4.6 Article

A Bifunctional Peptide Conjugate That Controls Infections of Erwinia amylovora in Pear Plants

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26113426

Keywords

fire blight; antimicrobial peptides; plant-defense elicitors; peptide conjugate

Funding

  1. MINECO/FEDER, UE [AGL2015-69876-C2-2-R]
  2. Universitat de Girona [MPCUdG2016/038]
  3. MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE [RTI2018-099410-B-C22]

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The paper describes the design and synthesis of peptide conjugates BP358 and BP359, with BP358 demonstrating strong antimicrobial activity against six plant pathogenic bacteria in vitro, without hemolytic or toxic effects on tobacco leaves. BP358 also induced overexpression of plant defense-related genes and effectively controlled fire blight infections in pear plants.
In this paper, peptide conjugates were designed and synthesized by incorporating the antimicrobial undecapeptide BP16 at the C- or N-terminus of the plant defense elicitor peptide flg15, leading to BP358 and BP359, respectively. The evaluation of their in vitro activity against six plant pathogenic bacteria revealed that BP358 displayed MIC values between 1.6 and 12.5 mu M, being more active than flg15, BP16, BP359, and an equimolar mixture of BP16 and flg15. Moreover, BP358 was neither hemolytic nor toxic to tobacco leaves. BP358 triggered the overexpression of 6 out of the 11 plant defense-related genes tested. Interestingly, BP358 inhibited Erwinia amylovora infections in pear plants, showing slightly higher efficacy than the mixture of BP16 and flg15, and both treatments were as effective as the antibiotic kasugamycin. Thus, the bifunctional peptide conjugate BP358 is a promising agent to control fire blight and possibly other plant bacterial diseases.

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