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1.
Recent Pat Biotechnol ; 8(1): 36-46, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24354529

RESUMO

The use of plants for healing diseases is one of the oldest medical practices and there are several studies showing that botany and medicine are related. Recent researches have shown that around 25% of new chemical entities and 42% of anticancer drugs marketed worldwide from 1981 to 2006 are obtained from natural products and their derivatives. One-third of the botanical biodiversity of the planet is in South American tropical ecosystems (Neotropical). Over the centuries, plants have been used by indigenous people for curing diseases. This strong tradition has been a great challenge for the scientific community in order to validate the folkloric medicinal use of herbs. In this way, a very few Neotropical pharmaceutical products have reached the market in industrialized countries, even though they have a considerable plant diversity. Plants synthesize several organic compounds which are not related to their growth and development and are called secondary metabolites or natural products that are derived from central or primary metabolism. Because plants are sessile organisms, they have to respond quickly to environmental changes in order to escape and survive under unfavorable conditions. Drought is one of the most worldwide serious impediments for crop yields producing adverse negative effects on plant growth, by impacting leaves and roots growth, stomatal conductance, photosynthetic rate and biomass gain. The three major classes of secondary metabolites are produced from pathways of different primary metabolites, including glycolysis, tricarboxilic acid cycle, aliphatic amino acids, pentose phosphate pathway, shikimate pathway and aromatic amino acids. This review compiles the metabolic changes occurring at primary metabolite level and total biosynthesis of natural products with potential for the development of new drugs in response to drought.


Assuntos
Produtos Biológicos/metabolismo , Plantas Medicinais/metabolismo , Produtos Biológicos/química , Secas , Engenharia Metabólica , Patentes como Assunto , Fotossíntese , América do Sul , Estresse Fisiológico , Terpenos/química , Terpenos/metabolismo
2.
Ciênc. rural ; 41(4): 614-620, abr. 2011. ilus
Artigo em Português | LILACS | ID: lil-585994

RESUMO

A promoção do crescimento vegetal pelos ácidos húmicos tem sido atribuída a ações similares a hormônios, devido à promoção do desenvolvimento e proliferação das raízes, resultando numa absorção mais eficiente de água e nutrientes. O objetivo deste trabalho foi analisar as mudanças na arquitetura radicular em plântulas de milho e no perfil de proteínas da membrana plasmática (MP) promovidas pelo tratamento com ácidos húmicos (AH) isolados de vermicomposto (20mg C L-1). O efeito da adição de ácido cítrico (AC), importante ácido orgânico presente nos exudados radiculares, sobre a bioatividade destes AH também foi investigada. Foram analisados o comprimento da raiz principal, o número de sítios de mitose, o número e comprimento de raízes laterais e a área radicular total. Para a análise do perfil protéico, vesículas da MP de células de raízes foram obtidas por fracionamento celular e as proteínas analisadas por eletroforese uni (1D) e bidimensional (2D). Observou-se que a adição de AC (0,005mM) aos AH estimularam a promoção do crescimento das raízes laterais (126 por cento), da área radicular (58 por cento) e do número de raízes laterais (55 por cento) em relação às plantas controle. A atividade da bomba de H+ da membrana plasmática, analisada como marcador bioquímico de indução do mecanismo do crescimento ácido, também foi significativamente estimulada (374 por cento) pela solução húmica suplementada com AC. O perfil protéico da MP revelou uma supressão da expressão das proteínas nesta membrana, induzida pelo tratamento com AH e, na presença de AC, esse efeito foi ainda mais evidente. Os resultados obtidos corroboram o mecanismo proposto para a bioatividade de AH no qual a ação de ácidos orgânicos exudados pelas plantas, tais como o AC, promove o rompimento da associação supramolecular dessas substâncias, tornando as moléculas bioativas presentes nos agregados húmicos mais acessíveis aos receptores celulares das raízes.


The plant growth stimulation by humic acids (HA) has been attributed to a hormone-like effect as promoting the root development and proliferation, resulting in a more efficient water and nutrient absorption. This research aims to investigate how the humic acids isolated from vermicompost (20mg L-1) can modify the root architecture and the plasma membrane (PM) protein patterns in maize roots. It was also analyzed the effect of the citric acid (CA), an organic acid present in root exudates. The changes induced in the corn root system were estimated by measuring the taproot length, the amount of root mitotic sites and lateral roots, and the total root area. Plasma membrane vesicles were purified by cell fractionation and the protein patterns were analyzed by uni (1D) and bidimensional (2D) electrophoresis. The results show that the HA in solution with CA (0.005mM) increases the lateral root growth promotion (126 percent), the root area (58 percent), and the number of lateral roots (55 percent). The activity of the plasma membrane H+ pump, analyzed as a marker of the induction of the acid growth mechanism, was also enhanced (374 percent) by the humic solution supplemented with CA. Expression of several plasma membrane proteins was inhibited when plants were treated with HA and this effect was more pronounced upon CA supplementation. The obtained results corroborate the proposed mechanism for the HA bioactivity, by which under the action of root-exuded organic acids, such as CA, a disruption of the HA macrostructure is promoted releasing bioactive molecules presented in the humic aggregates, which becomes more accessible to the root cell receptors.

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