Plant diseases cause over 20% annual crop losses worldwide, with rising fungicide resistance and environmental concerns driving urgent demand for sustainable alternatives. Phytochemicals naturally occurring secondary metabolites such as thymol, berberine, and quercetin offer a promising solution due to their broad-spectrum antifungal, antibacterial, and antiviral activities, coupled with low environmental persistence and biodegradability. However, their efficacy is highly dependent on plant species, developmental stage, and environmental factors including temperature, light intensity, soil quality, and nutrient availability, all of which influence biosynthesis and bioactivity. Moreover, extraction methods such as aqueous, ethanol, or organic solvent-based techniques significantly affect phytochemical stability, solubility, and antimicrobial potency, contributing to variability in performance. Despite their potential, challenges related to compositional heterogeneity, phytotoxicity risks, and inconsistent regulatory frameworks have limited widespread agricultural adoption. This review synthesizes recent advances (2015–2025) in phytochemical research for plant disease management, focusing on biosynthesis pathways, extraction optimization, mechanisms of action, and innovative formulation technologies. We highlight how phytochemicals exert dual effects: directly disrupting pathogen membranes, inhibiting viral replication, and interfering with essential enzymes, while also priming plant immune responses through salicylic acid, jasmonic acid, and systemic acquired resistance signaling. Emerging technologies including ultrasound-assisted extraction, supercritical CO2 extraction, and nanoencapsulation enhance yield, stability, and field efficacy, enabling targeted, sustained delivery. Furthermore, breakthroughs in genetic engineering, microbial bioproduction, AI-guided formulation design, and circular economy models such as valorizing agro-waste for extraction are overcoming scalability and standardization barriers. We propose a framework for “smart phytochemical deployment” that integrates precision delivery, resistance management, and systems biology. This review positions phytochemicals not merely as alternatives to synthetic pesticides, but as next-generation tools for resilient, climate-smart, and sustainable agriculture.
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Rani et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a7665fbadf0bb9e87dcbfd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s40538-026-00913-3
Lingareddy Usha Rani
Nishanth Mallappa
T. Anand
Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture
Houston Methodist
Indian Agricultural Research Institute
Tamil Nadu Agricultural University
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