School of Biological Sciences, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2011;6(7):e22275. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0022275. Epub 2011 Jul 18.
The study of traditional knowledge of medicinal plants has led to discoveries that have helped combat diseases and improve healthcare. However, the development of quantitative measures that can assist our quest for new medicinal plants has not greatly advanced in recent years. Phylogenetic tools have entered many scientific fields in the last two decades to provide explanatory power, but have been overlooked in ethnomedicinal studies. Several studies show that medicinal properties are not randomly distributed in plant phylogenies, suggesting that phylogeny shapes ethnobotanical use. Nevertheless, empirical studies that explicitly combine ethnobotanical and phylogenetic information are scarce.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In this study, we borrowed tools from community ecology phylogenetics to quantify significance of phylogenetic signal in medicinal properties in plants and identify nodes on phylogenies with high bioscreening potential. To do this, we produced an ethnomedicinal review from extensive literature research and a multi-locus phylogenetic hypothesis for the pantropical genus Pterocarpus (Leguminosae: Papilionoideae). We demonstrate that species used to treat a certain conditions, such as malaria, are significantly phylogenetically clumped and we highlight nodes in the phylogeny that are significantly overabundant in species used to treat certain conditions. These cross-cultural patterns in ethnomedicinal usage in Pterocarpus are interpreted in the light of phylogenetic relationships.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This study provides techniques that enable the application of phylogenies in bioscreening, but also sheds light on the processes that shape cross-cultural ethnomedicinal patterns. This community phylogenetic approach demonstrates that similar ethnobotanical uses can arise in parallel in different areas where related plants are available. With a vast amount of ethnomedicinal and phylogenetic information available, we predict that this field, after further refinement of the techniques, will expand into similar research areas, such as pest management or the search for bioactive plant-based compounds.
对药用植物传统知识的研究导致了一些发现,这些发现有助于对抗疾病和改善医疗保健。然而,近年来,有助于寻找新药用植物的定量方法并没有取得很大进展。系统发育工具在过去二十年中已经进入了许多科学领域,提供了解释力,但在民族医学研究中被忽视了。有几项研究表明,药用特性并不是在植物系统发育中随机分布的,这表明系统发育塑造了民族植物学的使用。然而,明确结合民族植物学和系统发育信息的实证研究仍然很少。
方法/主要发现:在这项研究中,我们借鉴了群落生态学系统发育学中的工具,来量化药用植物中系统发育信号的显著性,并确定系统发育树上具有高生物筛选潜力的节点。为此,我们从广泛的文献研究中制作了一份民族医学综述,并为泛热带属紫檀(豆科:蝶形花亚科)构建了一个多基因座系统发育假说。我们证明,用于治疗疟疾等某些疾病的物种在系统发育上明显聚集在一起,并且我们强调了系统发育树上在物种中显著过剩的节点用于治疗某些疾病。紫檀属的这些跨文化民族医学使用模式是根据系统发育关系来解释的。
结论/意义:这项研究提供了将系统发育应用于生物筛选的技术,但也揭示了塑造跨文化民族医学模式的过程。这种群落系统发育方法表明,在有相关植物的不同地区,类似的民族植物学用途可以同时出现。随着大量的民族医学和系统发育信息可用,我们预测,在进一步完善技术之后,这一领域将扩展到类似的研究领域,如害虫管理或寻找基于植物的生物活性化合物。