• Title/Summary/Keyword: terpene alkaloids

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Pathogen, Insect and Weed Control Effects of Secondary Metabolites from Plants (식물유래 2차 대사물질의 병충해 및 잡초 방제효과)

  • Kim, Jong-Bum
    • Applied Biological Chemistry
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    • v.48 no.1
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    • pp.1-15
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    • 2005
  • Pathogens, insects and weeds have significantly reduced agricultural productivity. Thus, to increase the productivity, synthetic agricultural chemicals have been overused. However, these synthetic compounds that are different from natural products cannot be broken down easily in natural systems, causing the destruction of soil quality and agricultural environments and the gradually difficulty in continuous agriculture. Now agriculture is faced with the various problems of minimizing the damage in agricultural environments, securing the safety of human health, while simultaneously increasing agricultural productivity. Meanwhile, plants produce secondary metabolites to protect themselves from external invaders and to secure their region for survival. Plants infected with pathogens produce antibiotics phytoalexin; monocotyledonous plants produce flavonoids and diterpenoids phytoalexins, and dicotylodoneous plant, despite of infected pathogens, produce family-specific phytoalexin such as flavonoids in Leguminosae, indole derivatives in Cruciferae, sesquitepenoids in Solanaceae, coumarins in Umbelliferae, making the plant resistant to specific pathogen. Growth inhibitor or antifeedant substances to insects are terpenoids pyrethrin, azadirachtin, limonin, cedrelanoid, toosendanin and fraxinellone/dictamnine, and terpenoid-alkaloid mixed compounds sesquiterpene pyridine and norditerpenoids, and azepine-, amide-, loline-, stemofoline-, pyrrolizidine-alkaloids and so on. Also plants produces the substances to inhibit other plant growths to secure the regions for plant itself, which is including terpenoids essential oil and sesquiterpene lactone, and additionally, benzoxazinoids, glucosinolate, quassinoid, cyanogenic glycoside, saponin, sorgolennone, juglone and lots of other different of secondary metabolites. Hence, phytoalexin, an antibiotic compound produced by plants infected with pathogens, can be employed for pathogen control. Terpenoids and alkaloids inhibiting insect growth can be utilized for insect control. Allelochemicals, a compound released from a certain plant to hinder the growth of other plants for their survival, can be also used directly as a herbicides for weed control as well. Therefore, the use of the natural secondary metabolites for pest control might be one of the alternatives for environmentally friendly agriculture. However, the natural substances are destroyed easily causing low the pest-control efficacy, and also there is the limitation to producing the substances using plant cell. In the future, effects should be made to try to find the secondary metabolites with good pest-control effect and no harmful to human health. Also the biosynthetic pathways of secondary metabolites have to be elucidated continuously, and the metabolic engineering should be applied to improve transgenics having the resistance to specific pest.

Phytochemical Constituents from the Aerial Parts of Paris verticillata (삿갓나물 지상부의 식물화학적 성분 연구)

  • Lee, Kyu-Ha;Kim, Ki-Hyun;Lee, Il-Kyun;Choi, Sang-Un;Lee, Kang-Ro
    • Korean Journal of Pharmacognosy
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    • v.39 no.2
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    • pp.91-94
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    • 2008
  • Column chromatographic separation of the MeOH extract from the aerial parts of Paris verticillata led to the isolation of three phenolics, two terpene glucosides and two pyrrolidine alkaloids. Their structures were characterized to be methyl caffeate (1), 5-hydroxy pyrrolidin-2-one (2), vanillic acid (3), benzyl alcohol glucopyranoside (4), (6S, 9R)-roseoside (5), staphylionoside H (6) and 5-methoxy pyrrolidin-2-one (7) by spectroscopic means. The isolated compounds (1-7) were for the first time reported from this source. The isolated compounds were tested for their cytotoxicity against four human tumor cell lines by SRB method in vitro.

Phytochemical constituents from Cacalia karaiensis Nakai

  • Lee, Sung-Ok;Choi, Sang-Zin;Kim, Su-Hak;Yang, Min-Cheol;Chung, Ae-Kyung;Nam, Jung-Hwan;Lee, Kyu-Ha;Lee, Kang-Ro
    • Proceedings of the PSK Conference
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    • 2002.10a
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    • pp.375.1-375.1
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    • 2002
  • As part of a research program on the bioactive terpene constituents of Korean compositae plants. we have investigated Cacalia koraiensis (compositae). collected from Gangwon Province on August 2001. On reviewing the literatures of this species. triterpenes and pyrrolizidine alkaloids were isolated and some pharmacological activities were investigated. This species have been used for tinea and spasmolysis However. chemical constituents of this plant have not been reported. (omitted)

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