[en] Nowadays, biopesticides have emerged as a main alternative to conventional agriculture. In this context, plant oxylipins, a vast and diverse family of secondary metabolites originated from polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), appear to be crucial agents in plant defence mechanisms. Actually, it is highly known that plant oxylipins are produced under a wide range of stress conditions. While those molecules are well known to activate several signalling pathways and to induce adaptations in plant exposed to (a)biotic stresses, non-signalling roles of phyto-oxylipins are poorly understood. Among plant oxylipins, the 13-hydroperoxy oxylipins (13-HPO) constitute key intermediate oxylipins (KIOs) as they can be converted into jasmonic acid, OPDA, dn-OPDA or traumatic acid, well-characterized components involved in plant resistance mechanisms. Their presumed functions include direct antimicrobial effect, stimulation of plant defence gene expression, and/or regulation of plant cell death. However, the precise contribution of each of those molecules in plant defence remains unknown.
In this study, 13-HPO properties as direct biocidal agents are investigated. In vitro assays have showed that KIOs can hinder growth of some plant microbial pathogens, with differences between strains and KIOs forms. Further investigation are needed to know if they maintain this power while being exogenously applied on plants, before or after infection.
Afterwards, this study aims to understand the oxylipins action mechanisms and especially their membrane activities. As KIOs are found to be potential biocontrol agents and also to interact with plant plasma membranes, their interactions with plants and pathogens plasma membranes were studied using biomimetic membranes via a complementary in silico informatics and in vitro biophysical approaches.
Finally, in analogy with other amphiphilic molecules (e.g. surfactins), KIOs may act as elicitors. This hypothesis is reinforced by preliminary results showing the production of reactive oxygen species (priming agents of eliciting reaction) when tobacco roots were in presence of KIOs. Further investigation are needed to confirm this property.
Disciplines :
Biochemistry, biophysics & molecular biology
Author, co-author :
Deboever, Estelle ; Université de Liège - ULiège > Département GxABT > Chimie des agro-biosystèmes
Deleu, Magali ; Université de Liège - ULiège > Département GxABT > Chimie des agro-biosystèmes
Fauconnier, Marie-Laure ; Université de Liège - ULiège > Département GxABT > Chimie des agro-biosystèmes
Other collaborator :
Lins, Laurence ; Université de Liège - ULiège > Département GxABT > Chimie des agro-biosystèmes
Language :
English
Title :
New insight into free-oxylipins roles, a potential for biocontrol agents
Alternative titles :
[en] Nouveauté sur les rôles des oxylipines libres, un potentiel pour les agents de biocontrôle
This website uses cookies to improve user experience. Read more
Save & Close
Accept all
Decline all
Show detailsHide details
Cookie declaration
About cookies
Strictly necessary
Performance
Strictly necessary cookies allow core website functionality such as user login and account management. The website cannot be used properly without strictly necessary cookies.
This cookie is used by Cookie-Script.com service to remember visitor cookie consent preferences. It is necessary for Cookie-Script.com cookie banner to work properly.
Performance cookies are used to see how visitors use the website, eg. analytics cookies. Those cookies cannot be used to directly identify a certain visitor.
Used to store the attribution information, the referrer initially used to visit the website
Cookies are small text files that are placed on your computer by websites that you visit. Websites use cookies to help users navigate efficiently and perform certain functions. Cookies that are required for the website to operate properly are allowed to be set without your permission. All other cookies need to be approved before they can be set in the browser.
You can change your consent to cookie usage at any time on our Privacy Policy page.