03 Jun 2025
Publication
Public
Active
Manu Caddie | Researcher
Manu Caddie
manucaddie@gmail.com
Summary
The potential of cannabinoids to address public health challenges has stimulated exploration into alternative sources and production technologies. Radula marginata, an endemic Aotearoa/New Zealand liverwort, produces the bibenzyl cannabinoid perrottetinene (PET), analogous to Cannabis psychoactive tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). Structural differences between PET and THC could alter therapeutic interactions and mitigate adverse side effects.
To understand the cannabinoid production potential of R. marginata, we analyzed 75 collections from three locations across several seasons, collaborating with kaitiaki Māori (indigenous guardians). Metabolic plasticity of the phytocannabinoids and plant growth was assessed under controlled growth conditions, and in in vitro culture.
Perrottetinene diol (trans-PTD), analogous to cannabidiol (trans-CBD), and its acid precursor (PTDA), were identified and fully characterized from nature for the first time. Bibenzyl-4-geranyl (BB4G), analogous to cannabigerol (CBG), and its corresponding acid (BB4GA), were also isolated. Radula marginata showed chemotypes dominated by PET, PTD, or BB4G, in striking analogy to the main Cannabis chemotypes. These site-selective chemotypes persisted after growth under artificial lighting and in in vitro progeny, suggesting genetic control.
These results expand phytocannabinoid knowledge through the discovery of PTD analogous to CBD. They add a new dimension to liverwort cannabinoids and suggest convergent evolution of biosynthesis in two distant plant lineages.
Local Contexts Project ID
43271a3a-9731-4725-91e2-081fea4c9b9d
Project URL
https://localcontextshub.org/projects/43271a3a-9731-4725-91e2-081fea4c9b9d
The BC (Biocultural) Notice is a visible notification that there are accompanying cultural rights and responsibilities that need further attention for any future sharing and use of this material or data. The BC Notice recognizes the rights of Indigenous Peoples to permission the use of information, collections, data and digital sequence information (DSI) generated from the biodiversity or genetic resources associated with traditional lands, waters, and territories. The BC Notice may indicate that BC Labels are in development and their implementation is being negotiated.
0 Sub Projects
If you are accessing this site using Safari or Internet Explorer, the site may not behave as expected. Try to access with Google Chrome for best performance