Mutualistic associations between host plants and their particular
endosymbionts were found to confer a variety of benefits to both
partners, such as, the production of bioactive secondary metabolites by
the microbial partner which is involved in host plant protection against
insects and parasites thereby representing an acquired chemical defense
mechanism of the host. However, Talaromyces wortmannii which is used as
endophytic microorganism represent not only a vast reservoir of novel
natural products involved in chemical ecology but offer also
opportunities for exploitation in medicine as a new antibiotic. At the
end, a comprehensive overview and a future prospect on enhancing the
production of secondary metabolites compounds and inducing silent
biosynthetic pathways within the investigated fungi were explained. This
can be achieved by adding epigenetic modifier compounds, co-cultivation
between endophytic fungi or/and with bacteria as well as utilizing
different diets.