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Chapter 19 - Secondary Plant Metabolites

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 May 2020

S. L. Kochhar
Affiliation:
University of Delhi
Sukhbir Kaur Gujral
Affiliation:
University of Delhi
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Summary

Plants synthesize a vast array of organic compounds that seemingly have no known role in either assimilation or during growth and development of the organism. These compounds, which are natural products, are called secondary metabolites (Figure 19.1). Secondary metabolites are different from primary metabolites (e.g., proteins, lipids, carbohydrates and nucleic acids) because of their restricted distribution in various groups of plants (Figure 19.2). Scientists have long thought that these compounds provide protection to plants from predators and pathogens owing to their toxic effect and repellent nature to herbivores and microbes when studied in vitro. Recent studies have shown that the expression of secondary metabolites can be modified by advanced molecular techniques.

Plant secondary metabolites can be classified into four distinct groups, such as terpenes, phenolics, alkaloids and glycosides.

Terpenes (Terpenoids)

Terpenoids take their name from terpenes, the volatile constituents of turpentine (a solvent produced from the distillation of pine tree resin). These include both primary and secondary metabolites. The terpenes represent the largest group of secondary metabolites. The diverse substances belonging to this group are normally insoluble in water and biosynthesized either from acetyl CoA or intermediates of glycolysis. Terpenoids and their derivatives may be considered polymers of isoprene units which consist of the branched five-carbon isoprene skeleton (Figure 19.3). Consequently, terpenoids are often referred to as isoprenoid compounds. The repetitive 5-C structural motif from which terpenoids are built is called the prenyl group. Terpenes are grouped by the number of 5-C units they have in their skeleton:

Hemiterpenoids: 5-C terpenes (one, five carbon units), e.g., isoamyl alcohol, tiglic acid

Monoterpenoids: 10-C terpenes (two, five carbon units), e.g., geraniol, menthol

Sesquiterpenoids: 15-C terpenes (three, five carbon units), e.g., farnesol

Diterpenoids: 20-C terpenes (four, five carbon units), e.g., phytol (part of chlorophyll)

Sesterpenoids: 25-C terpenes (five, five carbon units), e.g., ophiobolane

Triterpenoids: 30-C terpenes, e.g., steroids and sterol

Tetraterpenoids: 40-C terpenes, e.g., carotenoids

Polyterpenoids: ([C5]n carbons, where n > 8), e.g., natural rubber and gutta

Diterpenoids and triterpenoids include both primary and secondary metabolites. An important chemical group derived from di- and triterpenoid precursors is steroid which is widely distributed in plants, fungi and animals. They contribute much to the stability of membranes and hormone signalling.

Type
Chapter
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Plant Physiology
Theory and Applications
, pp. 590 - 610
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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