Bitter and sweet make tomato hard to (b)eat.

New Phytol

Laboratory of Phytopathology, Wageningen University, Wageningen, 6708 PB, the Netherlands.

Published: April 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • α-tomatine is a glycoalkaloid found in tomatoes that has antimicrobial properties and deters herbivorous insects, accumulating in high levels in vegetative tissues.
  • Recent research has uncovered the biosynthetic pathway of α-tomatine and its mechanism of action, which involves disrupting microbial membranes by interacting with sterols, while also examining how tomato plants protect themselves from its toxicity.
  • Studies indicate that the toxicity of α-tomatine can be influenced by external factors like pH and cellular location, and that its breakdown products can affect plant immune responses, highlighting a complex interaction between plants and pathogens.

Article Abstract

The glycoalkaloid saponin α-tomatine is a tomato-specific secondary metabolite that accumulates to millimolar levels in vegetative tissues and has antimicrobial and antinutritional activity that kills microbial pathogens and deters herbivorous insects. We describe recent insights into the biosynthetic pathway of α-tomatine synthesis and its regulation. We discuss the mode of action of α-tomatine by physically interacting with sterols, thereby disrupting membranes, and how tomato protects itself from its toxic action. Tomato pathogenic microbes can enzymatically hydrolyze, and thereby inactivate, α-tomatine using either of three distinct types of glycosyl hydrolases. We also describe findings that extend well beyond the simple concept of plants producing toxins and pathogens inactivating them. There are reports that toxicity of α-tomatine is modulated by external pH, that α-tomatine can trigger programmed cell death in fungi, that cellular localization matters for the impact of α-tomatine on invading microbes, and that α-tomatine breakdown products generated by microbial hydrolytic enzymes can modulate plant immune responses. Finally, we address a number of outstanding questions that deserve attention in the future.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8126962PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.17104DOI Listing

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