Abrus precatorius

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Jequirity
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Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Fabales
Family: Fabaceae
Subfamily: Faboideae
Tribe: Abreae
Genus: Abrus
Species: A. precatorius
Binomial name
Abrus precatorius
L.

Abrus precatorius, known commonly as Jequirity, Crab's Eye, Rosary Pea, 'John Crow' Bead, Precatory bean, Indian Licorice, Akar Saga, Giddee Giddee or Jumbie Bead in Trinidad & Tobago,[1] is a slender, perennial climber that twines around trees, shrubs, and hedges. It is a legume with long, pinnate-leafleted leaves. It is also known as Gunja in Sanskrit and some Indian languages and Ratti in Hindi. With ratti name, it was also long used to measure 0.12125 grams of a traditional unit, mostly used by jewellers and Ayurved doctors.[2] The seeds are also often used as beads and in percussion instruments. The seed contains the toxic poison abrin. The plant is native to Indonesia and grows in tropical and subtropical areas of the world where it has been introduced. It has a tendency to become weedy and invasive where it has been introduced.

Toxin

The toxin present in Abrus precatorius is a close relative to ricin called abrin. It is a dimer consisting of two protein subunits, termed A and B. The B chain facilitates abrin's entry into a cell by bonding to certain transport proteins on cell membranes, which then transport the toxin into the cell. Once inside the cell, the A chain prevents protein synthesis by inactivating the 26S subunit of the ribosome. One molecule of abrin will inactivate up to 1,500 ribosomes per second. Symptoms are identical to those of ricin, except abrin is more toxic by several orders of magnitude; the fatal dose of ricin is approximately 75 times greater than the fatal dose of abrin. Abrin can kill with a circulating amount of less than 3 μg (micrograms). 'Abrus precatorius' is called "kudri mani" in Tamil and 'Guru Ginja' in Telugu.It is used in Siddha medicine for centuries. The Tamil Siddhars knew about the toxic effects in plants and suggested various methods which is called "suththi seythal" or purification. Boiling the seeds in milk and drying may remove the toxic effect.[citation needed][dubious ]

Uses

The seeds of Abrus precatorius are much valued in native jewelry for their bright coloration. The third of the bean with the hilum (attachment scar) is black, and the rest is bright red, suggesting a ladybug. Jewelry-making with jequirity seeds is dangerous, and there have been cases of death by a finger-prick while boring the seeds for beadwork. However, it has long been a symbol of love in China, and its name in Chinese is xiang si dou (
中文:
), or "mutual love bean".

In Trinidad in the West Indies the brightly coloured seeds are strung into bracelets and worn around the wrist or ankle to ward off jumbies or evil spirits and "mal-yeux" - the evil eye. A tea is made from the leaves and used to treat fevers, coughs and colds.[3]

The Tamils use Abrus precatorius seeds of different colors. The red variety with black eye is the most common, but there are black, white and green varieties as well. In Siddha medicine the white variety is used to prepare oil that is used as an aphrodisiac.[4]

Gallery

Footnotes

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References

External links

cs:Sotorek obecný de:Paternostererbse es:Abrus precatorius fr:Abrus precatorius ko:홍두 id:Saga rambat it:Abrus precatorius ht:Lyann legliz lt:Vaistinis abras ml:കുന്നി mr:गुंज ms:Pokok saga nl:Paternosterboontje pt:Ervilha do Rosário ro:Abrus precatorius ru:Абрус молитвенный ta:குன்றிச் செடி te:గురివింద th:มะกล่ำตาหนู to:Moho vi:Cam thảo dây

zh:雞母珠
  1. Mendes (1986), p. 79.
  2. Abrus precatorius : Gunja (Ratti)|Bhopal Birds|Parag Bakshi, March 01, 2007|Archieved on March 17, 2010
  3. Mendes (1986), p. 79.
  4. Dr.J.Raamachandran, "HERBS OF SIDDHA MEDICINES-The First 3D Book on Herbs", page 2