Plant secondary metabolites and climate change

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International Journal of Development Research

Volume: 
13
Article ID: 
26110
4 pages
Research Article

Plant secondary metabolites and climate change

Dr. Tulika Mishra

Abstract: 

Plant secondary metabolites (PSMs) are plant products that are variously distributed throughout the plant kingdom. These secondary compounds have various chemical groups and are named according to their chemical constituents. For their ability to defend biotic and abiotic stresses they are considered as plants' defensive or bio-functional compounds. These metabolites derived from secondary metabolism of plants are produced for protection of the species from insects, herbivores and extreme environmental conditions. They are indirectly involved in plants’ growth and development. Secondary metabolites are also used by people in the form of medicines, pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals, colors, fragrances, flavorings, food additives, biopesticides, and drugs development. Different ecologically limiting factors including temperature, carbon dioxide, lighting, ozone, soil water, soil salinity and soil fertility has significant impact on plants’ physiological and biochemical responses, as well as the secondary metabolic process. Secondary metabolites are the key players in plant adaptation to these environmental stresses and play a role in mitigating the negative effects of these stresses. Both primary and secondary metabolisms are altered under these stress environments, however, plants have evolved to endure these conditions through inducing several regulating mechanisms including induction of antioxidant machinery and fine tuning of transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulations of gene expressions. In most of the plants, the ultimate result of these changes. The review showed the influence of different environmental variables on SMs production and accumulation is complex suggesting the relationship are not only species-specific but also related to increases and decline in SMs.

DOI: 
https://doi.org/10.37118/ijdr.26110.02.2023
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