De Novo Transcriptome Analysis of Warburgia ugandensis to.
Warbugia Ugandensis Warburgia ugandensis is one of the ten species identified as high priority medicinal plants in Kenya for detailed study.
Warburgia is a genus of plant in family Canellaceae described as a genus in 1895. It was named for the German botanist Otto Warburg. It is native to eastern and southern Africa. All four species have medicinal uses. Extracts of Warburgia ugandensis have been reported to show some antimalarial properties in animal models. Species.
Malaria and Human African trypanosomosis (HAT) are characterized by bacterial septicaemia. Thus, bacterial endocarditishas have been a major cause of death in HAT due to T. rhodesiense infections. Besides, HAT is also accompanied by elevated levels of bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPS) in both the plasma and cerebral spinal fluid. Therefore, there is need for management of the bacterial.
Genus: Warburgia Species: Warburgia ugandensis. Name. Warburgia ugandensis Sprague. References. Journal of the Linnean Society. Botany. London 37:498. 1906; USDA, ARS, Germplasm Resources Information Network. Warburgia ugandensis in the Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN), U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research.
Warburgia salutaris (G. Bertol.) Chiov. (Canellaceae) is a popular medicinal plant distributed in eastern and southern Africa. The plant is an evergreen tree with fissured bark, simple, glossy leaves, green flowers and plum-shaped fruits (Codd, 1976, Coates Palgrave, 2002).The bark and leaves possess antimicrobial activity (Rabe and Van Staden, 1997, Rabe and Van Staden, 2000, Mohanlall and.
Warburgia ugandensis isa highly valuedmedicinal tree within East Africa which is over-exploited for its medicinal use among many communities. This species has its habitat encroached and this has led to a notable decrease in its population size to the level that warrant some conservation efforts. Information on diversity in its antimicrobial activity is also lacking.
This data set contains scores for 185 loci for 100 individuals of the Warburgia ugandensis tree species (a medicinal tree species native to Eastern Africa). Since the data set is a subset of a larger data set that originated from a study of several Warburgia species, some of the loci did not produce bands for W. ugandensis (i.e. some loci only contain zeroes).