Therapeutic compounds from medicinal plant endophytes: molecular and metabolic adaptations

Author:

Sharma Garima12,Agarwal Surbhi1,Verma Kavita1,Bhardwaj Rashmi2,Mathur Vartika13

Affiliation:

1. Animal–Plant Interactions Lab, Department of Zoology, Sri Venkateswara College, University of Delhi , New Delhi 110021 , India

2. Centre for Medical Biotechnology, Maharshi Dayanand University , Rohtak, Haryana 124001 , India

3. Fellow of Institute of Eminence, School of Climate Change and Sustainability, University of Delhi , Delhi 110007 , India

Abstract

Abstract During the last few decades, endophytes have attracted increased attention due to their ability to produce a plethora of bioactive secondary metabolites. These compounds not only help the endophytes to outcompete other plant-associated microbes or pathogens through quorum sensing, but also enable them to surmount the plant immune system. However, only a very few studies have described the interlink between various biochemical and molecular factors of host-microbe interactions involved in the production of these pharmacological metabolites. The peculiar mechanisms by which endophytes modulate plant physiology and metabolism through elicitors, as well as how they use transitional compounds of primary and secondary metabolism as nutrients and precursors for the synthesis of new compounds or enhancing existing metabolites, are still less understood. This study thus attempts to address the aspects of synthesis of such metabolites used in therapeutics by the endophytes in the light of their ecological significance, adaptation, and intercommunity interactions. Our study explores how endophytes adapt to the specific host environment, especially in medicinal plants that produce metabolites with pharmacological potential and simultaneously modulate host gene expression for the biosynthesis of these metabolites. We also discuss the differential interactions of fungal and bacterial endophytes with their hosts.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Biotechnology

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