| Literature DB >> 35958221 |
Ping Huang1, Fengqi Zang1, Changhong Li1, Furong Lin1, Dekui Zang2, Bin Li1, Yongqi Zheng1.
Abstract
The genus Akebia belongs to the Lardizabalaceae family and comprises five species that are primarily distributed in East Asia. Plants of the Akebia genus comprise deciduous and semi-evergreen perennial twining vines that have been used in Chinese herbal medicine for at least 2000 years. The plants of this genus have the potential to form a novel forest crop with high nutritional and economic value because their fruit has a delicious sweet taste and rich nutrient components. In this study, we organized, analyzed, and evaluated the available published scientific literature on the botanical, ecological, and phytochemical characteristics of Akebia plants. Based on these studies, we briefly introduced botanical and ecological characteristics and focused on reviewing the development and utilization of wild genetic resources in the genus Akebia. We further explored the genus' rich nutritional components, such as triterpenes, flavonoids, polyphenols, polysaccharides, and fatty acids, and their potential use in food and health improvement applications. In addition, several papers describing advances in biotechnological research focusing on micropropagation, nutrient biosynthesis, and fruit ripeness were also included. This review provides comprehensive knowledge of the Akebia genus as a new forest crop for food and fruit utilization, and we also discuss future breeding and research prospects.Entities:
Keywords: Akebia; Lardizabalaceae; botany characteristic; fruit ripeness; nutrient composition; plant disease; status of resources
Year: 2022 PMID: 35958221 PMCID: PMC9360799 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2022.936571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 6.627
Figure 1Akebia trifoliata and A. quinata. (a–c) fruit, flower, and leaves of A. trifoliata; (d–f) fruit, flower, and leaves of A. quinata. (g–i) flesh, leaflet, and cracking fruit of A. trifoliata.
Natural distribution and botanical characteristics of Akebia species.
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| Altitude(m) | 300–1500 | 600–800 | 200–2000 | 300–2100 | - | 1500–2400 | 300–1500 |
| Distribution | China (West of the provinces of Sichuan and Hubei), Japan (Honshu, Kyushu, Shikoku) and Korea | China (Southeast the province of Gansu) | China (Central provinces), Japan (Hokkaidô, Honshu, Kyushu, Shikoku). | China (South provinces) | Japan | China (Taiwan) | China (South provinces) |
| No. of leaves | (3–)5(−7) leaflets. | 3(−5) | (3)-5 leaflets | 3(−5) | (3–)5(−7) leaflets. | ||
| Shape of Leaflets | Leaflets papery abaxially glaucous | Usually sinuate-dentate; | Margin with slightly wavy edges | Margin subentire | Margin entire, sub-leathery, leaflets, abaxially pale green | ||
| Margin subentire, leathery, base truncate to cuneate | Margins sinuate to shallowly lobed, leaflets papery to sub-leathery | Leaflets leathery, margin usually entire, very rarely irregularly sinuate | |||||
| Sepals of male flowers | 6–8 mm | 2–3 mm | - | 1–2 mm | 4–4.5 mm | ||
| Shape of sepals of male flowers | Occasionally pale green or white, broadly cucullate-ovate, 6–8 × 4–6 mm | Oblong, more than 2 × as long as stamens | Elliptic to broadly elliptic, ± as long as stamens | Elliptic to broadly elliptic, ± as long as stamens | - | Elliptic, navicular, 1–2 mm, glabrous | Elliptic-oblong to broadly elliptic, 4–4.5 × ca. 3 mm |
| Racemes | Racemes 6–12 cm, 4–8(−11)-flowered | Racemes 6–16 cm | Racemes 6–16 cm | Racemes ca.10 cm | Racemes 12–18 cm, 23–35(−43)-flowered | ||
| Flowering time | Apr–May | Apr | Apr–May | Apr–May | Apr–May | Apr–May | Mar–Apr, |
| Fruit | Fruit purplish at maturity, straight or slightly incurved, oblong to ellipsoid, 5–8 × 3–4 cm. | – | Fruit grayish white and slightly pale purple at maturity, oblong, 6–8 × 2–4 cm. | Fruit yellowish brown at maturity, 6–8 × 3–5 cm. | Fruit purple at maturity, 5–10 cm | – | Fruit solitary or paired, reddish purple at maturity, oblong, 6–7 × ca. 2 cm |
| Fruiting time | Jun–Aug | – | Jun–Sep | Jun–Sep | – | – | Aug |
Data sourced from Flora of China (.
Figure 2Species and distribution of triterpenoid saponins and triterpenoid in Akebia plants. The statistics are based on a phytochemical review of the Akebia genus (Maciag et al., 2021).
Main nutrient components in Akebia plants.
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| Fruit (flesh) | Sugar | Total sugar | 14.9 g/100 g FW | Liu and Qian ( |
| Reducing sugar | 10.2 g/100 g FW | Liu and Qian ( | |||
| Fructose | 4.10 g/100 g FW | Li et al. ( | |||
| Glucose | 2.78 g/100 g FW | Li et al. ( | |||
| 70–361 mg/g FW | Li et al. ( | ||||
| Sucrose | 1.57 g/100 g FW | Li et al. ( | |||
| D-mannose | 11–19 mg/g | Li et al. ( | |||
| Vitamin | Vitamin C | 108–930 mg/100 g FW | Liu and Qian ( | ||
| Vitamin PP | 0.51% w/w | Wang et al. ( | |||
| Vitamin B1 | 0.23% w/w | Wang et al. ( | |||
| Vitamin B2 | 0.41% w/w | Wang et al. ( | |||
| B-carotene | 0.052% w/w | Wang et al. ( | |||
| Protein | Crude protein | 1.07 g/100 g FW | Liu and Qian ( | ||
| 8.16% ± 0.11% FW | Li et al. ( | ||||
| Total amino acid | 818.5 mg/100 g FW | Liu and Qian ( | |||
| Mineral element | Potassium | 340–496 mg/100 g FW | Zhang et al. ( | ||
| Magnesium | 100–151 mg/100 g FW | Zhang et al. ( | |||
| Calcium | 47–48 mg/100 g FW | Zhang et al. ( | |||
| Zinc | 1.92–2.47 mg/100 g FW | Zhang et al. ( | |||
| Iron | 0.83–1.00 mg 100 g FW | Zhang et al. ( | |||
| Fruit(pericarp) | Sugar | Total sugar | 32.61% ± 0.18% w/w | Zhang et al. ( | |
| Reducing sugar | 19.31% ± 0.21% w/w | Zhang et al. ( | |||
| Pectin | 20.08% ± 0.20% w/w | Zhang et al. ( | |||
| Protein | - | 8.16 ± 0.11% w/w | Zhang et al. ( | ||
| Total flavonoids | - | 20.58 ± 0.12 mg/g DW | Zhang et al. ( | ||
| Total polyphenolics | - | 45.20 ± 0.18 mg/g DW | Zhang et al. ( | ||
| Seed | Oil | 30.2–48.8% w/w | Su et al. ( | ||
| Fatty acid | Oleic acid | 155.9–261.5 mg/g, 36.6–45.2% | Su et al. ( | ||
| Linoleic acid | 113.8–156.4 mg/g, 23.5–30.8% | Su et al. ( | |||
| Palmitic acid | 101.8–149.1 mg/g, 20.3–25.7% | Su et al. ( | |||
| Protein | Total protein | 17.23% w/w | Du et al. ( | ||
| Albumin | 51.65% w/w | Du et al. ( | |||
| Glutelin | 46.40% w/w | Du et al. ( | |||
| Flower | Anthocyanin | Pelargonidin-3-O-arabinoside |
| Jiang et al. ( | |
| Cyanindin-3-O-glucoside |
| Jiang et al. ( | |||
| Peonidin 3-galactoside |
| Jiang et al. ( | |||
| Delphinidin-3-O-arabinoside |
| Jiang et al. ( | |||
| Delphinidin-3-O-di-hexoside |
| Jiang et al. ( | |||
| Cyanidin-3-O-di-hexoside |
| Jiang et al. ( | |||
| Delphinidin-3-O-rutinoside |
| Jiang et al. ( | |||
| Cyanidin 3-O-(6″ acetyl) glucoside |
| Jiang et al. ( | |||
| Cyanidin-3-O-(p-coumaroyl) rutinoside |
| Jiang et al. ( | |||
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| Fruit | Essential oil | Limonene |
| Kawata et al. ( |
| Eugenol |
| Kawata et al. ( | |||
| Octanal |
| Kawata et al. ( | |||
| P-cymene |
| Kawata et al. ( | |||
| Stem | Essential oil | Hexanoic acid |
| Kawata et al. ( | |
| Palmitic acid |
| Kawata et al. ( | |||
| (2E, 4E)-decadienal |
| Kawata et al. ( | |||
| Hexanol |
| Kawata et al. ( | |||
| Fruit (Flesh) | Mineral element | Potassium | 321 mg/100 g FW | Zhang et al. ( | |
| Magnesium | 100 mg/100 g FW | Zhang et al. ( | |||
| Calcium | 49 mg/100 g FW | Zhang et al. ( | |||
| Zinc | 2.1 mg/100 g FW | Zhang et al. ( | |||
| Iron | 3.21 mg 100 g FW | Zhang et al. ( |
FW, Fresh weight; DW, Dry weight; w/w, weigh/weigh.
Main reported plant diseases in Akebia plants.
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| Powdery mildew |
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| October | Scholler and Gams ( |
| The upper surfaces of leaves were covered with white mycelium, and the corresponding abaxial surface of infected leaves were chlorotic. Young, green stems also affected showed extended chlorosis. As the disease progressed, infected leaves turned yellow and died. | Summer | Garibaldi et al. ( | ||||
| Leaf spot |
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| Initial symptoms consisted of small (less than 5 mm in diameter), circular, purple-brown leaf spots. Spots later enlarged and became elliptical, circular, or irregular with gray-white centers and dark brown rims. The centers were slightly concave. The spots could coalesce with each other, resulting in leaf desiccation and wilting. | 80% | July | Ye et al. ( |
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| Initial symptoms consisted of small rufous leaf spot and enlarge and became to 1–2 mm; then became elliptical, circular, or irregular disease spot; finally, the spots could coalesce with each other, resulting in leaf desiccation and wilting. | 53% | April to September | Liu et al. ( | ||
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| Small brown spots, subcircular or irregular-shaped brown necrotic lesions. In severe cases, the leaves became completely necrotic and abscised. | 30–40% | July | Cheng et al. ( | ||
| Anthracnose |
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| Diseased leaves exhibited irregular gray-brown spots with dark brown edges and dark brown. As disease progressed, white mycelium appeared on stems, causing stem rot and fruit drop. Several round or needle-shaped dark brown spots formed on fruit peel, coalescing into irregular, slightly sunken blotches. Under high humidity, the whole fruit turned brown, and the spots were covered by white mycelia, greatly affecting the fruit's ornamental quality. | up to 15% | December to May the following year | Pan et al. ( |
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| Initial symptoms appeared as small necrotic brown spots, 1–2 mm diameter, on the leaf margin, central vein, and petiole. As the disease progressed the lesions expanded and coalesced, and the center of the lesions turned grayish white. Severely diseased leaves wilted and fell off. In humid conditions, acervuli containing orange to salmon-pink masses of spores emerged on lesions | - | October | Kobayashi et al. ( | ||
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| The infected fruits were shrunken, colored dark brown, and withered to death. | 10% | - | Hong et al. ( |
Rapid micropropagation in Akebia genus.
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| Stem segments | Solid MS medium containing sucrose (3% w/v) and agar (0.9% w/v) | In the dark at 26 °C for 4–5 week | Callus cultures | - | Ikuta ( |
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| Leave | MS medium with 4 mg/L 2,4-D, 1 mg/L NAA, and 1 mg/L Kin | pH was 5.8, the temperature was 25 °C, and the cultures were kept in darkness | Callus cultures | 87.5% | Shen et al. ( |
| Stem with leaf buds | Inducing medium: WPM+1.0 mg·L-1 6-BA+0.5 mg·L-1 IAA+2.0 mg·L-1 GA3; | Humid air at 26 °C. The lighting intensity 50–60 μmol·m-2·s-1, photoperiod (14 h) | Micropropagation | Inducing rate 81.27%; rooting rate: 82.18% | Wu et al. ( | |
| Immature zygotic embryo from root | Inducing medium: MS without PGRs, pH 5.8; | 25 °C, 16 h photoperiod and a photon fux density of 45 μmol m−2 s−1. | Recurrent somatic embryogenesis | 95.8% | Zou et al. ( |
MS, Murashige-Skoog medium; WPM, McCown's Woody Plant Basic Medium; 2,4-D, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid; NAA, 1-naphthylacetic acid; Kin, kinetin; 6-BA, 6-benzylaminopurine; IAA, 3-Indoleacetic acid; IBA, 3-Indolebutyric acid; A: GA3, gibberellin A3; PGRs, plant growth regulators.
Different expressional gene and different abundant protein during fruit cracking and soften in A. trifoliata .
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| Polygalacturonase |
| Pericarp | Cell wall metabolism | Hydrolytic cleavage unesterified pectin | Up-regulation | Up-regulation |
| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | ||||
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| Pericarp | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
| Pectinesterase |
| Pericarp | Removal of methyl groups from esterified pectin | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | ||||
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| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
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| Flesh | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
| Pectate lyase |
| Pericarp | Eliminative cleavage of pectate, | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | ||||
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| Flesh | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
| Pectin acetylesterase |
| Flesh | Hydrolysis of acetyl esters of pectin | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| β-galactosidase |
| Pericarp | Removal of galactosyl residues increased from pectin | Down-regulation | Down-regulation | |
| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | ||||
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| Pericarp | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | ||||
| Expansin |
| Pericarp | Wall stress relaxation and irreversible wall extension | Down-regulation | Down-regulation | |
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| Flesh | Cell wall loosen | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | ||
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| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
| endoglucanase |
| Pericarp | Cellulose matrix disassembly | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |
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| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
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| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
| Furostanol glycoside 26-O-betaglucosidase |
| Pericarp | Starch and sucrose metabolism | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| Alpha/beta hydrolase |
| Pericarp | Up-regulation | Down-regulation | ||
| Glucan endo-1,3-betad-glucosidase |
| Pericarp | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | ||
| Beta-D-xylosidase |
| Pericarp | Up-regulation | Down-regulation | ||
| Cellulose synthase-like protein |
| Pericarp | Cellulose synthesis | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| β-xylosidase |
| Flesh | Hemicellulose degradation | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| α-arabinofuranosidase |
| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | ||
| Inactive beta-amylase |
| Flesh | Starch degradation | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| Beta-fructofuranosidase |
| Flesh | Sugar accumulation | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| Peroxidase |
| Pericarp | ROS homeostasis | Removal of hydrogen peroxide | Down-regulation | Up-regulation |
| Flesh | ROS-scavenging capacity | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
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| Pericarp | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
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| Pericarp | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
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| Pericarp | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |||
| Cysteine protease |
| Flesh | Response to the accumulation of ROS | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| Thaumatin-like proteins |
| Flesh | Response to the accumulation of ROS | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| Heat shock proteins |
| Flesh | Biotic and abiotic stresses | Stress response | Up-regulation | Down-regulation |
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| Flesh | Up-regulation | Down-regulation | |||
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| Flesh | Up-regulation | No change | |||
| Cinnamyl-alcohol dehydrogenase |
| Pericarp | Phenylpropanoid biosynthesis | Controls mechanical strength | Up-regulation | Down-regulation |
| Cinnamoyl-CoA reductase |
| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | ||
| 4-coumarate-COA-ligase |
| Pericarp | Down-regulation | Down-regulation | ||
| Shikimate O-Hydroxycinnamoyltransferase |
| Pericarp | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | ||
| Auxin efux carrier |
| Pericarp | Phytohormone | Up-regulation | Down-regulation | |
| Gibberellin-regulated protein |
| Flesh | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | ||
| NAC domain-containing protein |
| Pericarp | Transcriptional control | Down-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| Transcription factor bHLH66 |
| Pericarp | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | ||
| Dirigent protein |
| Pericarp | Others | Up-regulation | Up-regulation | |
| Ripening-related protein |
| Flesh | Up-regulation | Up-regulation |
Data sourced from Niu et al. (.
Figure 3Potential uses, key traits, and breeding aim of Akebia species.