Holbrook-Smith_2016_Nat.Chem.Biol_12_724

Reference

Title : Small-molecule antagonists of germination of the parasitic plant Striga hermonthica - Holbrook-Smith_2016_Nat.Chem.Biol_12_724
Author(s) : Holbrook-Smith D , Toh S , Tsuchiya Y , McCourt P
Ref : Nat Chemical Biology , 12 :724 , 2016
Abstract :

Striga spp. (witchweed) is an obligate parasitic plant that attaches to host roots to deplete them of nutrients. In Sub-Saharan Africa, the most destructive Striga species, Striga hermonthica, parasitizes major food crops affecting two-thirds of the arable land and over 100 million people. One potential weakness in the Striga infection process is the way it senses the presence of a host crop. Striga only germinates in the presence of the plant hormone strigolactone, which exudes from a host root. Hence small molecules that perturb strigolactone signaling may be useful tools for disrupting the Striga lifecycle. Here we developed a chemical screen to suppress strigolactone signaling in the model plant Arabidopsis. One compound, soporidine, specifically inhibited a S. hermonthica strigolactone receptor and inhibited the parasite's germination. This indicates that strigolactone-based screens using Arabidopsis are useful in identifying lead compounds to combat Striga infestations.

PubMedSearch : Holbrook-Smith_2016_Nat.Chem.Biol_12_724
PubMedID: 27428512

Related information

Inhibitor RG6    Soporidine

Citations formats

Holbrook-Smith D, Toh S, Tsuchiya Y, McCourt P (2016)
Small-molecule antagonists of germination of the parasitic plant Striga hermonthica
Nat Chemical Biology 12 :724

Holbrook-Smith D, Toh S, Tsuchiya Y, McCourt P (2016)
Nat Chemical Biology 12 :724