1. Academic Validation
  2. Variation in chemotactic preferences of Aphanomyces cochlioides zoospores to flavonoids

Variation in chemotactic preferences of Aphanomyces cochlioides zoospores to flavonoids

  • Z Naturforsch C J Biosci. 2009 Nov-Dec;64(11-12):847-52. doi: 10.1515/znc-2009-11-1215.
M Tofazzal Islam 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Graduate School of Agriculture, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-8589, Japan. [email protected]
Abstract

The zoospores of the phytopathogenic Aphanomyces cochlioides are chemotactically attracted by a host-specific flavone, cochliophilin A (5-hydroxy-6,7-methylenedioxyflavone), and repelled from the mammalian estrogens or estrogenic compounds. This study further examined the responses of A. cochlioides zoospores to some Flavonoids structurally related to cochliophilin A or compounds known as phytoestrogens. The bioassay revealed that some synthetic Flavones (such as 6-methyl-4'-methoxyflavone, 3-hydroxy-4'-methoxyflavone, 7-hydroxy-5-methylflavone, 3-hydroxy-4'-methoxy-6-methylflavone) elicited attractant activity at concentrations as low as picomolar (10 pM), which was an 100-fold lower concentration than that of the threshold concentration of the host-specific attractant cochliophilin A. Apparently, a hydrophobic B-ring with an alkylated (methylated) A-ring or a methoxylated B-ring with an unsubstituted A-ring in the flavone skeleton played a significant role in higher attractant activity. On the other hand, all known estrogenic Flavonoids (such as equol, 3'- or 8-prenylated naringenins) displayed potent repellent activity toward zoospores. Surprisingly, zoospores were attracted by non-estrogenic 6-prenylated naringenin indicating that repellent activity is linked to the estrogenic activity of the phytoestrogens.

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