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Chemotypical variation in Vanilla planifolia Jack. (Orchidaceae) from the Puebla-Veracruz Totonacapan region
Authors:Víctor Manuel Salazar-Rojas  B Edgar Herrera-Cabrera  Adriana Delgado-Alvarado  Marcos Soto-Hernández  Fernando Castillo-González  Mario Cobos-Peralta
Institution:1. Colegio de Postgraduados en Ciencias Agrícolas, Campus Puebla, Programa de Estrategias para el Desarrollo Agrícola Regional. Km. 125.5 Carr. Fed. Méx.-Pue. Col. La Libertad, 72130, Puebla, Pue, Mexico
2. Colegio de Postgraduados en Ciencias Agrícolas, Campus Montecillos, Programa de Botánica. Km. 36.5 Carr. Fed. Méx.-Tex. Montecillo, Edo, de Mexico, Mexico
3. Colegio de Postgraduados en Ciencias Agrícolas, Campus Montecillos, Programa de Genética. Km. 36.5 Carr. Fed. Méx.-Tex. Montecillo, Edo, de Mexico, Mexico
4. Colegio de Postgraduados en Ciencias Agrícolas, Campus Montecillos, Programa de Ganadería. Km. 36.5 Carr. Fed. Méx.-Tex. Montecillo, Edo, de Mexico, Mexico
Abstract:One of the threats in the diversity loss of the primary gene pool of Vanilla planifolia is the lack of information on existing level of polymorphism in cultivated germplasm, and the different expressions of this polymorphism. For this reason, it is proposed to study the chemical polymorphism of the four phytochemicals that define the vanilla aroma quality in fruits (vanillin, vanillic acid, p-hydroxybenzaldehyde, p-hydroxybenzoic acid) by HPLC analysis (High Performance Liquid Chromatography) of 25 collections of unknown genotype, grown in the region Totonacapan Puebla-Veracruz, Mexico. The results identified a selection process, domestication in fruit aroma of vanilla, during which increased the participation of vanillin and reduced the presence of three minor compounds (vanillic acid, p-hydroxybenzaldehyde and p-hydroxybenzoic acid) in the global aroma. We distinguished a total of six chemotypes of V. planifolia in the Totonacapan region, some chemotypes with wild aromatic characteristics (low participation of vanillin) related to the material less cultivated in the region and domesticated chemotypes with high participation of vanillin, for the most cultivated material. The results show that the diversification of the chemotypes of V. planifolia is not related to environmental variation. The data indicate that in the possible center of origin of vanilla, there is phytochemical polymorphism, which indirectly suggests the existence of genetic polymorphism, essential for the design of a breeding program for optimizing the use and conservation of diversity of the primary gene pool of Vanilla planifolia.
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