The Natural Functions of Secondary Metabolites
Top Cited Papers
- 1 January 2000
- book chapter
- Published by Springer Nature
- Vol. 69, 1-39
- https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-44964-7_1
Abstract
Secondary metabolites, including antibiotics, are produced in nature and serve survival functions for the organisms producing them. The antibiotics are a heterogeneous group, the functions of some being related to and others being unrelated to their antimicrobial activities. Secondary metabolites serve: (i) as competitive weapons used against other bacteria, fungi, amoebae, plants, insects, and large animals; (ii) as metal transporting agents; (iii) as agents of symbiosis between microbes and plants, nematodes, insects, and higher animals; (iv) as sexual hormones; and (v) as differentiation effectors. Although antibiotics are not obligatory for sporulation, some secondary metabolites (including antibiotics) stimulate spore formation and inhibit or stimulate germination. Formation of secondary metabolites and spores are regulated by similar factors. This similarity could insure secondary metabolite production during sporulation. Thus the secondary metabolite can: (i) slow down germination of spores until a less competitive environment and more favorable conditions for growth exist; (ii) protect the dormant or initiated spore from consumption by amoebae; or (iii) cleanse the immediate environment of competing microorganisms during germination.Keywords
This publication has 222 references indexed in Scilit:
- Natural Products in Drug Discovery and DevelopmentJournal of Natural Products, 1997
- Antibiotic production and biocontrol activity by Bacillus subtilis CL27 and Bacillus pumilus CL45Journal of Applied Bacteriology, 1995
- Antimicrobial properties of secretions from the metapleural glands of Myrmecia gulosa (the Australian bull ant)Journal of Applied Bacteriology, 1992
- Mycosporine-alanine: A self-inhibitor of germination from the conidial mucilage ofColletotrichum graminicolaExperimental Mycology, 1992
- Competitive dominance of antibiotic‐producing marine bacteria in mixed culturesJournal of Applied Bacteriology, 1991
- The Evolutionary Origins of Intercellular Communication and the Maginot Lines of the MindAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1986
- Industrial MicrobiologyScientific American, 1981
- Pamamycin inhibits nucleoside and inorganic phosphate transport in staphylococcus aureusBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1981
- The structure of sireninJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1968
- Cephalosporin C, a New Antibiotic containing Sulphur and D-α-Aminoadipic AcidNature, 1955