Lycium chinense explained

Lycium chinense is one of two species of boxthorn shrub in the family Solanaceae. Along with Lycium barbarum, it produces the goji berry ("wolfberry"). Two varieties are recognized,[1] L. chinense var. chinense and L. chinense var. potaninii. It is also known as Chinese boxthorn, Chinese matrimony-vine, Chinese teaplant, Chinese wolfberry, wolfberry, and Chinese desert-thorn.

Description

Wolfberry species are deciduous woody shrubs, growing 1– high, somewhat shorter than L. barbarum. The stems are highly branched. Branches are pale gray, slender, curved or pendulous, with thorns 0.5– long.[1]

Leaves

Lycium chinense leaves form on the shoot either solitary in an alternating arrangement or in bundles of 2 to 4. Their shape may be ovate, rombic, lanceolate, or linear-lanceolate, usually 1.5- long and 0.5- wide (but up to long and wide in cultivated plants).[1]

Flowers

The flowers grow in groups of one to three in the leaf axils, with pedicels 1- long.[1] The bell-shaped or tubular calyx (eventually ruptured by the growing berry) splits halfway into short, triangular, densely ciliate lobes. The corollae is a tube that splits into lavender or light purple petals, NaNmm wide with five or six lobes longer than the tube, with short hairs at the edge. The stamens are structured with filaments longer than the anthers, slightly shorter or longer than the corolla, with a villous ring slightly above the base and the adjacent corolla tube.[1] The anthers are longitudinally dehiscent.

Fruit and seeds

Lycium chinense produces a bright orange-red berry, whose shape is ovoid or oblong, 7- long and 5 to 8 mm wide (but up to long and wide in cultivation).[1] It contains compressed yellow seeds, from 2.5 to 3 mm wide, with a curved embryo; their number varies widely based on cultivar and fruit size, from 10 to 60. The berries ripen from July to October in the Northern Hemisphere.

Disease

It can be parasitized by the oomycete species Peronospora lycii.[2]

Similar species

Lycium chinense can be distinguished from the very similar Lycium barbarum by morphological traits of the flowers. The corolla tubes of barbarum are significantly longer than the lobes, and the calyx of chinense usually has more than two lobes whereas barbarum has just two.[3]

Use

The fruits may be infused with hot water to make goji tea. The plant has been used for centuries in traditional Chinese medicine for treating various disorders, although there is no high-quality clinical evidence that consuming it has any effect on health or disease.

Chemistry

The fruit composition is similar to that of L. barbarum, with polysaccharides, carotenoids and flavonoids as main constituents.[4] Rutin is a prominent flavonoid, while the main carotenoid is zeaxanthin dipalmitate (49% of the carotenoid fraction), with β-carotene, two cerebrosides, and three pyrrole derivatives as other constituents.[4]

Dozens of secondary metabolites have been isolated and identified from the roots, root bark, and leaves, including cyclic peptides, alkaloids, and flavonoids.[4] Citric acid is the major nonvolatile organic acid in the leaves followed by oxalic acid.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Flora of China treatment for L. chinense.
  2. Constantinescu . O. . An annotated list of Peronospora names . 1991 . Thunbergia . 15.
  3. https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Two-morphological-traits-to-differentiate-Lycium-barbarum-and-Lycium-chinense-based-on_fig1_329751703
  4. Olivier Potterat. 2010. Goji (Lycium barbarum and L. chinense): Phytochemistry, pharmacology and safety in the perspective of traditional uses and recent popularity. Planta Medica. 76. 1. 7–19. 10.1055/s-0029-1186218. 19844860. free.