PubMed · 2026-07-03
A new framework called Translational Agricultural Medicine argues that how plants respond to stress, including the compounds they produce, directly shapes the nutritional quality of food and may help prevent human diseases like cancer and metabolic disorders. Getting crop breeding and farming practices to account for human health outcomes is the central proposal.
Stress-induced plant compounds like glucosinolates and phenolics mirror biochemical pathways relevant to human metabolic disease and cancer prevention.
Climate-driven shifts in crop physiology may alter the nutritional and bioactive profiles of staple foods, with direct public health consequences.
Legume proteins are cited as an example where agricultural variables directly influence dietary properties tied to health outcomes.