INVESTIGADORES
CASTAGNARO Atilio Pedro
artículos
Título:
Strawberry fatty acyl glycosides enhance disease protection, have antibiotic activity and stimulate plant growth
Autor/es:
GRELLET BOURNONVILLE, CARLOS; FILIPPONE, MARÍA PAULA; DI PETO, PÍA DE LOS ÁNGELES; TREJO, MARÍA FERNANDA; COUTO, ALICIA SUSANA; MAMANÍ DE MARCHESE, ALICIA; DÍAZ RICCI, JUAN CARLOS; WELIN, BJÖRN; CASTAGNARO, ATILIO PEDRO
Revista:
Scientific Reports
Editorial:
Nature Research
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 10
Resumen:
An increasing interest in the development of products of natural origin for crop disease and pest control has emerged in the last decade. Here we introduce a new family of strawberry acyl glycosides (SAGs) formed by a trisaccharide (GalNAc-GalNAc-Glc) and a monounsaturated fatty acid of 6 to 12 carbon atoms linked to the glucose unit. Application of SAGs to Arabidopsis thaliana (hereafter Arabidopsis) plants triggered a transient oxidative burst, callose deposition and defense gene expression, accompanied by increased protection against two phytopathogens, Pseudomonas viridiflava and Botrytis cinerea. SAGs-induced disease protection was also demonstrated in soybean infected with the causal agent of target spot, Corynespora cassiicola. SAGs were shown to exhibit important antimicrobial activity against a wide-range of bacterial and fungal phytopathogens, most probably through membrane destabilization, and the potential use of SAGs as a biofungicide for postharvest disease protection was demonstrated on lemon fruits infected with Penicillium digitatum. Plant growth promotion by application of SAGs was shown by augmented primary root elongation, secondary roots development and increased siliques formation in Arabidopsis, whereas a significant increment in number of seed pods was demonstrated in soybean. Stimulation of radicle development and the induction of an auxin-responsive reporter system (DR5::GUS) in transgenic Arabidopsis plants, suggested that SAGs-stimulated growth at least partly acts through the auxin response pathway. These results indicate that strawberry fatty acid glycosides are promising candidates for the development of environmental-friendly products for disease management in soybean and lemon.