Biosynthesis of Plant Volatiles: Nature's Diversity and Ingenuity
Salk Institute for Biological Studies · Howard Hughes Medical Institute · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Plant volatiles (PVs) are lipophilic molecules with high vapor pressure that serve various ecological roles. The synthesis of PVs involves the removal of hydrophilic moieties and oxidation/hydroxylation, reduction, methylation, and acylation reactions. Some PV biosynthetic enzymes produce multiple products from a single substrate or act on multiple substrates. Genes for PV biosynthesis evolve by duplication of genes that direct other aspects of plant metabolism; these duplicated genes then diverge from each other over time. Changes in the preferred substrate or resultant product of PV enzymes may occur through minimal changes of critical residues. Convergent evolution is often responsible for the ability of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 15.67
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 45
Authors
3- EPEran PicherskyCorresponding
Salk Institute for Biological Studies, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Purdue University West Lafayette, University of Michigan
- JPJoseph P. Noel
Salk Institute for Biological Studies, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Purdue University West Lafayette, University of Michigan
- NDNatalia Dudareva
Salk Institute for Biological Studies, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Purdue University West Lafayette, University of Michigan
Topics & keywords
- Biosynthesis
- Hydroxylation
- Convergent evolution
- Gene
- Biochemistry
- Enzyme
- Substrate (aquarium)
- Chemistry