Some people think that giving their houseplants an occasional talking-to is a good thing. But how about a little shock treatment?

Researchers at the University of Arizona and the Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation in Oklahoma report that a small electric current applied to certain plants can stimulate the biosynthesis of chemicals with antifungal and other properties, without harming the plants. The finding, published in the journal Biotechnology Progress, suggests a new route to producing compounds with potential uses in research or in production of pesticides or medicines.

Image Credit... Chris Gash

As with animals, plants synthesize higher levels of some chemicals in response to microbial infection. Researchers have tried to stimulate the controlled production of these chemicals using “elicitors”  either biological ones like cells or cell parts, or nonbiological ones like chemicals, ultraviolet light or ultrasound. The problem with most of these approaches is that they either harm the plants or yield compounds that then must be separated from the elicitor.