2026/7/9
Mansour Ghorbanpour

Mansour Ghorbanpour

Academic rank: Professor
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4790-2701
Education: PhD.
H-Index:
Faculty: Agriculture and Environment
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E-mail: m-ghorbanpour [at] araku.ac.ir
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Research

Title
EXPLORING THE ROLE OF ABIOTIC ELICITORS IN THE BIOSYNTHESIS OF SECONDARY METABOLITES IN PEPPERMINT (Mentha piperita L.)
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
elicitation, essential oil, chemical elicitors, menthol, mint
Year
2026
Journal Acta Sci. Pol. Hortorum Cultus
DOI
Researchers Atefeh Namaki Khameneh ، Ghasem Eghlima ، Mohammad-Ebrahim Ranjbar ، Mansour Ghorbanpour

Abstract

Secondary metabolites are a large group of organic compounds generally biosynthesized by medicinal and aromatic plants, which have a wide range of uses in human life today. Peppermint (Mentha piperita L.) is widely used as a traditional medicinal plant worldwide due to its high content of secondary metabolites, including menthol, limonene, pulegone, rosmarinic acid, cinnamic acid, eriocitrin, narirutin and hesperidin. It has different medicinal and culinary uses, such as food flavoring and treating rheumatoid arthritis pain, sinusitis headache and breathing problems. Given the chemical synthesis of plant secondary metabolites under laboratory conditions is considerably expensive and complicated, some alternative methods have been developed. Applying abiotic elicitors such as UV-radiation, abiotic stresses, and phytohormones during pep permint cultivation is an effective strategy to modify secondary metabolite content and components. There fore, in this review, the most important secondary metabolites of peppermint and their uses are first described, and the abiotic elicitors used to influence the secondary metabolites profile of peppermint and their reaction mechanisms are then explained.