About this Research Topic
Plant terpenoids, such as nerolidol, linalool, carotenoids, steroids, and ginsenosides, are important components of food nutrients and/or flavor compounds. These compounds are essential for human health, and some are important therapeutic drugs. Therefore, it is important to study terpenoids in plant-derived foods.
As there are a large variety of plant terpenoids, their synthesis and regulations, structures, functions and isolation methods have not been well studied, and so many aspects need to be further investigated, such as 1) ways to increase the content of beneficial terpenoids, 2) dynamics of terpenoids during food production, processing and preservation, 3) approaches to effectively isolate beneficial terpenoids, 5) their structures and functions and mechanisms in human body, and 6) the structure-function relationship.
This research topic aims to provide new insights for the investigations of plant terpenoids on all aspects. We welcome, but are not limited to, original articles and review papers on the following topics related to Plant Terpenoids:
• Characterization, isolation, purification and structure;
• Synthesis and regulation;
• Biotechnology and processing technology for accumulation of beneficial terpenoids and reducing the harmful terpenoids;
• Dynamics of accumulation and degradation during production, processing and storage;
• Dynamics in utilization: during cooking, and intake, absorption and metabolism in the human body;
• Health function: mechanism in the digestive tract and cells, application in treatments of cancer, chronic disease and others;
• Structure-function relationship.
Keywords: terpenoids, food chemistry, terpenoids synthesis and regulation, structure-function relationship, health care
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.