| Literature DB >> 30486426 |
Weixuan Wang1, Yuying Li2, Pengqin Dang3, Siji Zhao4, Daowan Lai5, Ligang Zhou6.
Abstract
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) is an important food crop providing energy and nutrients for more than half of the world population. It produces vast amounts of secondary metabolites. At least 276 secondary metabolites from rice have been identified in the past 50 years. They mainly include phenolic acids, flavonoids, terpenoids, steroids, alkaloids, and their derivatives. These metabolites exhibit many physiological functions, such as regulatory effects on rice growth and development, disease-resistance promotion, anti-insect activity, and allelopathic effects, as well as various kinds of biological activities such as antimicrobial, antioxidant, cytotoxic, and anti-inflammatory properties. This review focuses on our knowledge of the structures, biological functions and activities, biosynthesis, and metabolic regulation of rice secondary metabolites. Some considerations about cheminformatics, metabolomics, genetic transformation, production, and applications related to the secondary metabolites from rice are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Oryza sativa; biological functions; biosynthesis; elicitation; metabolic regulation; phytoalexins; rice; secondary metabolites
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30486426 PMCID: PMC6320963 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23123098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Phenolic acids and their biological activities.
| Name | Rice Part Used for Isolation | Biological Activity and Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Husk and bran | - | [ | |
| Bran | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| Root exudate | Allelopathic effect | [ | |
| Husk and bran | - | [ | |
| Bran | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| Husk and bran | - | [ | |
| Husk and bran | - | [ | |
| 2-Hydroxy 5-[(3 | Brans of purple rice | Inhibitory activity on tunicamycin-induced retinal damage | [ |
| Caffeic acid ( | Endosperm and bran/embryo of | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Root exudate | Allelopathic effect | [ | |
| Husk and bran | - | [ | |
| Methyl caffeate ( | Bran | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Caffeoyl quinic acid methyl ester ( | Grains of brown rice | - | [ |
| Protocatechuic acid ( | Endosperm and bran/embryo of | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Chlorogenic acid ( | Endosperm and bran/embryo of | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Cinnamic acid ( | Husk and bran | - | [ |
| Endosperm and bran/embryo of | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| Root exudate | Allelopathic effect | [ | |
| Grains | - | [ | |
| Grains | - | [ | |
| Grains of brown rice | - | [ | |
| 3- | Grains of brown rice | - | [ |
| Leaves | - | [ | |
| Endosperm and bran/embryo of | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| Grains | - | [ | |
| Black rice bran | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| Husk and bran | - | [ | |
| Bran | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| Bran | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| Bran | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| Bran | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| 1,3- | Leaves | - | [ |
| 1- | Leaves | - | [ |
| 3- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Gallic acid ( | Endosperm and bran/embryo of | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Husk and bran | - | [ | |
| Grains of brown rice | - | [ | |
| Salicylic acid 2- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Sinapic acid ( | Grains | - | [ |
| 1- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Syringaldehyde ( | Grains of brown rice | - | [ |
| Syringic acid ( | Endosperm and bran/embryo of | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Root exudate | Allelopathic effect | [ | |
| Husk and bran | - | [ | |
| Grains of brown rice | - | [ | |
| Vanillic aldehyde ( | Bran | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Vanillic acid ( | Root exudate | Allelopathic effect | [ |
| Husk and bran | - | [ | |
| Grains of brown rice | - | [ |
Figure 1Structures of the phenolic acids isolated from rice.
Flavonoids and their biological activities.
| Name | Rice Part Used for Isolation | Biological Activity and Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flavones | |||
| Apigenin 6- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Chrysoeriol 7- | Grains of brown rice | - | [ |
| Chrysoeriol 6- | Leaves | - | [ |
| 5,7,4′-Trihydroxy-3′,5′-dimethoxyflavone ( | Leaves | Allelopathic activity; antifungal activity | [ |
| Seedlings | Allelopathic activity | [ | |
| 5,4′-Dihydroxy-3′,5′-dimethoxy-7- | Seedlings | - | [ |
| 7,4′-Dihydroxy-3′,5′-dimethoxy-5- | Seedlings | - | [ |
| Isoscoparin 2- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Isoscoparin 2″- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Isovitexin 2″- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Isovitexin 2″- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Isoorientin 7,3′-dimethyl ether ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| luteolin 6- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Schaftoside ( | Leaves | Antifeedant activity | [ |
| Isoschaftoside ( | Leaves | Antifeedant activity | [ |
| Swertisin ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin ( | Bran | DPPH radical scavenging activity | [ |
| Tricin 7- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 5- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 7- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 7- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 7- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 7- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 7- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 4′- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 4′- | Bran | DPPH radical scavenging activity | [ |
| Bran | Cytotoxicity and apoptosis induction in multiple tumor cells | [ | |
| Tricin 4′- | Bran | DPPH radical scavenging activity | [ |
| Bran | Cytotoxicity and apoptosis induction in multiple tumor cells | [ | |
| Tricin 4′- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 4′- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 4′- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 4′- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 4′- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 4′- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tricin 7- | Grains of brown rice | - | [ |
| Flavonols | |||
| Brassicin ( | Grains of transgenic | Radical scavenging activity | [ |
| Brassicin-4′- | Grains of transgenic | Radical scavenging activity | [ |
| Isorhamnetin-4′- | Grains of transgenic | Radical scavenging activity | [ |
| Isorhamnetin-7- | Grains of transgenic | Radical scavenging activity | [ |
| Kaempferol ( | Husk and bran | - | [ |
| Myricetin ( | Rice flour | - | [ |
| Quercetin ( | Rice flour | - | [ |
| Quercetin 3- | Rice flour | - | [ |
| Quercetin 3- | Rice flour | - | [ |
| Qucertin 3-O-rutinoside = Rutin ( | Rice flour | - | [ |
| Syringetin 3- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Syringetin 3- | Leaves | - | [ |
| Flavanones | |||
| Hesperidin ( | Rice flour | - | [ |
| Naringenin ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| - | Antifungal activity | [ | |
| Rice flour | - | [ | |
| Rice fungal pathogen | - | [ | |
| Naringenin 7- | Rice fungal pathogen | - | [ |
| Sakuranetin ( | Leaves | Antifungal activity | [ |
| Leaves | Antibacterial and antifungal activities | [ | |
| Leaves | Anti- | [ | |
| - | Antileishmanial and antitrypanosomal activities | [ | |
| - | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| - | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |
| - | Anti-mutagenic activity | [ | |
| - | Induction of adipogenesis in 3T3-L1 cells | [ | |
| - | Induction of melanogenesis in B16BL6 melanoma cells | [ | |
| Sakuranetin 4′- | Rice fungal pathogen | - | [ |
| Sternbin ( | Rice fungal pathogen | - | [ |
| Flavanonols | |||
| 3′- | Grains of transgenic | Radical scavenging activity | [ |
| 3′- | Grains of transgenic | Radical scavenging activity | [ |
| 3′- | Grains of transgenic | Radical scavenging activity | [ |
| 3′- | Grains of transgenic | Radical scavenging activity | [ |
| Flavanols | |||
| Catechin ( | Rice flour | - | [ |
| Epicatechin ( | Rice flour | - | [ |
| Anthocyanins | |||
| Cyanidin ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Black rice kernels | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| Cyanidin 3- | Bran | - | [ |
| - | Inhibitory activity on tunicamycin-induced retinal damage | [ | |
| Cyanidin 3- | Bran | - | [ |
| Inhibitory activity on tunicamycin-induced retinal damage | [ | ||
| Cyanidin 3- | Kernels | - | [ |
| Cyanidin 3- | Black rice kernels | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Cyanidin 3,5- | Kernels | - | [ |
| Delphinidin ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Malvidin ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Pelargonidin ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Pelargonidin 3,5- | Pigmented rice | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Peonidin ( | Black rice kernels | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Peonidin 3- | Bran | - | [ |
| - | Inhibitory activity on tunicamycin-induced retinal damage | [ | |
| Black rice kernels | Antioxidant activity | [ |
Figure 2Structures of the flavonoids isolated from rice.
Monoterpenoids and their biological activities.
| Name | Rice Part Used for Isolation | Biological Activity and Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Camphene ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Camphor ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Carveol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| 1,4-Cineol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Fenchyl acetate ( | Bran | - | [ |
| ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| Bran | - | [ | |
| Seedlings | Antibacterial activity on | [ | |
| Linalool ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| Leaves | Resistance induction to | [ | |
| Bran | - | [ | |
| Bran | - | [ | |
| Myrcene ( | Seedlings | - | [ |
| Bran | - | [ | |
| Bran | - | [ | |
| α-Pinene ( | Seedlings | - | [ |
| β-Pinene ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Sabinene ( | Seedlings | - | [ |
| Bran | - | [ | |
| α-Terpinene ( | Seedlings | - | [ |
| γ-Terpinene ( | Leaves | Antibacterial activity on | [ |
| Terpinen-4-ol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| α-Thujene ( | Seedlings | - | [ |
Figure 3Structures of the monoterpenoids identified in rice.
Sesquiterpenoids and their biological activities and functions.
| Name | Rice Part Used for Isolation | Biological Activity and Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abscisic acid ( | Whole rice plant | Regulation of growth and development | [ |
| ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| β-Bisabolene ( | Bran | - | [ |
| ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| α-Cadinene ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| β-Caryophyllene ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| Bran | - | [ | |
| α-Copaene ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| Bran | - | [ | |
| Seedlings | - | [ | |
| α-Curcumene ( | Leaves | [ | |
| γ-Curcumene ( | Leaves | [ | |
| Cyclosativene ( | Seedlings | - | [ |
| α-Elemene ( | Bran | - | [ |
| β-Elemene ( | Seedlings | - | [ |
| ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| Germacrene D ( | Leaves | [ | |
| α-Gurjunene ( | Bran | - | [ |
| β-Gurjunene ( | Leaves | [ | |
| α-Humulene ( | Leaves | [ | |
| Italicene ( | Leaves | [ | |
| γ-Muurolene ( | Leaves | [ | |
| ( | Leaves | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| 7- | Bran | - | [ |
| Valencene ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| Viridiflorene ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| α-Ylangene ( | Bran | - | [ |
| α-Zingiberene ( | Leaves | - | [ |
Figure 4Structures of the sesquiterpenoids isolated from rice.
Diterpenoids and their biological activities.
| Name | Rice Part Used for Isolation | Biological Activity and Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phytohormone gibberellins | |||
| Gibberellin A1 ( | Whole plant | Growth-promoting activity | [ |
| Gibberellin A4 ( | Whole plant | Growth-promoting activity | [ |
| Gibberellin A19 ( | Whole plant | Growth-promoting activity | [ |
| Pimaradiene-type diterpenoids | |||
| Momilactone A ( | Coleoptiles | Antifungal activity | [ |
| Bran | Growth inhibitory activity on rice roots | [ | |
| Bran | Inhibitory activities on seed germination and growth of barnyard grass | [ | |
| Root exudates | Allelopathy effect | [ | |
| Momilactone B ( | Coleoptiles | Antifungal activity | [ |
| Seedlings | Growth inhibitory activity on rice roots | [ | |
| Seedlings | Allelopathic effects | [ | |
| Bran | Inhibitory activities on seed germination and growth of barnyard grass | [ | |
| Root exudates | Allelopathy effect | [ | |
| Momilactone C ( | Bran | Weak growth inhibitory activity | [ |
| Momilactone D ( | Roots | - | [ |
| Momilactone E ( | Roots | - | [ |
| 9β-Pimara-7,15-diene-3β,6β,19-triol ( | Leaves | Weak antifungal activity | [ |
| Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Oryzalexin A ( | Leaves | Inhibitory activity on spore germination and germ tube growth of | [ |
| Roots | - | [ | |
| Oryzalexin B ( | Leaves | Inhibitory activity on spore germination and germ tube growth of | [ |
| Oryzalexin C ( | Leaves | Inhibitory activity on spore germination and germ tube growth of | [ |
| Oryzalexin D( | Leaves | Inhibitory activity on spore germination of | [ |
| Oryzalexin E ( | Leaves | Inhibitory activity on spore germination of | [ |
| Oyzalexin F ( | Leaves | Antimicrobial activity | [ |
| Oryzalic acid A ( | Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ |
| Oryzalic acid B = | Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ |
| Oryzalide A = | Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ |
| Oryzalide B ( | Leaves of a bacterial leaf blight-resistant cultivar | Antibacterial activity | [ |
| Sandaracopimaradien-3-one ( | Roots | - | [ |
| Stemarene-type diterpenoids | |||
| Oryzalexin S ( | Leaves | Antifungal activity | [ |
| Stemar-13-en-2α-ol ( | Leaves | Weak antifungal activity | [ |
| Phytocassane A ( | Leaves infected with | Antifungal activity | [ |
| Phytocassane B ( | Leaves infected with | Antifungal activity | [ |
| Phytocassane C ( | Leaves infected with | Antifungal activity | [ |
| Phytocassane D ( | Leaves infected with | Antifungal activity | [ |
| Phytocassane E ( | Cultured rice cells | Inhibition activity on spore germination and germ tube growth of | [ |
| Phytocassane F ( | Leaves | Antifungal activity | [ |
| Casbene-type diterpenoids | |||
| 5-Deoxo- | Leaves | Antifungal activity | [ |
| 5-Dihydro- | Leaves | Antifungal activity | [ |
| Leaves | Antifungal activity | [ |
Figure 5Structures of the diterpenoids isolated from rice.
Triterpenoids and their biological activities.
| Name | Rice Part Used for Isolation | Biological Activity and Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Citrostadienol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |
| Citrostadienol | Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ |
| Citrostadienol | Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ |
| (24 | Bran | Moderate cytotoxic activity | [ |
| (24 | Bran | Moderate cytotoxic activity | [ |
| Cycloart-23 | Bran | Moderate cytotoxic activity | [ |
| Cycloartenol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Bran | Lowering postpradial hyperglyceimia | [ | |
| Cycloartenol | Seeds | - | [ |
| Cycloartenol | Bran | - | [ |
| Cycloartanol | Bran | - | [ |
| Bran | Moderate cytotoxic activity | [ | |
| 24-Methylene cycloartanol ( | Bran of black non-glutinous rice | Anti-cancer activity | [ |
| Bran | Lowering postpradial hyperglyceimia | [ | |
| 24-Methylene cycloartanol | Bran | - | [ |
| Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |
| 24-Methylene cycloartanol | Bran | - | [ |
| Bran | Moderate cytotoxic activity | [ | |
| Cycloeucalenol ( | Bran of black non-glutinous rice | Anti-cancer activity | [ |
| Cycloeucalenol | Bran | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Cycloeucalenol | Bran | - | [ |
| Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |
| Bran | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| Gramisterol ( | Bran of black non-glutinous rice | Anti-cancer activity | [ |
| Gramisterol | Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ |
| Gramisterol | Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ |
| Lanast-7,9(11)-dien-3α,15α-diol-3α- | Hulls | Herbicidal activity | [ |
| Lupeol ( | Bran of black non-glutinous rice | Anti-cancer activity | [ |
| Lupenone ( | Bran of black non-glutinous rice | Anti-cancer activity | [ |
Figure 6Structures of the triterpenoids isolated from rice.
Steroids and their biological activities.
| Name | Rice Part Used for Isolation | Biological Activity and Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| ∆5-Avenasterol ( | Germinating seeds | - | [ |
| ∆7-Avenasterol ( | Germinating seeds | - | [ |
| Campestanol ( | Germinating seeds | - | [ |
| Campestanol | Bran | - | [ |
| ∆7-Campestenol ( | Germinating seeds | - | [ |
| Campesterol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Seedlings | Drought stress tolerance | [ | |
| Campesterol | Bran | - | [ |
| ∆7-Campesterol | Bran | - | [ |
| Campesterol | Bran | - | [ |
| Cholesterol ( | Germinating seeds | - | [ |
| 24-Methyl cholesterol | Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ |
| 24-Methylene cholesterol | Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ |
| 24-Methylene cholesterol | Bran | - | [ |
| Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |
| 24-Methylene ergosta-5-en-3β-ol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| 24-Methylene ergosta-7-en-3β-ol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Fucosterol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Schleicheol 2 ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Sitostanol ( | Germinating seeds | - | [ |
| Sitosterol = β-Sitosterol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Seedlings | Drought stress tolerance | [ | |
| 7α-Hydroxy sitosterol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| 7β-Hydroxy sitosterol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Sitosterol | Bran | - | [ |
| Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |
| Sitosterol | Bran | - | [ |
| ∆7-Sitosterol | Bran | - | [ |
| Bran (Hulls) | - | [ | |
| Bran (Hulls) | - | [ | |
| Bran (Hulls) | - | [ | |
| Cellotetraosylsitosterol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Cellopentaosylsitosterol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Stigmastanol | Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ |
| Stigmastanol | Bran | [ | |
| Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |
| Stigmastanol-3β- | Hulls | Weak herbicidal activity | [ |
| Stigmastanol-3β- | Hulls | - | [ |
| ∆7-Stigmastenol ( | Germinating seeds | - | [ |
| Stigmasterol ( | Bran | - | [ |
| Seedlings | Drought stress tolerance | [ | |
| Stigmasterol | Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ |
| Stigmasterol | Bran | - | [ |
| Bran | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ |
Figure 7Structures of the steroids isolated from rice.
Alkaloids and their biological activities.
| Name | Rice Part Used for Isolation | Biological Activity and function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leaves | Antimicrobial activity | [ | |
| Leaves | Antimicrobial activity | [ | |
| Kynurenic acid ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| Lycoperodine-1 ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| 2-Acetyl-1-pyrroline ( | Grains | - | [ |
| Leaves | Antimicrobial activity | [ | |
| Leaves | Antimicrobial activity | [ | |
| Leaves | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Leaves | Antimicrobial activity | [ | |
| Leaves | Antimicrobial activity | [ | |
| Leaves | Antimicrobial activity | [ | |
| Leaves | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Whole rice plant | Allelopathic activity; antifungal activity | [ | |
| Leaves | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Leaves | Antimicrobial activity | [ | |
| Leaves | Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Leaves | Antimicrobial activity | [ | |
| Leaves | - | [ | |
| Indole 3-acetic acid ( | Whole rice plant | Regulation on growth and development | [ |
| Serotonin = 5-Hydroxytryptamine ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| Tryptamine ( | Leaves | - | [ |
Figure 8Structures of the alkaloids isolated from rice.
Other metabolites and their biological activities.
| Name | Rice Part Used for Isolation | Biological Activity and Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| ( | Whole phants | Antibacterial and antifungal activities, toxic to rice plants | [ |
| ( | Leaves | - | [ |
| Orizaanthracenol = 1-Methoxyanthracen-2-ol ( | Hulls | Strong inhibitory activity in seed germination of radish | [ |
| 1-Hydroxy-7-((2S,3R,4R,5S)-2″,3″,4″-trihydroxy-5″-(hydroxymethyl)tetrahydro-2H-pyran-1-yloxy)anthracen-2-yl 3′,7′-dimethyloctanoate ( | Hulls | Weak inhibitory activity in seed germination of radish | [ |
| 1-Hydroxy-7-((2S,3R,4R,5S)-2″,3″,4″-trihydroxy-5″-(hydroxymethyl)tetrahydro-2H-pyran-1-yloxy)anthracen-2-yl 3′,7′,11′,15′,19′-pentamethyltricosanoate ( | Hulls | Weak inhibitory activity in seed germination of radish | [ |
| (5 | Leaves | Allelopathic activity | [ |
| Seedlings | Allelopathic effects | [ | |
| Whole plants | Inducible anti-insect activity | [ | |
| 1-Phenyl-2-hydroxy-3,7-dimethyl-11-aldehydic-tetradecane-2β- | Hulls | Herbicidal activity | [ |
| α-Tocopherol ( | Bran | Antioxidative, antihypercholesterolemic, anticancer, neuroprotective activities | [ |
| β-Tocopherol ( | Bran | Antioxidative, antihypercholesterolemic, anticancer, neuroprotective activities | [ |
| γ-Tocopherol ( | Bran | Antioxidative, antihypercholesterolemic, anticancer, neuroprotective activities | [ |
| δ-Tocopherol ( | Bran | Antioxidative, antihypercholesterolemic, anticancer, neuroprotective activities | [ |
| α-Tocotrienol ( | Bran | Antioxidative, antihypercholesterolemic, anticancer, neuroprotective activities | [ |
| β-Tocotrienol ( | Bran | Antioxidative, antihypercholesterolemic, anticancer, neuroprotective activities | [ |
| γ-Tocotrienol ( | Bran | Antioxidative, antihypercholesterolemic, anticancer, neuroprotective activities | [ |
| δ-Tocotrienol ( | Bran | Antioxidative, antihypercholesterolemic, anticancer, neuroprotective activities | [ |
Figure 9Structures of the other compounds isolated from rice.
Figure 10Proposed biosynthesis pathway of rice flavonoids [124]. Abbreviations: CHS, chalcone synthase; CHI, chalcone isomerase; F3H, flavanone 3-hydroxylase; FLS, flavonol synthase; F3′H, flavonoid 3′-hydroxylase; DFR, dihydroflavonol 4-reductase; ANS, anthocyanidin synthase; UGT, UDP-glucosyl transferase; LAR, leucoanthocyanidin reductase; ANR, anthocyanidin reductase; FNSII, flavone synthase II; OMT, O-methyltransferase; F2H, flavanone 2-hydroxylase; CGT, C-glucosyl transferase; and DH, dehydratase; OsNOMT, rice naringenin 7-O-methyltransferase.
Figure 11Biosynthesis pathway of sakuranetin in rice [9]. Abbreviations: SAM, S-adenosyl-l-methionine; SAH, S-adenosyl-l-homocysteine.
Figure 12Biosynthesis pathways of the labdane-related diterpenoids in rice [141].
Figure 13Biosynthesis pathways showing ent-sandaracopimaradiene dihydroxylation into oryzalexins D and E [144].
Figure 14General biosynthetic pathway for vitamin E in plants [146]. Abbreviations: T3, tocotrienol; Toc, tocopherol; FOH, farnesol; GGOH, geranylgeraniol; FPP, farnesyl pyrophosphate; GGPP, geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate; PPP, phytyl pyrophosphate; HGA, homogentisic acid; MGGBQ, 2-methyl-6-geranylgeranylbenzoquinol; DMGGBQ, 2,3-dimethyl-6-geranylgeranylbenzoquinol; MPBQ, 2-methyl-6-phytylbenzoquinol; DMPBQ, 2,3-dimethyl-6-phytylbenzoquinol. The enzymes HGGT, GGR, VTE2-1,2, T3/Toc methyltransferase (VTE3 and VTE4), T3/Toc cyclase (VTE1), pheophytinase, and phytol kinase (VTE5) are believed to be involved in vitamin E biosynthesis.
Figure 152-Acetyl-1-pyrroline (2AP) biosynthesis pathways in rice [149]. Abbreviations: GABald, γ-aminobutyraldehyde; BAD2, betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase; GABA, γ-aminobutyric acid.
Figure 16Alkaloid biosynthesis pathways in rice [147]. Abbreviations: AS, anthranilate synthase; TDC, tryptophan decarboxylase; POX, peroxidase.