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Main Authors: Angeles Flores, Giancarlo, Cusumano, Gaia, Venanzoni, Roberto, Angelini, Paola
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) 2025
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41515049/
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author Angeles Flores, Giancarlo
Cusumano, Gaia
Venanzoni, Roberto
Angelini, Paola
author_facet Angeles Flores, Giancarlo
Cusumano, Gaia
Venanzoni, Roberto
Angelini, Paola
Angeles Flores, Giancarlo
Cusumano, Gaia
Venanzoni, Roberto
Angelini, Paola
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Biodiversity-Driven Natural Products and Bioactive Metabolites. Angeles Flores, Giancarlo Cusumano, Gaia Venanzoni, Roberto Angelini, Paola Natural products represent one of the most diverse and functionally sophisticated groups of bioactive molecules found across plants, fungi, bacteria, and marine organisms. Recent advances in genomics, metabolomics, and chemical ecology have fundamentally redefined how these compounds are generated, regulated, and functionally deployed in nature. Increasing evidence reveals that chemical diversity arises not solely from taxonomic lineage but from ecological pressures, evolutionary innovation, and multi-organism interactions that shape biosynthetic pathways over time. Hybrid metabolic architectures, context-dependent activation of biosynthetic gene clusters, and cross-kingdom metabolic integration collectively portray a biosynthetic landscape far more dynamic and interconnected than previously understood. At the same time, mechanistic studies demonstrate that natural products rarely act through single-target interactions. Instead, they influence redox dynamics, membrane architecture, chromatin accessibility, and intracellular signaling in distributed and synergistic ways that reflect both ecological function and evolutionary design. This review synthesizes emerging insights into the evolutionary drivers, ecological determinants, and mechanistic foundations of natural product diversity, highlighting the central role of silent biosynthetic gene clusters, meta-organismal chemistry, and network-level modes of action. By integrating these perspectives, we outline a conceptual and methodological framework capable of unlocking the vast biosynthetic potential that remains dormant within natural systems. Collectively, these advances reposition natural product research as a deeply integrative discipline at the intersection of molecular biology, ecology, evolution, and chemical innovation.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_41515049
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher Plants (Basel, Switzerland)
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Biodiversity-Driven Natural Products and Bioactive Metabolites.
Angeles Flores, Giancarlo
Cusumano, Gaia
Venanzoni, Roberto
Angelini, Paola
Biodiversity-Driven Natural Products and Bioactive Metabolites. Angeles Flores, Giancarlo Cusumano, Gaia Venanzoni, Roberto Angelini, Paola Natural products represent one of the most diverse and functionally sophisticated groups of bioactive molecules found across plants, fungi, bacteria, and marine organisms. Recent advances in genomics, metabolomics, and chemical ecology have fundamentally redefined how these compounds are generated, regulated, and functionally deployed in nature. Increasing evidence reveals that chemical diversity arises not solely from taxonomic lineage but from ecological pressures, evolutionary innovation, and multi-organism interactions that shape biosynthetic pathways over time. Hybrid metabolic architectures, context-dependent activation of biosynthetic gene clusters, and cross-kingdom metabolic integration collectively portray a biosynthetic landscape far more dynamic and interconnected than previously understood. At the same time, mechanistic studies demonstrate that natural products rarely act through single-target interactions. Instead, they influence redox dynamics, membrane architecture, chromatin accessibility, and intracellular signaling in distributed and synergistic ways that reflect both ecological function and evolutionary design. This review synthesizes emerging insights into the evolutionary drivers, ecological determinants, and mechanistic foundations of natural product diversity, highlighting the central role of silent biosynthetic gene clusters, meta-organismal chemistry, and network-level modes of action. By integrating these perspectives, we outline a conceptual and methodological framework capable of unlocking the vast biosynthetic potential that remains dormant within natural systems. Collectively, these advances reposition natural product research as a deeply integrative discipline at the intersection of molecular biology, ecology, evolution, and chemical innovation.
title Biodiversity-Driven Natural Products and Bioactive Metabolites.
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41515049/