Issue 22, 2010

Unveiling the phytoalexin biosynthetic puzzle in salt cress: unprecedented incorporation of glucobrassicin into wasalexins A and B

Abstract

Salt cress (Thellungiella salsuginea also known as T. halophila) is a wild cruciferous extremophile highly resistant to salt, drought, and cold. The recent discovery that salt cress produces the phytoalexins wasalexins A and B, and the phytoanticipins 1-methoxyglucobrassicin and 4-methoxyglucobrassicin in relatively higher amounts than other cruciferous species, prompted investigation of their biosynthetic relationships. Toward this end, perdeuterated 1-methoxybrassinin, L-Trp, glucobrassicin, 1-methoxyindolyl-3-acetaldoxime, brassinin, and methionine, as well as the corresponding natural abundance compounds, were administered to salt cress plants previously irradiated with UV-light (λmax 254 nm). Remarkably, administration of hexadeuterated glucobrassicin led to incorporation of several deuterium atoms into wasalexins A and B, 1-methoxyglucobrassicin and 4-methoxyglucobrassicin. This unprecedented discovery suggests that glucobrassicin is a biosynthetic precursor of wasalexins and methoxylated glucosinolates in salt cress.

Graphical abstract: Unveiling the phytoalexin biosynthetic puzzle in salt cress: unprecedented incorporation of glucobrassicin into wasalexins A and B

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 Jun 2010
Accepted
18 Aug 2010
First published
17 Sep 2010

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2010,8, 5150-5158

Unveiling the phytoalexin biosynthetic puzzle in salt cress: unprecedented incorporation of glucobrassicin into wasalexins A and B

M. S. C. Pedras, E. E. Yaya and S. Hossain, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2010, 8, 5150 DOI: 10.1039/C0OB00265H

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