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Irritant and Defense Substances of Higher Plants—A Chemical Herbarium
Author(s) -
Schildknecht Hermann
Publication year - 1981
Publication title -
angewandte chemie international edition in english
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.831
H-Index - 550
eISSN - 1521-3773
pISSN - 0570-0833
DOI - 10.1002/anie.198101641
Subject(s) - organism , context (archaeology) , chemical defense , documentation , irritation , biology , chemistry , biochemical engineering , botany , herbivore , engineering , computer science , genetics , paleontology , immunology , programming language
All living organisms respond to stimulation, reacting more or less sensitively and more or less typically to a wide variety of energy forms such as light, heat, gravity, pressure (sound), electricity—and chemicals. A living organism responds to an irritation by releasing irritants which—as potential defense substances—are directed against the attacker or assist the organism endogenously in an intrinsic defense reaction. Often very small energy changes perceived by the plant are enough to induce a series of physiological processes ultimately manifested as a glandular reaction or even movement. The irritants involved in these processes act on membranes as defense substances in the presence of an attacker, or as endogenous factors in their own cellular environment. These chemically very diverse low‐molecular active principles have been found in many parts of plants and in many plant families. For this reason alone we could speak of a chemical herbarium, but the case is even stronger because, in this botanical documentation, not only the individual chemicals are considered in context but also whole sets of interacting substances, since it is only in these sets that optimal activity is found (just as one considers not only the parts of a plant but also the whole plant in botany).

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