4, and Mw/Mn = 2.5, was also confirmed in plantlets obtained from shoots as a result of tissue culture. © 2007 Verlag der Zeitschrift für Naturforschung.

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Bamba, T., Sando, T., Miyabashira, A., Gyokusen, K., Nakazawa, Y., Su, Y., … Kobayashi, A. (2007). Periploca sepium Bunge as a model plant for rubber biosynthesis study. Zeitschrift Fur Naturforschung - Section C Journal of Biosciences, 62(7–8), 579–582. https://doi.org/10.1515/znc-2007-7-820

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