Inter- and Intra-specific Variation among
Five Erythroxylum Taxa Assessed by AFLP

by
Johnson EL, Zhang D, Emche SD.
USDA ARS PSI ACSL, 10300 Baltimore Avenue,
BARC-W, Beltsville, MD 20705, USA.
Ann Bot (Lond). 2005 Jan 13


ABSTRACT

* Background and Aims The four cultivated Erythroxylum taxa (E. coca var. coca, E. novogranatense var. novogranatense, E. coca var. ipadu and E. novogranatense var. truxillense) are indigenous to the Andean region of South America and have been cultivated for folk-medicine and, within the last century, for illicit cocaine production. The objective of this research was to assess the structure of genetic diversity within and among the four cultivated alkaloid-bearing taxa of Erythroxylum in the living collection at Beltsville Agricultural Research Center. * Methods Amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) fingerprinting was performed in 86 Erythroxylum accessions using a capillary genotyping system. Cluster analysis, multidimensional scaling (MDS) and analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) were used to assess the pattern and level of genetic variation among and within the taxa. * Key Results A clear distinction was revealed between E. coca and E. novogranatense. At the intra-specific level, significant differentiation was observed between E. c. var. coca and E. c. var. ipadu, but the differentiation between E. n. var. novogranatense and E. n. var. truxillense was negligible. Erythroxylum c. var. ipadu had a significantly lower amount of diversity than the E. c. var. coca and is genetically different from the E. c. var. ipadu currently under cultivation in Colombia, South America. * Conclusions There is a heterogeneous genetic structure among the cultivated Erythroxylum taxa where E. coca and E. novogranatense are two independent species. Erythroxylum coca var. coca is most likely the ancestral taxon of E. c. var. ipadu and a founder effect may have occurred as E. c. var. ipadu moved from the eastern Andes in Peru and Bolivia into the lowland Amazonian basin. There is an indication of artificial hybridization in coca grown in Colombia.


History
Colombia
Medicine
Supercoke
Coca leaves
Acupuncture
Cocaine hotspots
Erythroxylum coca
Dopaminergic flies?
Dopaminergic agents
The coke-craving brain
Wild Erythroxylum species
Cocaine as a dietary supplement
The bacterial junkie: Rhodococcus sp. strain MB1

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