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Food Science

Noah Whiteman digs into the plant toxins we consume

His book Most Delicious Poisonexplores how humans have tapped into plants’ chemical war chests

by Carolyn Wilke, special to C&EN
July 29, 2024 | A version of this story appeared in Volume 102, Issue 23

 

Noah Whiteman holds a display case containing butterflies.
Credit: Elena Zhukova
Evolutionary biologist Noah Whiteman has studied how some insects, including monarch butterflies, collect toxins from the plants they eat to make themselves toxic to predators.

As living chemical factories, plants pump out compounds that people have used for centuries, from the aspirin in willow bark to the isothiocyanates in wasabi. “These things that show up in our food and medicine—none of it evolved for us,” says Noah Whiteman, an evolutionary biologist at the University of California, Berkeley, and author of the new book Most Delicious Poison.

Many of these chemicals evolved as toxins that plants use to battle the animals seeking to eat them. In his book, Whiteman explores the vast landscape of plant toxins that people consume, examining their ecology and tracing their adoption by humans, including Indigenous peoples worldwide. As Whiteman illustrates the interplay of biology, chemistry, and human culture, it becomes apparent that chemists can find insights from the plants and environments that gave rise to the compounds that tickle our taste buds and treat our diseases.

Carolyn Wilke spoke with Whiteman about the chemistry of nature’s poisons and their influence on human culture and genetics. This interview was edited for length and clarity.

Noah Whiteman holds a rhubarb leaf.
Credit: Courtesy of Noah Whiteman
Noah Whiteman grows rhubarb in his poison garden. Rhubarb leaves contain oxalate and alkaloids that make them quite toxic—so don’t eat the leaves, Whiteman cautions.

What are some examples of the plant poisons that lurk in our refrigerators, spice racks, and gardens?

Nicotine and caffeine are two daily-use stimulants, and both are alkaloids that affect our nervous systems. And then a whole set of molecules—that are often phenols, terpenoids, or alkaloids—that are in other spices, ranging from things like mint, which has menthol, to oregano, to thyme, which has things like thymol.

One that is lurking in citrus, and in things in the parsley or dill family, is furanocoumarins. Grapefruit juice has furanocoumarins that interact with our metabolism to detoxify drugs. They target a specific enzyme such that the drug doesn’t get eliminated from our bodies at the rate that has been studied in clinical trials. So those levels can go up [to unsafe levels] over a period of hours or days if you continue to drink grapefruit juice.

Vitals

Hometown: Oakland, California

Current position: Professor of genetics, genomics, evolution and development and director of the Essig Museum of Entomology at the University of California, Berkeley

Education: BA, biology, Saint John’s University (Collegeville, Minnesota), 1998; MSc, Entomology, University of Missouri-Columbia, 2000; PhD, biology, University of Missouri-Saint Louis, 2006

Some plants in Whiteman’s backyard poison garden: Yarrow, which contains matricin; a beautiful lemon that has furanocoumarins; rhubarb that has oxalate and alkaloids in its leaves; belladonna, a nightshade that has atropine in it; and a California pipevine that produces aristolochic acids, which are these potent kidney toxins

Favorite plant: The coast redwood—they’re the tallest plants that ever lived. They are super resilient, and that’s a nice metaphor.

Favorite molecule: Gallotannins—their molecular structures are so beautiful and, in the presence of iron, they can reflect blue light.

What drew you to learn about the chemistry of plants’ toxins and their evolution?

I probably first encountered this idea when my dad showed me that milkweed produces a milky sap. He said, basically, don’t touch or drink that sap—it’s poisonous. But then I saw these zebra-striped monarch caterpillars feeding on these beautiful plants. Later, in my lab, we started studying how insects use plant toxins as defenses of their own, like how the monarchs get cardiac glycosides from the milkweeds.

How do we know that so many key compounds in our foods and spices evolved through an arms race between plants and the pests that prey on them?

These are chemicals that are often bitter, spicy, painful—but also have some molecular function of targeting some animal system, whether the nervous, digestive, or muscular system. These chemicals are costly to make, and they only provide an advantage in the presence of enemies. That’s sort of proof that they are evolved and maintained as defenses primarily.

We share this basic biology with these other organisms; the chemicals often target the same things in us and insects. The thing that’s fascinating is that through human culture, which is coevolving with our genes, we’ve evolved the ability to tap into this reservoir [of natural chemicals in beneficial ways,] as some insects have.

What is an example of how human culture and genetics have evolved with these compounds?

Favism is a hereditary disorder caused by a mutation in the G6PD gene. That mutation makes it difficult for red blood cells to control their redox environment [and can cause them to break down]. People with favism get anemia when they eat fava beans, strangely—that’s why it’s called favism.

Fava beans, also called broad beans, contain vicine alkaloids. People who don’t carry mutations that cause favism easily deal with these alkaloids that get into the blood.

But people with favism—the most common hereditary disorder in humans—are more resistant to malaria. It doesn’t seem to be a coincidence. Researchers have looked at where people consume fava beans, which includes Southeast Asia, for example, and they have G6PD mutations. The idea is that these vicine alkaloids cause anemic episodes that remove blood cells that could be infected by malarial parasites from the body.

And then there are plants that are sources of molecules for pharmaceuticals. How have these shown up in our lives? In the book, you talk about the development of the birth control pill.

This professor, Russell Marker at [Pennsylvania State University], isolated the chemical diosgenin from a beautiful plant called trillium at a time when people wanted to synthesize hormones—progesterone, estrogen, testosterone, cortisol, and cortisone. Up to that point, the only way to get them was to isolate them from the animal glands. It was onerous and not sustainable.

But plants make steroid-like molecules, like diosgenin, that have a similar backbone. Marker quit his job to search for sources bigger than trillium plants. He drove to the US Southwest and found plants in the yam family that produced giant tubers. Then he went into Mexico and found bigger ones. Some weighed like 200 lbs [90 kg].

Marker started this company in Mexico City called Syntex, and there, this undergraduate student, Luis Miramontes, synthesized the first semisynthetic progesterone, called norethindrone, one of the molecules that [would come to be] used in the birth control pill. That’s an amazing story, but why would the tubers be making this? We don’t know. Diosgenin is a saponin. [Saponins] may be an insect growth regulator because they’re similar to hormones, but a better hypothesis is that they disrupt the cell membrane, and so they’re toxins to insects.

Noah Whiteman collects flies with a net.
Credit: Nathalie Nagalingum
Noah Whiteman collects plant-munching flies that attack toxic bracken fern.

What can chemists—for instance, those working in the field of natural products research—learn from evolutionary biologists?

One of the things that chemists can learn is to step back and ask themselves why these chemicals evolved. That can provide insight into the function of these things—the ultimate purpose that they serve for the organism that is making them.

The full story is the life cycle of that molecule—how it’s made, where the plant puts it in its cells or tissues, what happens when an animal eats it. Does it matter if it’s a caterpillar, deer, or human? Does the pH of the gut matter? If you don’t have information like that, you’ll miss a dimension to the bioactivity of the molecule.

Carolyn Wilke is a freelance writer based in Chicago who covers chemistry, materials, and the natural world. A version of this story first appeared in ACS Central Science: cenm.ag/noahwhiteman.

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