The complex secondary metabolites in plant-environment interaction and
evolutionary adaptation of tea plant for sustainable green food
production
- Jian Zhao,
- Penghui Li,
- Xiao-Chun Wan
Abstract
While most people know the rich flavors, pleasant tastes, and numerous
health benefits of teas, various contaminations with chemicals for
controling weeds, insects, microbial pathogens and other tea garden
managements, become increasingly concerned on tea products. Meanwhile
most of tea secondary metabolites concentrated in tea leaves, such as
catechins, affeine, volatiles, saponins, and theanine, are synthesized
primarily for defenses against both biotic and abiotic stresses.
However, few use of these plant natural products for weed, pest and
disease control by tea producers disabled the sustainable and safty
production of teas. This is partly because the lacking of detailed
information about biosynthesis, regulation, defense mechanism of these
tea specialized metabolites due to chemical diversity and metabolic
complexicity. An in-depth understanding of the biosynthesis, regulation,
and defensive mechanisms of these specialized metabolites would greatly
facilitate the employment of the innate immunity of tea plants to
minimaize the use of other health-harmful chemicals. The review
highlights relevant contexts of metabolic genomics of tea plants, so as
to guaide future research on genetic improvement of tea plants for both
safety and nutritional quality of teas.