Elicitation, a New Window into Plant Chemodiversity and Phytochemical Drug
Discovery
Posted on 2003-05-02 - 00:00
Plant extracts collected from the wild are important sources for drug discovery. However, these
extracts suffer from a lack of reproducible bioactivity and chemical composition caused by the
highly inducible, variable, and transitory nature of plant secondary metabolism. Here, we
demonstrate that exposing roots of hydroponically grown plants to chemical elicitors selectively
and reproducibly induced the production of bioactive compounds, dramatically increased the
hit rate, and more than doubled the number of plant species showing in vitro activity against
bacteria, fungi, or cancer. Elicitation performed under controlled conditions dramatically
improves reliability and efficiency of plant extracts in drug discovery while preserving wild
species and their habitats.
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Poulev, Alexander; O'Neal, Joseph M.; Logendra, Sithes; Pouleva, Reneta B.; Timeva, Vesa; Garvey, Alison S.; et al. (2016). Elicitation, a New Window into Plant Chemodiversity and Phytochemical Drug
Discovery. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jm020359tÂ