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The Roles of Rhizospheric and Endophytic Microorganisms on the Regulation of Secondary Metabolites Accumulation in Medicinal Plants-A Review from Medicinal Plant Research Center of South China Agricultural University

Medicinal plants are important economic crops and of great value in healthcare industry. The rapid growth of market demand has led to a shortage of Chinese medicinal crops and an annual increase in prices. Secondary metabolites (SMs), as the main active components in medicinal plants, are widely used to produce clinical therapeutic drugs or raw materials for drug preparations. The accumulation of SMs in medicinal plants is influenced by both internal physiological factors and external environmental factors, such as climate, soil physicochemical properties and microorganisms. In recent years, studies have found that the rhizosphere and endophytic microorganisms play a vital role in the accumulation of key SMs in many medicinal plants.

Recently, Professor Hong Wu and his team from the Medicinal Plant Research Center of South China Agricultural University published a review paper titled “Regulation of Secondary Metabolites Accumulation in Medicinal Plants by Rhizospheric and Endophytic Microorganisms” in Medicinal Plant Biology. In this review, they summarize the factors that affect the composition of rhizospheric and endophytic microorganisms in medicinal plants, including the physical and chemical properties of the soil, planting mode, different developmental stages of medicinal plants, and plant cultivars. In addition, this review shows that microorganisms encode genes related to nitrogen fixation, phosphate metabolism, hormone synthesis, and root colonization. By fixing nitrogen and dissolving phosphate rock to release free phosphorus, plant height and fresh weight of medicinal materials can be increased. Moreover, some microorganisms can promote the growth of medicinal plants by inhibiting the growth of pathogens.

The review also discusses the mechanism by which microorganisms promote the accumulation of SMs in medicinal plants. Some microorganisms synthesize SMs through gene clusters encoding SM synthesis related genes. Moreover, microorganisms can synthesize plant hormones or affect the accumulation of SMs by influencing the hormone levels in the host. Furthermore, microorganisms can increase the content of active substances by activating the immune system of medicinal plants, thereby stimulating the expression of genes related to metabolic pathways. Conversely, SMs synthesized by some medicinal plants can also affect the composition of the microbial community (Figure 1). This review on endophytic and rhizospheric microorganisms regulating the accumulation of active ingredients in medicinal plants can lay a theoretical foundation for the development of efficient and high-quality microbial fertilizer, thus contributing significantly to the advancement of green agriculture.

Jianbin Yu, a PhD candidate at South China Agricultural University, is the first author of the paper, with Professors Hong Wu and Xiangxiu Liang as corresponding authors. Dr. Mei Bai also contributed to the writing of the paper. The research is supported by Guangdong Provincial Key Fields Science and Technology Development Program (2020B020221001), Lingnan Key Laboratory of Modern Agricultural Engineering (NZ 2021024), Guangdong Province “14th Five-Year” Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation Ten Major Direction Project (2022SDZG07), and Natural Science Foundation Project (32270381).

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References

DOI

10.48130/mpb-0024-0011

Original Source URL

https://www.maxapress.com/article/doi/10.48130/mpb-0024-0011

Authors

Jianbin Yu1 , Mei Bai1,2 , Congyu Wang1 , Hong Wu1,2,3* and Xiangxiu Liang1,2*

Affiliations

1 College of Life Sciences, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou 510642, China

2 Guangdong Laboratory for Lingnan Modern Agriculture, Guangzhou 510642, China

3 Traditional Chinese Medicine Resource Germplasm Bank Management Center, Yunfu 527300, China

About Wu hong

Professor Wu Hong is the director of Medicinal Plant Research Center at South China Agricultural University. He has long been engaged in research on the protection, development and utilization of medicinal plant resources. He has conducted leading work in breeding new varieties of medicinal plants in south China such as Citri Reticulatae ‘Chachi’, Citrus grandis ‘Tomentosa’, and Cinnamomum cassia, as well as research on the synthesis and regulation mechanism of active ingredients in medicinal plants. He has published more than 100 papers in academic journals such as Nature Communications, Microbiome, Innovation, and Plant Physiology. He was selected as the World’s Top 2% Scientists 2020 by Stanford University-the list of lifetime scientific impact. He has been authorized 18 national invention patents, including 5 transformations, and has been approved for 2 national new veterinary drug certificates and 2 new plant variety rights by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs.