International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Dec 2018)

Induced Resistance Mechanism of Novel Curcumin Analogs Bearing a Quinazoline Moiety to Plant Virus

  • Limin Yin,
  • Xiuhai Gan,
  • Jing Shi,
  • Ningning Zan,
  • Awei Zhang,
  • Xiaoli Ren,
  • Miao Li,
  • Dandan Xie,
  • Deyu Hu,
  • Baoan Song

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms19124065
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 12
p. 4065

Abstract

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Plant immune activators can protect crops from plant virus pathogens by activating intrinsic immune mechanisms in plants and are widely used in agricultural production. In our previous work, we found that curcumin analogs exhibit excellent biological activity against plant viruses, especially protective activity. Inspired by these results, the active substructure of pentadienone and quinazoline were spliced to obtain curcumin analogs as potential exogenously induced resistant molecule. Bioassay results showed that compound A13 exhibited excellent protective activity for tobacco to against Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) at 500 μg/mL, with a value of 70.4 ± 2.6% compared with control treatments, which was better than that of the plant immune activator chitosan oligosaccharide (49.0 ± 5.9%). The protective activity is due to compound A13 inducing tobacco resistance to TMV, which was related to defense-related enzymes, defense-related genes, and photosynthesis. This was confirmed by the up-regulated expression of proteins that mediate stress responses and oxidative phosphorylation.

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