| Literature DB >> 25310150 |
Justyna Mierziak1, Kamil Kostyn2, Anna Kulma1.
Abstract
Flavonoids are small molecular secondary metabolites synthesized by plants with various biological activities. Due to their physical and biochemical properties, they are capable of participating in plants' interactions with other organisms (microorganisms, animals and other plants) and their reactions to environmental stresses. The majority of their functions result from their strong antioxidative properties. Although an increasing number of studies focus on the application of flavonoids in medicine or the food industry, their relevance for the plants themselves also deserves extensive investigations. This review summarizes the current knowledge on the functions of flavonoids in the physiology of plants and their relations with the environment.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25310150 PMCID: PMC6270724 DOI: 10.3390/molecules191016240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Classification of flavonoids.
Figure 2The role of flavonoids in the interactions between nitrogen-fixing bacteria and legume plants. Flavonoids are released by the plant bind to and activate NodD protein, which, in turn, attaches to no-box cassettes in the promoter sequences of nod genes, leading to the production of nod proteins and subsequently nod factors. These molecules bind to the nod factor receptors (NR) localized on the plant cell membrane, starting a cascade of signal transduction. This signal activates various gene expression, leading to root hair deformation, formation of infection thread, flavonoid biosynthesis, cell division and, finally, root nodule formation.
List of flavonoid compounds of anti-pathogenic activities found in plant organisms.
| Plant Organism | Antimicrobial Compound | Pathogen | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| flavonol triglycoside of kaempferide | [ | ||
| kaempferol- | [ | ||
| isoorientin, isovitexin, vitexin | [ | ||
| flavonoids | [ | ||
| catechin, epicatechin, rutin | [ | ||
| Wheat NILs | 5,6-dimethoxyflavone, 2-hydroxyisoflavanone, naringenin, naringenin 7- | [ | |
| naringenin, kaempferol | [ | ||
| chalcones | [ | ||
| flavans | [ | ||
| quercetin | [ | ||
| flavonols | [ | ||
| isoflavonoids | [ | ||
| isoflavone | [ | ||
| quercetin-3- | [ | ||
| isoflavonoid phytoalexin: genistein, daidzein, 2-hydroxygenistein, dalbergioidin, phaseollin, phaseollidin, phaseollin isoflavan, kievitone, coumestrol | [ | ||
| flavonoids | [ | ||
| isoflavone | [ | ||
| glucosylated forms of flavonoids | [ | ||
| naringenin, kaempferol, quercetin, hydroxyquercetin | [ | ||
| kaempferol glucoside | [ | ||
| jaceosidin fisetin hydrate | [ | ||
| flavonoids | [ | ||
| flavonoid glycosides, polymethoxylated flavones | [ |
Figure 3Flavonoids’ interference with PIN and MDR/ABC proteins, as well as with PID, WAK and PDK1 kinases leads to impaired auxin transport.