Abstract

In the quest for novel medications, researchers have kept on studying nature to unearth beneficial plant species with medicinal qualities that may cure various diseases and disorders. These medicinal plants produce different bioactive secondary metabolites with immense therapeutic importance. One such valuable secondary metabolite, reserpine (C33H40N2O9), has been used for centuries to cure various ailments like hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, neurological diseases, breast cancer, and human promyelocytic leukaemia. Rauvolfia spp. (family Apocynaceae) is an essential reservoir of this reserpine. The current review thoroughly covers different non-conventional or in vitro-mediated biotechnological methods adopted for pilot-scale as well as large-scale production of reserpine from Rauvolfia spp., including techniques like multiple shoot culture, callus culture, cell suspension culture, precursor feeding, elicitation, synthetic seed production, scale-up via bioreactor, and hairy root culture. This review further analyses the unexplored and cutting-edge biotechnological tools and techniques to alleviate reserpine production. KEY POINTS: • Reserpine, a vital indole alkaloid from Rauvolfia spp., has been used for centuries to cure several ailments. • Overview of biosynthetic pathways and biotechnological applications for enhanced production of reserpine. • Probes the research gaps and proposes novel alternative techniques to meet the pharmaceutical industry's need for reserpine while reducing the over-exploitation of natural resources.

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