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Review
. 2012 Sep 3;13(13):1846-59.
doi: 10.1002/cbic.201200086. Epub 2012 Jul 16.

Sulfur-containing secondary metabolites from Arabidopsis thaliana and other Brassicaceae with function in plant immunity

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Review

Sulfur-containing secondary metabolites from Arabidopsis thaliana and other Brassicaceae with function in plant immunity

Paweł Bednarek. Chembiochem. .

Abstract

Biosynthesis of antimicrobial secondary metabolites in response to microbial infection is one of the features of the plant immune system. Particular classes of plant secondary metabolites involved in plant defence are often produced only by species belonging to certain phylogenetic clades. Brassicaceae plants have evolved the ability to synthesise a wide range of sulfur-containing secondary metabolites, including glucosinolates and indole-type phytoalexins. A subset of these compounds is produced by the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Genetic tools available for this species enabled verification of immune functions of glucosinolates and camalexin (A. thaliana phytoalexin), as well as characterisation of their respective biosynthetic pathways. Current knowledge of the biosynthesis of Brassicaceae sulfur-containing metabolites suggests that the key event in the evolution of these compounds is the acquisition of biochemical mechanisms originating from detoxification pathways into secondary metabolite biosynthesis. Moreover, it is likely that glucosinolates and Brassicaceae phytoalexins, traditionally considered as separate groups of compounds, have a common evolutionary origin and are interconnected on the biosynthetic level. This suggests that the diversity of Brassicaceae sulfur-containing phytochemicals reflect phylogenetic clade-specific branches of an ancient biosynthetic pathway.

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