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Secondary metabolite Totally Explained
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Everything about Secondary Metabolites totally explainedSecondary metabolites are organic compounds that are not directly involved in the normal growth, development or reproduction of organisms. Unlike primary metabolites, absence of secondary metabolities results not in immediate death, but in long-term impairment of the organism's survivability/ fecundity or aesthetics, or perhaps in no significant change at all. Secondary metabolites are often restricted to a narrow set of species within a phylogenetic group.
The function or importance of these compounds to the organism is usually of an ecological nature as they're used as defenses against predators, parasites and diseases, for interspecies competition, and to facilitate the reproductive processes (coloring agents, attractive smells, etc). Since these compounds are usually restricted to a much more limited group of organisms, they've long been of prime importance in taxonomic research.
Secondary metabolites may be likely candidates for drug or other technological development directly, or as an inspiration for unnatural products. This will concern secondary metabolites in plants, bacteria, fungi and many marine organisms (sponges, tunicates, corals, snails). In some cases, higher organisms will host a microorganism which is the actual producer of the product in question, as part of a symbiotic relationship. Most of the secondary metabolites of interest to man fit into the following categories, and some fall into more than one:
These categories are broad categories which classify secondary metabolites based on their biosynthetic origin. Since secondary metabolites are often created by modified primary metabolite synthases, or "borrow" substrates of primary metabolite origin, these categories shouldn't be interpreted as saying that all molecules in the category are secondary metabolites (for example the steroid category), but rather that there are secondary metabolites in these categories.
Small " small molecules"
Big "small molecules", produced by large, modular, "molecular factories".
Polyketides:
Fatty acid synthase products :
Nonribosomal peptides:
Hybrids of the above three:
Non-"small molecules" - DNA, RNA, ribosome, or polysaccharide "classical" biopolymers.
Ribosomal peptides:
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