Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.48441/4427.1327
Publisher DOI: 10.1016/j.phytochem.2024.114004
Title: Essentials in the acquisition, interpretation, and reporting of plant metabolite profiles
Language: English
Authors: Çiçek, Serhat S. 
Mangoni, Alfonso 
Hanschen, Franziska S. 
Agerbirk, Niels 
Zidorn, Christian 
Keywords: Plant metabolite profiling; Mass spectrometry; NMR; Misidentification; Transparency; Standards; References; Interpretation; Confidence levels; Chemophenetics; Chemosystematics; Chemotaxonomy
Issue Date: 14-Feb-2024
Publisher: Elsevier Science
Journal or Series Name: Phytochemistry 
Volume: 220
Abstract: 
Plant metabolite profiling reveals the diversity of secondary or specialized metabolites in the plant kingdom with its hundreds of thousands of species. Specialized plant metabolites constitute a vast class of chemicals posing significant challenges in analytical chemistry. In order to be of maximum scientific relevance, reports dealing with these compounds and their source species must be transparent, make use of standards and reference materials, and be based on correctly and traceably identified plant material. Essential aspects in qualitative plant metabolite profiling include: (i) critical review of previous literature and a reasoned sampling strategy; (ii) transparent plant sampling with wild material documented by vouchers in public herbaria and, optimally, seed banks; (iii) if possible, inclusion of generally available reference plant material; (iv) transparent, documented state-of-the art chemical analysis, ideally including chemical reference standards; (v) testing for artefacts during preparative extraction and isolation, using gentle analytical methods; (vi) careful chemical data interpretation, avoiding over- and misinterpretation and taking into account phytochemical complexity when assigning identification confidence levels, and (vii) taking all previous scientific knowledge into account in reporting the scientific data. From the current stage of the phytochemical literature, selected comments and suggestions are given. In the past, proposed revisions of botanical taxonomy were sometimes based on metabolite profiles, but this approach (“chemosystematics” or “chemotaxonomy”) is outdated due to the advent of DNA sequence-based phylogenies. In contrast, systematic comparisons of plant metabolite profiles in a known phylogenetic framework remain relevant. This approach, known as chemophenetics, allows characterizing species and clades based on their array of specialized metabolites, aids in deducing the evolution of biosynthetic pathways and coevolution, and can serve in identifying new sources of rare and economically interesting natural products.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12738/14828
DOI: 10.48441/4427.1327
ISSN: 1873-3700
Review status: This version was peer reviewed (peer review)
Institute: Department Biotechnologie 
Fakultät Life Sciences 
Type: Article
Additional note: Serhat S. Çiçek, Alfonso Mangoni, Franziska S. Hanschen, Niels Agerbirk, Christian Zidorn : Essentials in the acquisition, interpretation, and reporting of plant metabolite profiles. Phytochemistry, Volume 220, 2024, 114004, ISSN 0031-9422, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phytochem.2024.114004 (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0031942224000414).
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