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Compartmentation in Aromatic Metabolism; F. Hrazdina.
Immunolocalization of Flavonoid Conjugates and their Enzymes; R.K.
Ibrahim. General Phenylpropanoid Metalbolism; C.J. Douglas, et al.
Molecular Biology of Stress-Induced Phenylpropanoid and
Isoflavonoid Biosynthesis in Alfalfa; R.A. Dixon, et al.
Biosynthesis and Metabolism of Isoflavones and Pterocarpan
Phytoalexins in Chickpea, Soybean, and Phytopathogenic Fungi; W.
Barz, R. Welle. Flavonoid Synthesis in Petunia Hybrida; A.G.M.
Gerats, C. Martin. Flavonoids; D.A. Phillips. Flavonoid Sulfation;
L. Varin. Synthesis and Base-Catalyzed Transformations of
Proanthocyanidins; D. Ferreira, et al. Enzymatic Synthesis of
Gallotanins and Related Compounds G.G. Gross. Enantioselective
Separations in Phytochemsitry; L.B. Davin, et al. The Phytochemical
Society of North America; S.A. Brown. Index.
Throughout the tropics, vast areas of rainforest and other
biologically diverse lands are being cleared for agricultural or
related uses. Rainforests, the most dramatic example of tropical
habitat destrucLion, are estimated to be disappearing at the rate
of up to 20.4 million hectares per year world-wide (based on FAO
estimates; see World Resources 1990-1991, Oxford University Press)
more than 2% of the total area covered by tropical rainforests per
year. Destruction of these complex habitats results in the
irreversible loss of both plant and animal diversity, and
dramatically illustraLes the need to investigate these threatened
species for potentially useful constituents-especially the
identification and characterization of novel biologically-active
phytochemicals with pharmacologiical and/or pesticidal properties.
This volume is based on papers presented by invited speakers at an
international symposium entitled "Phytochemical POlential of
Tropical Plants: held in conjunction with the second joint meeting
of the Phytochemical nd Societies of Europe and North America, as
well as the 32 annual meeting of the latter society. The meeting
was held at the Deauville Hotel, Miami Beach, Florida, USA from
August 8-12,1992. One hundred and twenty-five participants from
more than 20 countries attended this meeting."
Throughout the tropics, vast areas of rainforest and other
biologically diverse lands are being cleared for agricultural or
related uses. Rainforests, the most dramatic example of tropical
habitat destrucLion, are estimated to be disappearing at the rate
of up to 20.4 million hectares per year world-wide (based on FAO
estimates; see World Resources 1990-1991, Oxford University Press)
more than 2% of the total area covered by tropical rainforests per
year. Destruction of these complex habitats results in the
irreversible loss of both plant and animal diversity, and
dramatically illustraLes the need to investigate these threatened
species for potentially useful constituents-especially the
identification and characterization of novel biologically-active
phytochemicals with pharmacologiical and/or pesticidal properties.
This volume is based on papers presented by invited speakers at an
international symposium entitled "Phytochemical POlential of
Tropical Plants: held in conjunction with the second joint meeting
of the Phytochemical nd Societies of Europe and North America, as
well as the 32 annual meeting of the latter society. The meeting
was held at the Deauville Hotel, Miami Beach, Florida, USA from
August 8-12,1992. One hundred and twenty-five participants from
more than 20 countries attended this meeting."
In this volume of Recent Advances in Phytochmistry you will find a
record of the pioneering attempts of plant biochemists and
molecular biologists to modify the patterns of secondary metabolism
in plants, as presented at the 33rd annual meeting of the
Phytochemical Society of North America, in Asilomar, California, on
June 27 -July I, 1993. The studies described here represent a
marriage of the newest of technologies with one of the oldest human
activities, exploitation of plant chemistry. They also represent
the beginning of a new era of phytochemical research, an era that
will undoubtedly begin to provide answers to some of the
long-standing questions that have absorbed plant biochemists for
the past century. There is, for instance, a common deflating
experience to which every worker in the area of plant secondary
metabolism can probably relate. After hearing about the latest
research findings regarding some aspect of remarkable compound "X",
someone in the audience finally directs the inevitable question at
the hapless speaker. "Tell me, is anything known as to the
biological role of compound "X" in the plant?" The answer, in most
cases, must be "essentially nothing"! This is a frustrating
scenario for both the speaker and the audience, since the very fact
that a complex biosynthetic pathway remains encoded in a plant
genome points to an associated selective advantage. The problem is
that establishing the nature and scale of that advantage is a very
complex task.
This volume contains reviews which are based on a symposium, given
th at the 30 meeting of The Phytochemical Society of North America,
held at Laval University in Quebec City, Canada on August 11-15,
1990. During the past two decades, there have been major new
developments in methods which can be applied toward the isolation,
separation and structure determination of complex natural products.
Therefore, the topic of this symposium, "Modem Phytochemical
Methods," is a very timely one. The organizers of the symposium
recognized that it would not be possible to cover in detail all new
advances in phytochemical methodology. It was therefore decided to
emphasize general reviews on recent developments of major
separation techniques such as high performance liquid
chromatography as well as supercritical fluid chromato graphy. In
addition, advances in commonly used structure determination
methods, mainly NMR and MS, are reviewed. Other topics include
methodo logies of micro-sampling for isolation and analysis of
trichome constituents as well as recent breakthroughs on
biosynthetic studies of monoterpenes using "enriched" basal cells
of trichomes. The volume concludes with a review of quantitative
structure-activity relationship (QSAR) studies of biologically
active natural products. In Chapter I, K. Hostettmann and his
colleagues give a general review of recent developments in the
separation of natural products with major emphasis on preparative
separations of biologically active plant constituents. The authors
present a comparison of droplet countercurrent chromatography
(OCCC) with the highly rapid and more versatile centrifugal
partition chromatography (CPC)."
This volume contains reviews presented at the 31 st annual meeting
of the Phytochemical Society of North America, held at Colorado
State University in Fort Collins, Colorado on June 22-26, 1991.
This symposium, entitled Phenolic Metabolism in Plants, celebrated
the origin of this society as the Plant Phenolics Group of North
America; the first symposium, entitled Biochemistry of Plant
Phenolic Substances, was also held at Fort Collins from August 31
to September 1, 1961. A brief history of the Society is presented
in Chapter 12 by Stewart Brown, one of the original founders of the
Society. We dedicate this volume to Hans Grisebach, 1926-1990,
Professor of Biochemistry at the Biologisches Institut II,
Freiburg, Germany, where he headed for many years a laboratory
responsible for major advances in the area of phenolic metabolism;
this will be self evident from the numerous bibliographical
references cited in the literature for papers by his Freiburg group
from about 1958 until now, and subsequently by former students and
colla borators. His impact on the data reviewed in this volume will
testify to this.
This series of lectures was delivered at the 29th meeting of the
Phytochemical Society of North America, held at the University of
British Columbia in Vancouver, B. C. , Canada on June 16th-20th,
1989. Topics concerning terpenoids, consisting of isoprene units,
are now so numerous that a judicious selection for a relatively
limited symposium was difficult. We were able to assemble, however,
a potpourri of reviews on topical areas of terpenoid chemistry,
biochemistry and biology, by scientists who are making exciting
contributions and whose work points the way to significant future
research. Because of the importance of terpenoids in the life of
plants, and indeed in all living organisms, a periodical review of
the mevalonic acid pathway and of the subsequent biochemical events
leading to the biosynthesis of isoprenoids needs no justification.
Life, as we know it, would not be possible without the ability of
living organisms to employ this metabolic sequence which proceeds
from condensations of three molecules of acetyl-CoA and terminates
with the elaboration of the terpenoid precursors, isopentenyl
pyrophosphate and dimethylallyl pyrophosphate. In addition to
producing obviously essential compounds that are partially or
completely of isoprenoid origin (Fig. 1), such as hormones,
photosynthetic pigments, compounds involved in electron transport
in respiration and in photosynthesis, oxidative enzymes and
membrane components, plants elaborate thousands of novel
terpenoids, many of which do not as yet have identifiable
physiological, biochemical or even ecological roles, e. g. the
cardenolides, ecdysones or saponins.
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