HORMESIS AND A CHEMICAL RAISON D’ÊTRE FOR SECONDARY PLANT METABOLITES

Author(s)
Franz Hadacek, Gert Bachmann, Doris Engelmeier, Vladimir Chobot
Abstract

In plants, accumulation in specific compartments and huge structural diversity of secondary metabolites is one trait that is not understood yet. By exploring the diverse abiotic and biotic interactions of plants above- and belowground, we provide examples that are characterized by nonlinear effects of the secondary metabolites. We propose that redox chemistry, specifically the reduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and, in their absence, reduction of molecular oxygen by the identical secondary metabolite, is an important component of the hormetic effects caused by these compounds. This is illustrated for selected phenols, terpenoids, and alkaloids. The redox reactions are modulated by the variable availability of transition metals that serve as donors of electrons in a Fenton reaction mode. Low levels of ROS stimulate growth, cell differentiation, and stress resistance; high levels induce programmed cell death. We propose that provision of molecules that can participate in this redox chemistry is the raison d'etre for secondary metabolites. In this context, the presence or absence of functional groups in the molecule is more essential than the whole structure. Accordingly, there exist no constraints that limit structural diversity. Redox chemistry is ubiquitous, from the atmosphere to the soil.

Organisation(s)
Journal
Dose-Response: assessing the nature, mechanisms, and implications of dose-response relationships
Volume
9
Pages
79-116
No. of pages
38
ISSN
1559-3258
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2203/dose-response.09-028.Hadacek
Publication date
2011
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
106030 Plant ecology, 106031 Plant physiology
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/hormesis-and-a-chemical-raison-detre-for-secondary-plant-metabolites(8d8bcfeb-2901-4d83-9b5f-5c06eb0db728).html