Marijuana Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Marijuana, including details on benefits, cancer, effects, uses, addiction. | ||||||||
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Organelle DNA haplotypes reflect crop-use characteristics and geographic origins of Cannabis sativa.Gilmore S, Peakall R, Robertson J Centre for Forensic Science, Canberra Institute of Technology, Canberra, ACT, Australia. simon.gilmore@cit.act.edu.au <simon.gilmore@cit.act.edu.au> Comparative sequencing of cannabis individuals across 12 chloroplast and mitochondrial DNA loci revealed 7 polymorphic sites, including 5 length variable regions and 2 single nucleotide polymorphisms. Simple PCR assays were developed to assay these polymorphisms, and organelle DNA haplotypes were obtained for 188 cannabis individuals from 76 separate populations, including drug-type, fibre-type and wild populations. The haplotype data were analysed using parsimony, UPGMA and neighbour joining methods. Three haplotype groups were recovered by each analysis method, and these groups are suggestive of the crop-use characteristics and geographical origin of the populations, although not strictly diagnostic. We discuss the relationship between our haplotype data and taxonomic opinions of cannabis, and the implications of organelle DNA haplotyping to forensic investigations of cannabis. Published 10 September 2007 in Forensic Sci Int, 172(2): 179-90.
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