Summary of Study ST001713
This data is available at the NIH Common Fund's National Metabolomics Data Repository (NMDR) website, the Metabolomics Workbench, https://www.metabolomicsworkbench.org, where it has been assigned Project ID PR001097. The data can be accessed directly via it's Project DOI: 10.21228/M8WT3C This work is supported by NIH grant, U2C- DK119886.
See: https://www.metabolomicsworkbench.org/about/howtocite.php
This study contains a large results data set and is not available in the mwTab file. It is only available for download via FTP as data file(s) here.
Study ID | ST001713 |
Study Title | Effects of different planting densities on the metabolism of Panax notoginseng |
Study Type | Planting density experiment |
Study Summary | At the moderate planting density, the primary metabolism (starch and sucrose metabolism) of the plants were significantly enhanced. However, the strong intraspecific competition at the higher planting densities resulted in stress as well as the accumulation of antioxidants (gentiobiose, oxalic acid, dehydroascorbic acid) and other stress resistance-related metabolites. Interestingly, the planting at low densities with low intraspecific competition disturbed normal carbohydrate metabolism by upregulating galactose metabolism. |
Institute | Yunnan Agricultural University |
Department | College of Plant Protection |
Laboratory | Key Laboratory for Agro-biodiversity and Pest Control of Ministry of Education |
Last Name | Haijiao |
First Name | Liu |
Address | 452 Fengyuan road, Kunming, Yunnan, China |
15832256149@163.com | |
Phone | +8615288149641 |
Submit Date | 2021-01-25 |
Raw Data Available | Yes |
Raw Data File Type(s) | d |
Analysis Type Detail | GC-MS |
Release Date | 2022-01-25 |
Release Version | 1 |
Select appropriate tab below to view additional metadata details:
Project:
Project ID: | PR001097 |
Project DOI: | doi: 10.21228/M8WT3C |
Project Title: | Study on metabolites of Panax notoginseng under different densities |
Project Type: | Ms qualitative research |
Project Summary: | At the moderate planting density, the primary metabolism (starch and sucrose metabolism) of the plants were significantly enhanced. However, the strong intraspecific competition at the higher planting densities resulted in stress as well as the accumulation of antioxidants (gentiobiose, oxalic acid, dehydroascorbic acid) and other stress resistance-related metabolites. Interestingly, the planting at low densities with low intraspecific competition disturbed normal carbohydrate metabolism by upregulating galactose metabolism. |
Institute: | Yunnan Agricultural University |
Department: | Crop Protection Institute |
Laboratory: | Key Laboratory for Agro-biodiversity and Pest Control of Ministry of Education |
Last Name: | Liu |
First Name: | haijiao |
Address: | 452 Fengyuan road, kunming, Yunnan, 650051, China |
Email: | 15832256149@163.com |
Phone: | +8615288149641 |
Funding Source: | This work was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2017YFC1702502; 2018YFD0201100), Yunnan provincial key programs of Yunnan Eco-friendly Food International Cooperation Research Center project under grant (2019ZG00901), the Yunnan Academician Workstation of Chinese Academy of Engineering (2018IC063), the Young and Middle-aged Academic and Technical Leaders Reserve Programme in Yunnan Province (2017HB024), the Yunnan Ten Thousand Talents Plan Young & Elite Talents Project and Program for Innovative Research Team in Science and Technology in University of Yunnan Province (to Shusheng Zhu) |
Subject:
Subject ID: | SU001790 |
Subject Type: | Plant |
Subject Species: | Panax notoginseng |
Taxonomy ID: | 44586 |
Gender: | Not applicable |
Factors:
Subject type: Plant; Subject species: Panax notoginseng (Factor headings shown in green)
mb_sample_id | local_sample_id | Treatment |
---|---|---|
SA160377 | 10cm_1 | 10cm |
SA160378 | 10cm_3 | 10cm |
SA160379 | 10cm_4 | 10cm |
SA160380 | 10cm_2 | 10cm |
SA160381 | 15cm_2 | 15cm |
SA160382 | 15cm_4 | 15cm |
SA160383 | 15cm_1 | 15cm |
SA160384 | 15cm_3 | 15cm |
SA160385 | 20cm_2 | 20cm |
SA160386 | 20cm_4 | 20cm |
SA160387 | 20cm_1 | 20cm |
SA160388 | 20cm_3 | 20cm |
SA160389 | 30cm_3 | 30cm |
SA160390 | 30cm_4 | 30cm |
SA160391 | 30cm_2 | 30cm |
SA160392 | 30cm_1 | 30cm |
SA160393 | 8cm_2 | 8cm |
SA160394 | 8cm_4 | 8cm |
SA160395 | 8cm_1 | 8cm |
SA160396 | 8cm_3 | 8cm |
Showing results 1 to 20 of 20 |
Collection:
Collection ID: | CO001783 |
Collection Summary: | Fresh fibrous root of Panax notoginseng were washed with sterile water and then flash-frozen in liquid N2 |
Sample Type: | Fibrous root |
Treatment:
Treatment ID: | TR001803 |
Treatment Summary: | The experimental design for P. notoginseng cultivation is as follows: Each plastic basin (65×40×18 cm) contains about 40 kg natural soil, which was collected from a pine forest in Xundian Country, Yunnan, China (103.29°E, 25.51°N; altitude of 1960 m), then sieved to remove the residue of plant. The soil had the following characteristics: pH 5.17, electrical conductivity 458 μS cm-1, available potassium (K) 6.90 mg kg-1, available phosphate (P) 5.18 mg kg-1, alkali-hydrolyzable nitrogen (N) 172.38 mg kg-1 and organic matter 47830 mg kg-1. 4, 12, 15, 28, 45 healthy one-year old seedlings were planted in January 3, 2016 at a plant spacing of 30 cm, 20 cm, 15 cm, 10 cm and 8 cm, respectively. There were four repeats for each treatment, and a total of 20 plastic basins were placed in a completely randomized block design in greenhouse. The fresh fibrous root of P. notoginseng was collected in November 30, 2016. |
Sample Preparation:
Sampleprep ID: | SP001796 |
Sampleprep Summary: | Approximately 60 mg of frozen powder fibrous roots and 1 mL of methanol (CH3OH) containing 0.5 mg of ribitol were added into a prechilled 2 mL lock-cap centrifuge tube, then vortexed for 10 s. A 300 μL extraction aliquot (H2O:methanol:chloroform=1:2.5:1, v:v:v) was added and ultrasonically extracted for 30 min at 37°C. Then, the sample was centrifuged (1600 g, 3 min) to separate the polar and nonpolar phases. Then the upper polar phase was transferred to a fresh centrifuge tube and added 200 μL sterile water, and then vortexed and centrifuged (1600 g, 4°C for 3 min). A 250 μL aliquot of the upper phase was transferred to a fresh centrifuge tube, dried for 3-4 h at room temperature using a SpeedVac (Christ, Germany). Adding 80 μL of methoxyamine hydrochloride solution (20 mg mL-1 dissolved in pyridine) to each sample and incubating for 90 min at 30°C to protect carbonyl moieties. And then, 40 μL N-methyl-N-(trimethylsilyl)-trifluoroacetamide (MSTFA) was added and incubating at 37°C for 30 min to trimethylsilylate the acidic protons. After this step, the sample was centrifuged (1600 g, 4°C for 3 min), then the supernatant was stored at 4°C for further analysis. |
Combined analysis:
Analysis ID | AN002788 |
---|---|
Analysis type | MS |
Chromatography type | GC |
Chromatography system | Shimadzu GCMS-QP2010 ultra |
Column | Agilent HP5-MS (30m x 0.25mm, 0.25 um) |
MS Type | EI |
MS instrument type | GC-TOF |
MS instrument name | Shimadzu QP2010 Ultra |
Ion Mode | UNSPECIFIED |
Units | Peak area |
Chromatography:
Chromatography ID: | CH002063 |
Instrument Name: | Shimadzu GCMS-QP2010 ultra |
Column Name: | Agilent HP5-MS (30m x 0.25mm, 0.25 um) |
Chromatography Type: | GC |
MS:
MS ID: | MS002584 |
Analysis ID: | AN002788 |
Instrument Name: | Shimadzu QP2010 Ultra |
Instrument Type: | GC-TOF |
MS Type: | EI |
MS Comments: | Mass spectra were obtained in electron impact (EI) ionization mode at 70 eV by monitoring the full-scan range (m/z 45-600);the raw peak obtained by data baseline filtering and calibration, peak alignment, deconvolution analysis and peak identification using MS-DIAL with the Fiehn library. The peak areas of metabolites in raw MS-Dial output (Supplementary Table S2) were normalization by sum, transformation by log and scaling by Pareto method on Metaboanalyst 4.0 (http://www.metaboanalyst.ca/MetaboAnalyst/) |
Ion Mode: | UNSPECIFIED |