Erb Matthias, Kliebenstein Daniel J
Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, California 95616
Institute of Plant Sciences, University of Bern, 3013 Bern, Switzerland.
Plant Physiol. 2020 Sep;184(1):39-52. doi: 10.1104/pp.20.00433. Epub 2020 Jul 7.
The plant kingdom produces hundreds of thousands of low molecular weight organic compounds. Based on the assumed functions of these compounds, the research community has classified them into three overarching groups: primary metabolites, which are directly required for plant growth; secondary (or specialized) metabolites, which mediate plant-environment interactions; and hormones, which regulate organismal processes and metabolism. For decades, this functional trichotomy of plant metabolism has shaped theory and experimentation in plant biology. However, exact biochemical boundaries between these different metabolite classes were never fully established. A new wave of genetic and chemical studies now further blurs these boundaries by demonstrating that secondary metabolites are multifunctional; they can function as potent regulators of plant growth and defense as well as primary metabolites sensu lato. Several adaptive scenarios may have favored this functional diversity for secondary metabolites, including signaling robustness and cost-effective storage and recycling. Secondary metabolite multifunctionality can provide new explanations for ontogenetic patterns of defense production and can refine our understanding of plant-herbivore interactions, in particular by accounting for the discovery that adapted herbivores misuse plant secondary metabolites for multiple purposes, some of which mirror their functions in plants. In conclusion, recent work unveils the limits of our current functional classification system for plant metabolites. Viewing secondary metabolites as integrated components of metabolic networks that are dynamically shaped by environmental selection pressures and transcend multiple trophic levels can improve our understanding of plant metabolism and plant-environment interactions.
植物王国能产生成千上万种低分子量有机化合物。基于这些化合物的假定功能,科学界将它们分为三大类:初级代谢产物,是植物生长直接所需的;次级(或特殊)代谢产物,介导植物与环境的相互作用;以及激素,调节生物体过程和新陈代谢。几十年来,这种植物代谢的功能三分法塑造了植物生物学的理论和实验。然而,这些不同代谢物类别之间确切的生化界限从未完全确定。现在,新一轮的遗传学和化学研究进一步模糊了这些界限,表明次级代谢产物具有多种功能;它们可以作为植物生长和防御的有效调节剂,以及广义上的初级代谢产物发挥作用。几种适应性情况可能有利于次级代谢产物的这种功能多样性,包括信号稳健性以及经济高效的储存和循环利用。次级代谢产物的多功能性可以为防御产物的个体发育模式提供新的解释,并可以完善我们对植物与食草动物相互作用的理解,特别是通过考虑到适应性食草动物将植物次级代谢产物用于多种目的这一发现,其中一些目的与它们在植物中的功能相似。总之,最近的研究揭示了我们目前植物代谢物功能分类系统的局限性。将次级代谢产物视为由环境选择压力动态塑造并跨越多个营养级的代谢网络的整合组成部分,可以增进我们对植物代谢和植物与环境相互作用的理解。