Effect of Soil-Applied Metabolic Modulators on the Accumulation of Specialized Metabolites in Chelidonium majus L
Maria Stasińska-Jakubas, Sławomir Dresler, Maciej Strzemski, Magdalena Wójciak, Katarzyna Rubinowska, Barbara Hawrylak-Nowak

TL;DR
This study explores how soil-applied substances affect the production of valuable compounds in a medicinal plant, finding that selenium and salicylic acid are most effective.
Contribution
The study evaluates the in vivo effects of soil-applied metabolic modulators on secondary metabolite accumulation in Chelidonium majus L.
Findings
Selenium and salicylic acid treatments significantly increased protopine, berberine, and allocryptopine levels.
Chitosan lactate had a weaker effect on alkaloid accumulation compared to selenium and salicylic acid.
Elicitor treatments increased antioxidant activity and total phenolic compounds without affecting shoot biomass.
Abstract
Various metabolic modulators have been widely used in recent years to increase the accumulation of desired secondary metabolites in medicinal plants, although most studies to date have focused on in vitro systems. Although simpler and cheaper, their potential application in vivo is still limited. Therefore, the aim of this study was to compare the effect of three chemically different elicitors (150 mg/L chitosan lactate—ChL; 10 mg/L selenium as selenite—Se; 100 mg/L salicylic acid—SA) applied to the soil substrate on some aspects of the secondary metabolism and physiological responses of Chelidonium majus L. Using HPLC-DAD, six isoquinoline alkaloids were identified and quantified in shoot extracts. LC-ESI-TOF-MS analysis confirmed the molecular identity of all target alkaloids, supporting the identification. The strongest stimulatory effect on the accumulation of protopine, berberine,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBerberine and alkaloids research · Botanical Research and Chemistry · Chemical synthesis and alkaloids
