Litcius/Paper detail

The potential therapeutic value of terpenes

Henry Lowe, Amza Ali, Blair Steele, Lorenzo Gordon, Justin Grant

2024INNOSC Theranostics and Pharmacological Sciences10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Terpenes form part of a huge and diverse class of naturally occurring and volatile secondary metabolites produced by many plants, fruits, animals, insects, and other organisms. They are the largest group of naturally occurring metabolites, with over 55,000 types of terpenes produced by plants alone, primarily as essential oils. In humans, they contain significant biological properties such as antifungal, antiviral, antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, antiparasitic, antihyperglycemic, anti-cancer, and analgesic agents. In plants, terpenes also play significant roles in defensive mechanisms against herbivores and invasive plants, disease resistance, chemical signaling and communication between plants, protection against photo-oxidation, plant-environment mediation, thermo-protection, and the attraction of pollinators. In addition, terpenes are responsible for a plant’s scent, taste, flavor, and pigmentation, leading to their commercial use as fragrances and food dyes. Terpenes are also used in the production of synthetic polymers, natural rubbers (polyisoprene), organic solvents, varnishes, inks, adhesives, cleaning products, biofuels, pesticides, and food and drink products. For these reasons, terpenes have significant value in modern medicine, pharmacy, nutraceuticals, cosmetics, and other industries.

Topics & Concepts

TerpeneAntimicrobialCosmeticsNutraceuticalAntiparasiticChemistryAntifungalBiologyTraditional medicineFood scienceOrganic chemistryMedicineMicrobiologyPathologyPlant biochemistry and biosynthesisEssential Oils and Antimicrobial ActivityPlant and animal studies