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Characterization and antifungal properties of wheat nonspecific lipid transfer proteins. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored the phylogeny, fatty acid binding, and toxicity of various monocot nonspecific lipid transfer proteins (ns-LTP) in wheat.
  • Nine novel wheat ns-LTP1 clones were identified, showing highly conserved sequences and significant similarity at both nucleotide and protein levels.
  • Analysis revealed two main ns-LTP families and confirmed successful expression of eight ns-LTP in a host organism, with varying degrees of toxicity against different fungal pathogens, linked to changes in fungal membrane integrity rather than lipid-binding activity.

Article Abstract

This study simultaneously considered the phylogeny, fatty acid binding ability, and fungal toxicity of a large number of monocot nonspecific lipid transfer proteins (ns-LTP). Nine novel full-length wheat ns-LTP1 clones, all possessing coding sequences of 348 bp, isolated from abiotic- and biotic-stressed cDNA libraries from aerial tissues, exhibited highly conserved coding regions with 78 to 99 and 71 to 100% identity at the nucleotide and amino acid levels, respectively. Phylogenetic analyses revealed two major ns-LTP families in wheat. Eight wheat ns-LTP genes from different clades were cloned into the expression vector pPICZalpha and transformed into Pichia pastoris. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, Western blotting, and in vitro lipid binding activity assay confirmed that the eight ns-LTP were all successfully expressed and capable of in vitro binding fatty acid molecules. A comparative in vitro study on the toxicity of eight wheat ns-LTP to mycelium growth or spore germination of eight wheat pathogens and three nonwheat pathogens revealed differential toxicities among different ns-LTP. Values indicating 50% inhibition of fungal growth or spore germination of three selected ns-LTP against six fungi ranged from 1 to 7 microM. In vitro lipid-binding activity of ns-LTP was not correlated with their antifungal activity. Using the fluorescent probe SYTOX Green as an indicator of fungal membrane integrity, the in vitro toxicity of wheat ns-LTP was associated with alteration in permeability of fungal membranes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/MPMI-21-3-0346DOI Listing

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