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      Rethinking Ginkgo biloba L.: Medicinal uses and conservation

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          Abstract

          Ginkgo biloba ( G. biloba) is an ancient medicinal tree species that has been in existence for millennia without undergoing modifications due to its resistance to environmental stresses. Palaeobotanical history showed a wide distribution of the species across the globe but declined over geological time, becoming restricted to narrow geographical range with few surviving individuals in the modern day. The tree is slow growing, adapted to many ecological conditions and shows numerous adaptation in developmental patterns. Medicinal use of the species is attracting research interest, especially the various parts of the tree that are used in orthodox or traditional medicine to treat diseases due to the many bioactive compounds. The primary compounds receiving increasing research interest are the triterpene lactones and flavonoids; these are the target of biotechnological strategies being employed to enhance production. Many genetic and environmental factors have contributed to the endangered status of the species; conservation measures are required to protect it from extinction. In many countries, the cultivation of plantations for the supply of ginkgo leaf-based pharmaceutical formulations is in progress, and efforts to standardize ginkgo leaf extract as herbal medication for human use are being made. Microcuttings and cuttings, cryopreservation, and plant tissue culture have all aided to conserve G. biloba.

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          Most cited references154

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          Chemical analysis of Ginkgo biloba leaves and extracts.

          The chemical analysis and quality control of Ginkgo leaves and extracts is reviewed. Important constituents present in the medicinally used leaves are the terpene trilactones, i.e., ginkgolides A, B, C, J and bilobalide, many flavonol glycosides, biflavones, proanthocyanidins, alkylphenols, simple phenolic acids, 6-hydroxykynurenic acid, 4-O-methylpyridoxine and polyprenols. In the commercially important Ginkgo extracts some of these compound classes are no longer present. Many publications deal with the analysis of the unique terpene trilactones. They can be extracted with aqueous acetone or aqueous methanol but also supercritical fluid extraction is possible. Still somewhat problematic is their sample clean-up. Various procedures, not all of them validated, employing partitioning or SPE have been proposed. Some further development in this area can be foreseen. Separation and detection can be routinely carried out by HPLC with RI, ELSD or MS, or with GC-FID after silylation. TLC is another possibility. No quantitative procedure for flavonol glycosides has been published so far due their difficult separation and commercial unavailability. Fingerprint analysis by gradient RP-HPLC is possible. After acidic hydrolysis to the aglycones quercetin, kaempferol and isorhamnetin and separation by HPLC, quantitation is straightforward and yields by recalculation an estimation of the original total flavonol glycoside content. For biflavones, simple phenols, 6-hydroxykynurenic acid, 4-O-methylpyridoxine and polyprenols analytical procedures have been published but not all assays are yet ideal. Lately a there is a lot of interest in the analysis of the undesired alkylphenols and a few validated procedures have been published. The analysis of Ginkgo proanthocyanidins is still in its infancy and no reliable assays exist.
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            Phylogeography of a living fossil: pleistocene glaciations forced Ginkgo biloba L. (Ginkgoaceae) into two refuge areas in China with limited subsequent postglacial expansion.

            Ginkgo biloba is one of the most famous and therefore intensively studied living fossils. The Ginkgoaceae was suggested to have originated in the early Permian approximately 280mya, and at the height of their worldwide radiation consisted of least 16 genera that were distributed in temperate forests. However, China's G. biloba is the only species of this genus which has survived until today. Using a phylogeographical approach we analyzed the history of this remnant from the past. G. biloba is native to China and has been distributed less than 300 years ago by humans throughout all temperate regions of the world. Separate from this human influence, native Chinese populations of G. biloba have been affected by the cycles of glaciation and deglaciation of the Pleistocene era, similar to many other global plant species. We used molecular markers from the nuclear (AFLPs) and plastid genomes (trnK intron, trnS-trnG intergenic spacer), and based on these data, glacial survival of Gingko populations within two refugia in Southwestern and Eastern China, respectively, is suggested. Specifically, for the first time, this study provides evidence of the existence of a refuge area in Eastern China on the West Tianmu Mountains. We can not support any extensive postglacial range expansion from these refuge areas. Furthermore, AFLP data indicate substantial genetic differentiation among populations from Southwestern, Eastern and Central China. We also hypothesize that this evidence supports that as a long-lived dioecious plant, G. biloba displays high levels of intra-populational genetic diversity that have been maintained in most populations, regardless if they are native or reforested stands. Furthermore, we provide evidence that planted trees from Europe, Japan, Korea and America were introduced multiple times from Eastern China.
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              The missing link in Ginkgo evolution.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Pharmacogn Rev
                Pharmacogn Rev
                PRev
                Pharmacognosy Reviews
                Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd (India )
                0973-7847
                0976-2787
                Jul-Dec 2015
                : 9
                : 18
                : 140-148
                Affiliations
                [1] Department of Botany, Hamdard University, Hamdard Nagar, New Delhi, India
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence: Dr. Tasiu Isah, Department of Botany, Hamdard University New Delhi - 110 062, India. E-mail: taasmore@ 123456yahoo.co.uk
                Article
                PRev-9-140
                10.4103/0973-7847.162137
                4557237
                26392712
                82ff9f5e-5f21-4ec0-b72b-4232a9b7a15d
                Copyright: © Pharmacognosy Reviews

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 06 November 2014
                : 20 February 2015
                : 04 August 2015
                Categories
                Plant Review

                Pharmacology & Pharmaceutical medicine
                bilobalides,conservation,ginkgo biloba,ginkgolides,short shoots,triterpene lactones

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