• Title/Summary/Keyword: Papaver somniferum

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Effects of Temperature, pH, Light and Degree of Oxygen Supply on the Germination of Papaver somniferum L. Seeds (온도, pH, 광 및 수침이 양귀비 ( Papaver somniferum L. ) 종자발아에 미치는 영향)

  • Lee, Ho Joon;Sung Jong Kim;Seon Ho Kim;Se Young Kim
    • The Korean Journal of Ecology
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.19-24
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    • 1986
  • Effects of temperature, pH, light-and-dark and degree of oxygen supply on germination of Papaver somniferum L. seeds were investigated. The optimum temperature of the germination was 2$0^{\circ}C$, but the germination was decreased as temperatures changed to the upper and lower. The largest elongation of both radicle and hypocotyl also occurred at 2$0^{\circ}C$. The best germination occurred at pH 7 but this decreased suddenly the above and below of that pH value. Although no effect of light-and-dark on the germination was, this was restricted under limited. oxyten supply in terms of underwater germination as compared with abovewater one.

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(-)-${\beta}$-Narcotine: A Facile Synthesis and the Degradation with Ethyl Chloroformate

  • Lee, Dong-Ung
    • Proceedings of the PSK Conference
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    • 2002.10a
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    • pp.348.3-349
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    • 2002
  • (-)-${\alpha}$-narcotine( 1 R.9S) is one of the major bases in Papaver somniferum L.. the sourse plant for opium. while (-)-${\beta}$-narcotine(1R.9R) is a synthetic phthalideisoquinoline alkaloid. Although some advanced methods for the preparation of $\alpha$-narcotine have been developed using modified Bischler-Napieralski cyclization. the facile synthesis of $\beta$-narcotine has not further been attempted. supposingly because of its no clinical efficacy contrary to $\alpha$-narcotine having an antitussive effect. (omitted)

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Literary investigation on the origin of poppy and other narcotics Research Articles (아편 유래 약물에 대한 문헌적 고찰)

  • Lim, Chung-San;Han, Young-Ju;Kang, Kye-Sung;Lee, Kwang-Ho;Kim, Doo-Young;Kwon, Ki-Rok
    • Journal of Pharmacopuncture
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.67-75
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    • 2009
  • Objectives : This study was performed to developing orally administered analgesics and locally injected pharmacopuncture analgesics like opioids. Methods : Literary investigation on the origin of poppy (Papaver somniferum L) and other narcotics was conducted to examine the potential of developing orally administered analgesics and locally injected pharmacopuncture analgesics. Opium is a gum-like mass derived from air-dried white fluid of immature fruit of the poppy. Opium contains approximately 20 types of alkaloids including morphine, codeine, thebaine, papaverine and others. Natural opioids and synthetic alkaloid derivatives are the constituents of opioid analgesics and their effects and side-effects depend on the peculiarities of receptors. An extreme caution is required in the selection of proper dosage, proper analgesic types, and indications for successful pain management. Results and Discussion : With the enactment of "Narcotic control protocol", herbs such as cannibis and poppy are no longer available for use by Korean medicine doctors, and these doctors are faced with difficulty in managing severe pain in the clinical environment. A systematic consideration is inevitable for overcoming the limitation on these analgesics.

Unrecorded naturalized species: Papaver setigerum DC. (Papaveraceae) and Veronica serpyllifolia L. (Scrophulariaceae) (한국 미기록 귀화식물: 나도양귀비 (양귀비과)와 좀개불알풀 (현삼과))

  • Kim, Chan-Soo;Song, Gwan-Pil;Moon, Myung-Ok;Lee, Eun-Ju;Kim, Chul Hwan
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.36 no.2
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    • pp.145-151
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    • 2006
  • Two naturalized allien species are reported from Jeju Island: Papaver setigerium collected from the ground along the road in lowland Veronica serpyllifolia collected from the roadside and ranches on alt. 400-800 m. P. setigerium is similar to P. somniferum, but different from the latter by plant height of 30-70 cm, shorter discoid stigma than fruit in diameter, somewhat sparsely bristly on stems, leaves and calyxes. V. serpyllifolia is similar to V. tenella in morphology, but different from the latter by short plant height, petiolated leaves on lower stem and serrated leaf margins.

Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Metabolic Engineering of Benzylisoquinoline Alkaloid Biosynthesis

  • Peter J. Facchini;Park, Sang-Un;David A. Bird;Nailish Samanani
    • Korean Journal of Plant Tissue Culture
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    • v.27 no.4
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    • pp.269-282
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    • 2000
  • Benzylisoquinoline alkaloids are a diverse group of natural products that include many pharmacologically active compounds produced in a limited number of plant families. Despite their complexity, intensive biochemical research has extended our knowledge of the chemistry and enzymology of many important benzylisoquinoline alkaloid pathways, such as those leading to the analgesic drugs morphine and codeine, and the antibiotics sanguinarine and berberine. The use of cultured plant cells as an experimental system has facilitated the identification and characterization of more than 30 benzylisoquinoline alkaloid biosynthetic enzymes, and the molecular cloning of the genes that encode at least 8 of these enzymes. The recent expansion of biochemical and molecular technologies has creat-ed unique opportunities to dissect the mechanisms involved in the regulation of benzylisoquinoline alkaloid biosynthesis in plants. Research has suggested that product accumulation is controlled by the developmental and inducible regulation of several benzylisoquinoline alkaloid biosynthetic genes, and by the subcellular compartmentation of biosynthetic enzymes and the intracellular localization and trafficking of pathway intermediates. In this paper, we review our current understanding of the biochemistry, cell biology, and molecular regulation of benzylisoquinoline alkaloid biosynthesis in plants. We also summarize our own research activities, especially those related to the establishment of protocols for the genetic transformation of benzylisoquinoline alkaloid-producing species, and the development of metabolic engineering strategies in these plants.

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Approach Toward the Creation of Nonnarcotic Opium Poppy - Morphological and Genetical Analysis on 'Thebaine Poppy' -

  • Kawano, Noriaki;Yoshimatsu, Kayo;Kiuchi, Fumiyuki
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Plant Biotechnology Conference
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    • 2005.11a
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    • pp.361-366
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    • 2005
  • Opium poppy (Papaver somniferum L.) is one of the most important medicinal plants, which is used as a sole commercial source of narcotic analgesic, morphine. The transformant of opium poppy we have established by infection of Rhizobium rhizogenes (formerly Agrobacterium rhizogenes) strain MAFF03-01724 showed aberrant morphology and altered opium alkaloid composition. The major alkaloid produced by this transformant was thebaine (16.3%, opium dry weight) instead of morphine. It is likely that this 'thebaine poppy' phenotype was caused by the integration of T-DNA(s) into the poppy genome DNA, and their inserted loci are of great interest. To gain an insight into the mechanism of nonnarcotic thebaine accumulation for the further approach toward the creation of 'codeine poppy' which produces codeine as a major alkaloid, the genetical and morphological analyses on the transformant was carried out. Here we report the results of the detailed analysis on the T-DNA inserted loci of T0 transfromant and the correlation between opium alkaloid composition and segregated T-DNA integration pattern in the self-pollinated T1 transformants.

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