Abstract
Overexploitation, climate change, and pressure from invasive species are
threatening the diversity of medicinal plants; a few of them are extinct or in the
endangered category. The mass multiplication of some medicinal plants outside their
natural habitat affected the biochemical diversity of the plants, thereby decreasing their
medicinal value. Hence, micropropagation of high-yielding, elite genotypes was
preferred over time to conserve the species and meet the pharmaceutical needs.
Although micropropagation was promising, the diversity and quantity of bioactive
compounds of the in vitro plants were not comparable to those of their counterparts in
nature. The in vitro plants, challenged with a plethora of biotic and abiotic stresses,
were poorly acclimatized, with abject survival. During the last few decades, the role of
endophytes with their mechanisms in enhancing growth, development, and stress
tolerance has been proven among field-grown plants. In consequence, the role of
endophytes in micropropagation is gaining prominence to address the vulnerability,
acclimatization, and enhanced bioactive compounds of tissue culture plants. This
approach of the use of competent endophytes is known as biotization. This chapter
brings together the current status, possibilities, and limitations of the most promising
biotization of medicinal plants. Biotization of endophytes in micropropagation is a
potential tool for the production of medicinal plants with enriched bioactive
compounds with improved therapeutic effects.