Title: Chapter 13 Secondary metabolites and plant defense
1Chapter 13 Secondary metabolites and plant
defense Sedentary A wide variety of
attackers The mechanisms of self-protection
against herbivores and pathogenic
microbes 1. Surface protection reduce H2O
loss and help block the entry of pathogene
cutin, waxes, and suberin 2.
Secondary metabolites no direct function in
growth and development, also named
secondary products, natural products,
depend on plant species, functionless
end products of metabolism or metabolic wastes
? important medicinal drugs, poisons,
flavors, and industrial materials,
even have ecological functions 3. The
signaling processes during host-pathogen
interaction
2cutin on most aboveground parts
ester-linkage waxes associate with both
cutin and suberin suberin on
underground parts, woody stem, and healed
wounds in the Casparian strip
or epoxide
aldehyde, ketones, esters and free fatty acids
to reduce transpiration and pathogen
invasion
3the mechanism of wax formation (?), natural wax
4- Secondary metabolites
- the results of heritable mutations, natural
selection, and - evolution change
- Ecological functions in plants
- against being eaten by herbivores and infected
by microbial pathogens - as attractants for pollinators and
seed-dispersing animals - as agents of plant-plant competition
(allelopathy, p.324) and - plant-microbe symbioses
- From leaves, roots, and decaying litter,
plants release a variety of primary and - secondary metabolites into environment.
Investigation of the effects of these - compounds on neighboring plants.
- Many important crop plants have been
artificially selected - ? low levels of secondary metabolites
- (more susceptible to insects and diseases)
5Three groups
6- terpenes isoprene unit
7? essential oil ? ester pyrethroids insecticide
s
? essential oil, ABA
? brassinosterol, saponin, limonoids,
cardenolides (p. 322)
? GA
? carotenoids
Saponins
C5n n ? 8, dolichols
Functions growth, development, defense,
perfumes, medicals,.
8C10
monoterpene
Glandular hair on a young leaf of spring
sunflower
9C30 triterpene
Powerful feeding deterrents to insects
From the neem tree (Azadirachta indica) 50 ppb
for some insects
From the common fern (Polypodium vulgare) Against
plant-parasitic nematodes
10Plant phenolics are biosynthesized in several
different ways
(2) Phenols
Glyphosphate (Roundup)
Not in animals
Tannins unripe fruits, wine,
11Flavonoids (C6-C3-C6)
(salicylic acid) p. 325
(allelopathy)
(phototoxicity)
C6-C3
Functions protection (pathogen, UV-light),
color, antimicrobial activity,
mechanical strengthen,
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