Micropropagation and conservation of selected endangered anticancer medicinal plants from the Western Ghats of India

Globally, cancer is a constant battle which severely affects the human population. The major limitations of the anticancer drugs are the deleterious side effects on the quality of life. Plants play a vital role in curing many diseases with minimal or no side effects. Phytocompounds derived from vari...

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Main Authors: Sinniah, Uma Rani, Swamy, Mallapa Kumara, Paramashivaiah, Sukanya, Hiremath, Lingayya, Akhtar, Mohd. Sayeed
Format: Book Section
Language:English
Published: Springer 2018
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/71727/1/Micropropagation%20and%20conservation.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/71727/
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spelling my.upm.eprints.717272020-03-17T09:31:10Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/71727/ Micropropagation and conservation of selected endangered anticancer medicinal plants from the Western Ghats of India Sinniah, Uma Rani Swamy, Mallapa Kumara Paramashivaiah, Sukanya Hiremath, Lingayya Akhtar, Mohd. Sayeed Globally, cancer is a constant battle which severely affects the human population. The major limitations of the anticancer drugs are the deleterious side effects on the quality of life. Plants play a vital role in curing many diseases with minimal or no side effects. Phytocompounds derived from various medicinal plants serve as the best source of drugs to treat cancer. The global demand for phytomedicines is mostly reached by the medicinal herbs from the tropical nations of the world even though many plant species are threatened with extinction. India is one of the mega diverse countries of the world due to its ecological habitats, latitudinal variation, and diverse climatic range. Western Ghats of India is one of the most important depositories of endemic herbs. It is found along the stretch of south western part of India and constitutes rain forest with more than 4000 diverse medicinal plant species. In recent times, many of these therapeutically valued herbs have become endangered and are being included under the red-listed plant category in this region. Due to a sharp rise in the demand for plant-based products, this rich collection is diminishing at an alarming rate that eventually triggered dangerous to biodiversity. Thus, conservation of the endangered medicinal plants has become a matter of importance. The conservation by using only in situ approaches may not be sufficient enough to safeguard such a huge bio-resource of endangered medicinal plants. Hence, the use of biotechnological methods would be vital to complement the ex vitro protection programs and help to reestablish endangered plant species. In this backdrop, the key tools of biotechnology that could assist plant conservation were developed in terms of in vitro regeneration, seed banking, DNA storage, pollen storage, germplasm storage, gene bank (field gene banking), tissue bank, and cryopreservation. In this chapter, an attempt has been made to critically review major endangered medicinal plants that possess anticancer compounds and their conservation aspects by integrating various biotechnological tools Springer 2018 Book Section PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/71727/1/Micropropagation%20and%20conservation.pdf Sinniah, Uma Rani and Swamy, Mallapa Kumara and Paramashivaiah, Sukanya and Hiremath, Lingayya and Akhtar, Mohd. Sayeed (2018) Micropropagation and conservation of selected endangered anticancer medicinal plants from the Western Ghats of India. In: Anticancer Plants: Natural Products and Biotechnological Implements. Springer, Singapore, 481 - 505. ISBN 9789811080630 10.1007/978-981-10-8064-7_20
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description Globally, cancer is a constant battle which severely affects the human population. The major limitations of the anticancer drugs are the deleterious side effects on the quality of life. Plants play a vital role in curing many diseases with minimal or no side effects. Phytocompounds derived from various medicinal plants serve as the best source of drugs to treat cancer. The global demand for phytomedicines is mostly reached by the medicinal herbs from the tropical nations of the world even though many plant species are threatened with extinction. India is one of the mega diverse countries of the world due to its ecological habitats, latitudinal variation, and diverse climatic range. Western Ghats of India is one of the most important depositories of endemic herbs. It is found along the stretch of south western part of India and constitutes rain forest with more than 4000 diverse medicinal plant species. In recent times, many of these therapeutically valued herbs have become endangered and are being included under the red-listed plant category in this region. Due to a sharp rise in the demand for plant-based products, this rich collection is diminishing at an alarming rate that eventually triggered dangerous to biodiversity. Thus, conservation of the endangered medicinal plants has become a matter of importance. The conservation by using only in situ approaches may not be sufficient enough to safeguard such a huge bio-resource of endangered medicinal plants. Hence, the use of biotechnological methods would be vital to complement the ex vitro protection programs and help to reestablish endangered plant species. In this backdrop, the key tools of biotechnology that could assist plant conservation were developed in terms of in vitro regeneration, seed banking, DNA storage, pollen storage, germplasm storage, gene bank (field gene banking), tissue bank, and cryopreservation. In this chapter, an attempt has been made to critically review major endangered medicinal plants that possess anticancer compounds and their conservation aspects by integrating various biotechnological tools
format Book Section
author Sinniah, Uma Rani
Swamy, Mallapa Kumara
Paramashivaiah, Sukanya
Hiremath, Lingayya
Akhtar, Mohd. Sayeed
spellingShingle Sinniah, Uma Rani
Swamy, Mallapa Kumara
Paramashivaiah, Sukanya
Hiremath, Lingayya
Akhtar, Mohd. Sayeed
Micropropagation and conservation of selected endangered anticancer medicinal plants from the Western Ghats of India
author_facet Sinniah, Uma Rani
Swamy, Mallapa Kumara
Paramashivaiah, Sukanya
Hiremath, Lingayya
Akhtar, Mohd. Sayeed
author_sort Sinniah, Uma Rani
title Micropropagation and conservation of selected endangered anticancer medicinal plants from the Western Ghats of India
title_short Micropropagation and conservation of selected endangered anticancer medicinal plants from the Western Ghats of India
title_full Micropropagation and conservation of selected endangered anticancer medicinal plants from the Western Ghats of India
title_fullStr Micropropagation and conservation of selected endangered anticancer medicinal plants from the Western Ghats of India
title_full_unstemmed Micropropagation and conservation of selected endangered anticancer medicinal plants from the Western Ghats of India
title_sort micropropagation and conservation of selected endangered anticancer medicinal plants from the western ghats of india
publisher Springer
publishDate 2018
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/71727/1/Micropropagation%20and%20conservation.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/71727/
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score 13.211869