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Common monkeyflower

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Title: Common monkeyflower


1
Common monkey-flower
  • Order Lamiales
  • Family currently Phrymaceae (see more on
    taxonomy below)
  • Annual or perennial, 30-50 cm in height
  • Preferred habitat banks of streams and rivers
  • Native to North America. Originally brought as a
    decorative plant to Europe via Scotland in the
    19th century 1, it can now also be found as a
    part of wild flora
  • Propagation is possible both by seeds
    (pollination by insects) and rhizome cuttings
  • Study conducted with M. primuloides populations
    growing in different altitudes in California
    revealed less successful inflorescences to be
    produced and seedlings to be mostly non-viable in
    greater altitude as rhizomes take over the major
    procreation role 2
  • No published reports of micropropagation,
    in-vitro culture or genetic transformation (as of
    July 2009)

Mimulus guttatus plants grown for the rhizome
project (June 2009)
1 http//de.wikipedia.org/Gauklerblumen 2
Douglas 1981
2
Taxonomy
  • Historically a Scrophulariaceae, the genus was
    moved to the family of Phrymaceae on the basis of
    chloroplast and nucleus DNA sequences 1-3
  • Mimulus is the largest genus (gt120 species) in
    the family. It is not monophyletic, at least 6
    other genera have evolved from within it 2
  • These species are organized in complexes with
    differing habits M. guttatus complex are
    small herbs, M. cardinalis compex are shrub-like
    perennials. It is not unlikely the genus will be
    split into several genera as data comes in

outgroups
Max. likelihood tree of the studied Phrymaceae
species demonstrates several interrelated
genera/species still need to be untwined, as
several nodes (marked with are only weakly
supported 1
1 Olmstead et al. (2001) 2 Beardsley
Olmstead (2002) 3 Beardsley Barker (2005)
3
Occurrence
  • The genus Mimulus is cosmopolitan
  • Some 90 monkeyflower species identified in the
    US and Canada
  • Various species exhibit differing climate
    adaptation. For instance, whereas M. guttatus is
    mostly found on the West coast, M. glabratus and
    M. ringens grow across the continent, and M.
    alatus occurs in the Southeast of the US
  • Studies with selected hybrids indicate adaptation
    to one habitat may entail loss of features
    essential for survival under contrasting
    conditions, explaining in part region limitations
    1. Nearly complete reproductive isolation of M.
    lewisii from M. cardinalis is believed to be
    engendered by ecogeographic speciation 2,
    however, the role of post- and prezygotic
    barriers still needs to be studied in depth
  • Numerous taxa endemic to California
  • Several species listed as endangered (visit
    plants.usda.gov)

Maps of Mimulus spec. (below) and specifically M.
guttatus (above) occurrence in North America.
(http//plants.usda.gov ) 1 Angert et al.
(2008) 2 Ramsey et al. (2003)
4
Mimulus as a model plant
  • Features that make the genus Mimulus a suitable
    model plant are e.g. reviewed in 1
  • Comparatively small genome of ca. 430 MBp
  • Abundant ecological and evolutionary studies
  • High genetic diversity, placement in the plant
    kingdom
  • Interspecific crossing barriers high to almost
    inexistent
  • Short generation time
  • Easy propagation and cross-pollination
  • Developing resource sites
  • M. guttatus and M. cardinalis http//www.mimuluse
    volution.org
  • Genome sequencing project (NCBI project ID 13880)
    carried out at DOE Joint Genome Institute

1 Wu et al. (2008)
5
Pollination studies
  • Investigation of traits decisive for pollinator
    visitations on hybrids of M. lewisii and M.
    cardinalis, resp., indicates the flower
    anthocyanin content and nectar production to be
    essential for insect discouragement and
    hummingbird attraction 1,2
  • One major allele shift (flower color, dependent
    on carotenoid content) seems to be responsible
    for the change in pollinator preference 3
  • Similar floral traits appear to influence the
    pollinator preference in Mimulus section
    Erythranthe 4
  • Interestingly, similar floral coloration
    (anthocyanin presence in petals) of Chilean
    Mimulus species might have evolved independently
    by three different genetic pathways 5

Near isogenic lines (full siblings) of M. lewisii
with alternate alleles in the YUP (yellow upper)
locus. Pink wild-type flower (left) attracted
mostly bumblebees, orange mutants received
dramatically reduced number of insect visitations
whereas hummingbird visitation was ca. 70x
increased in comparison to wild type 3
1 Bradshaw et al. (1995) 2 Schemske
Bradshaw (1999) 3 Bradshaw Schemske (2003)
4 Beardsley et al. (2003) 5 Cooley Willis
(2009)
6
Adaptation salt and copper tolerance
  • Ecological studies on morphologically and
    genetically divergent sister species of M.
    guttatus (inland annuals and coastal perennials)
  • Almost complete reproductive isolation of these
    adapted populations is due to strong selection
    against immigrants at respective foreign habitat
    and differences in flowering time rather than
    postzygotic isolation 1
  • NaCl tolerance and high salt accumulation
    observed in coastal perennial M. guttatus are
    effected by three and two QTLs, resp., which
    dont have affect the in-field fitness under
    low-salt conditions 2
  • Copper-tolerant M. guttatus and recently evolved
    M. cupriphilis colonies found around copper mines
    3. There is data suggesting the tolerance
    mechanism relies on changes in cell membrane
    permeability rather than phytochelatins 4
  • Cost of tolerance refers to their low fitness on
    uncontaminated soil 5. This appears not to be a
    consequence of decreased total metal uptake,
    resulting in micronutrient deficiency 6

1 Lowry et al. (2008) 2 Lowry et al. (2009)
3 Macnair 1989 4 Strange Macnair (1991) 5
Macnair 1981 6 Harper et al. (1997)
7
Medicinal use
  • Mimulus is one of the 38 main plants employed in
    Bach flower remedies (alternative psychosomatic
    healing philosophy founded by Dr. Edward Bach
    (1886-1936) which regards a disease as a result
    of disharmony between a persons mind and soul,
    and mental discomfort as a cause of physical
    disease. The flower remedies are supposed to
    restore personalitys integrity and peace of
    mind, thus preventing bodily sickness)
  • Mimulus is indicated when suffering a fear of
    known things

Images www.bachcentre.com
8
Phytochemistry
  • Almost exclusively floral constituents of Mimulus
    spec. isolated, several studies on distribution
    pattern (spots of two-colored leaves) 1
  • Mostly pigments subject of study (carotenoids,
    xanthins, anthocyanins, malonylated flavonoids)
    2-4
  • Herbacetin (8-OH kaempferol) 7-O-glucoside
  • Geranylated flavonoids 5 and a geranylated
    a-pyrone isolated from leaf surface resin of M.
    aurantiacus 6
  • No reports on the phytochemistry of rhizomes

6-geranylated flavonoids (R1-3 OH or OCH3)
isolated from M. clevelandii 5
Structure of the geranylated a-pyrone from M.
aurantiacus 6
1 Bloom Vickery (1973) 2 Ferro et al.
(1972) 3 Nitsche 1972 4 Goodwin Thomas
(1964) 5 Philipps et al. (1996) 6 Hare
Borchardt (2002)
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