Genus Zingiber: A Review on Botanical, Major Bioactivities and Genetic Diversity

Zingiberaceae is a perennial plant family that is found across the tropics, particularly in Southeast Asia from low land to hill forests. In Peninsular Malaysia, it is believed that 160 ginger species are widely distributed belonging to 18 genera. Most of the Zingiber species in Peninsular Malaysia...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Malaysian Journal of Fundamental and Applied Sciences
Main Author: Fasli F.A.Z.; Hussin N.S.S.M.; Farinordin F.A.; Midin M.R.; Qareerah N.M.A.; Ahmeedah S.A.S.; Ridzuan R.
Format: Review
Language:English
Published: Penerbit UTM Press 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85208368243&doi=10.11113%2fmjfas.v20n5.3553&partnerID=40&md5=dfc0ffb20e2a6d9b70bf55205b4cc813
id 2-s2.0-85208368243
spelling 2-s2.0-85208368243
Fasli F.A.Z.; Hussin N.S.S.M.; Farinordin F.A.; Midin M.R.; Qareerah N.M.A.; Ahmeedah S.A.S.; Ridzuan R.
Genus Zingiber: A Review on Botanical, Major Bioactivities and Genetic Diversity
2024
Malaysian Journal of Fundamental and Applied Sciences
20
5
10.11113/mjfas.v20n5.3553
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85208368243&doi=10.11113%2fmjfas.v20n5.3553&partnerID=40&md5=dfc0ffb20e2a6d9b70bf55205b4cc813
Zingiberaceae is a perennial plant family that is found across the tropics, particularly in Southeast Asia from low land to hill forests. In Peninsular Malaysia, it is believed that 160 ginger species are widely distributed belonging to 18 genera. Most of the Zingiber species in Peninsular Malaysia are less investigated and less understood taxonomically, thus remaining as under-utilized crops. The description of their morphologies in parallel with phytochemicals and molecular information are crucial to provide valuable information for further discovery of potent compounds, identification of potential new sources of genetic variation, as well as to provide insight into the domestication and breeding of ginger. The majority of Zingiber species are perennial herbs with a fragrant scent, an upright stem, and a fibrous rhizome. The presence of volatile components such as monoterpenoids, sesquiterpenes, sesquiterpenoids and some non-volatile compounds like gingerols, shagaols, and zingerone have contributed to the strong scent of the ginger oils. Among the dominant components of Zingiber are α-zingiberene, geranial, neral, camphene, neral, neric acid, α-curcumene, and zerumbone. The crude extracts and essential oils of Zingiber have proven to show some biological activities such as antimicrobial, anti-bacterial, insecticidal, larvicidal, anti-cancer, anti-inflammatory, anti-ulceration, antioxidant, anti-fungal, immunomodulatory, and anti-nociceptive. Most Zingiber species are known to have 22 somatic chromosomes (2n=22) which is the lowest among genera in Zingiberaceae. This study underscores the crucial significance of breeding programs and germplasm conservation, specifically emphasizing the potential of common ginger as a prominent contributor. ©Copyright Zoni Fasli.
Penerbit UTM Press
2289599X
English
Review

author Fasli F.A.Z.; Hussin N.S.S.M.; Farinordin F.A.; Midin M.R.; Qareerah N.M.A.; Ahmeedah S.A.S.; Ridzuan R.
spellingShingle Fasli F.A.Z.; Hussin N.S.S.M.; Farinordin F.A.; Midin M.R.; Qareerah N.M.A.; Ahmeedah S.A.S.; Ridzuan R.
Genus Zingiber: A Review on Botanical, Major Bioactivities and Genetic Diversity
author_facet Fasli F.A.Z.; Hussin N.S.S.M.; Farinordin F.A.; Midin M.R.; Qareerah N.M.A.; Ahmeedah S.A.S.; Ridzuan R.
author_sort Fasli F.A.Z.; Hussin N.S.S.M.; Farinordin F.A.; Midin M.R.; Qareerah N.M.A.; Ahmeedah S.A.S.; Ridzuan R.
title Genus Zingiber: A Review on Botanical, Major Bioactivities and Genetic Diversity
title_short Genus Zingiber: A Review on Botanical, Major Bioactivities and Genetic Diversity
title_full Genus Zingiber: A Review on Botanical, Major Bioactivities and Genetic Diversity
title_fullStr Genus Zingiber: A Review on Botanical, Major Bioactivities and Genetic Diversity
title_full_unstemmed Genus Zingiber: A Review on Botanical, Major Bioactivities and Genetic Diversity
title_sort Genus Zingiber: A Review on Botanical, Major Bioactivities and Genetic Diversity
publishDate 2024
container_title Malaysian Journal of Fundamental and Applied Sciences
container_volume 20
container_issue 5
doi_str_mv 10.11113/mjfas.v20n5.3553
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85208368243&doi=10.11113%2fmjfas.v20n5.3553&partnerID=40&md5=dfc0ffb20e2a6d9b70bf55205b4cc813
description Zingiberaceae is a perennial plant family that is found across the tropics, particularly in Southeast Asia from low land to hill forests. In Peninsular Malaysia, it is believed that 160 ginger species are widely distributed belonging to 18 genera. Most of the Zingiber species in Peninsular Malaysia are less investigated and less understood taxonomically, thus remaining as under-utilized crops. The description of their morphologies in parallel with phytochemicals and molecular information are crucial to provide valuable information for further discovery of potent compounds, identification of potential new sources of genetic variation, as well as to provide insight into the domestication and breeding of ginger. The majority of Zingiber species are perennial herbs with a fragrant scent, an upright stem, and a fibrous rhizome. The presence of volatile components such as monoterpenoids, sesquiterpenes, sesquiterpenoids and some non-volatile compounds like gingerols, shagaols, and zingerone have contributed to the strong scent of the ginger oils. Among the dominant components of Zingiber are α-zingiberene, geranial, neral, camphene, neral, neric acid, α-curcumene, and zerumbone. The crude extracts and essential oils of Zingiber have proven to show some biological activities such as antimicrobial, anti-bacterial, insecticidal, larvicidal, anti-cancer, anti-inflammatory, anti-ulceration, antioxidant, anti-fungal, immunomodulatory, and anti-nociceptive. Most Zingiber species are known to have 22 somatic chromosomes (2n=22) which is the lowest among genera in Zingiberaceae. This study underscores the crucial significance of breeding programs and germplasm conservation, specifically emphasizing the potential of common ginger as a prominent contributor. ©Copyright Zoni Fasli.
publisher Penerbit UTM Press
issn 2289599X
language English
format Review
accesstype
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1820775433778495488