Endophytes Crop Productivity and Protection Volume 2 (Sustainable Development and Biodiversity)

(Tina Meador) #1

9.5 Bioactive Metabolites from Endophytic Fungal Origin


from Different Ecological Niches


Although the discovery of endophytic fungi dates as far back as the early 1900s,


they did not receive much attention until the recent realization of their pharma-


ceutical and ecological significance (Gunatilaka 2006 ). Recent developments of


screening technologies have revealed that endophytic fungi are an outstanding
source of biologically active compounds with promising medicinal and agricultural


applications (Aly et al. 2011 ).


Tropical rainforest ecosystems are the richest ecosystems in the world containing


more than half of the Earth’s biota (Wilson 1988 ). The extreme biological diversity


of tropical rainforests ultimately implies the chemical diversity resulting from the


constant chemical innovations that exist in such ecosystems (Strobel and Daisy


2003 ). In tropical rainforests, the resources are limited due to the high species


diversity, therefore competition among species is high, and the selection pressure is


at its peak (Strobel and Daisy 2003 ). These factors eventually make rainforests a


potentially productive source for the discovery of novel molecular structures and


biologically active metabolites (Redell et al. 2000 ; Strobel and Daisy 2003 ).


Specific endophytes may have evolved within endemic plant species in areas of


high plant endemicity with moist, warm, and geographically isolated climates


(Strobel 2003 ; Strobel and Daisy 2003 ). This has been reported in rainforests of


Venezuela, Central America, monsoonal areas of Australia, golden triangle of


Thailand, Papua New Guinea, Madagascar, and upper Amazon regions


(Mittermeier et al. 1999 ). Novel endophytic fungal taxa and series of new bioactive


compounds have been discovered from each of the above areas (Mittermeier et al.


1999 ).


On the other hand, Strobel ( 2003 ) has stated plants growing in extremely moist


conditions or plants growing in rainforests which have a more or less constant 90–


100% relative humidity are prone to attack by certain extremely pathogenic fungi,
thus specialized defensive mechanisms in such plants are necessary for their sur-


vival. Accordingly, such disease defences may have offered by endophytes asso-


ciated with the plant (Strobel 2003 ). A comparative study using statistical data,


revealed that tropical plant endophytes provide more active natural products and a


larger number of secondary metabolites in comparison to that of temperate plant


endophytes (Bill et al. 2002 ).


The metabolite demethylasterriquinone B-1, L-783,281(1), isolated from an


endophyticPseudomassarisp. collected from an African rainforest tree has acted as


an antidiabetic agent (Strobel et al. 2004 ; Zhang et al. 1999 ). Unlike insulin, this


non-peptide secondary metabolite (L-783,281) does not get ineffective in the


digestive tract and thus can be a lead for an orally ingested drug for diabetes.


Similarly, Ambuic acid(2)is an antifungal agent isolated from a common rainforest


9 Endophytic Fungi: A Remarkable Source... 195

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