1. Academic Validation
  2. Discovery of N-Phenylpropiolamide as a Novel Succinate Dehydrogenase Inhibitor Scaffold with Broad-Spectrum Antifungal Activity on Phytopathogenic Fungi

Discovery of N-Phenylpropiolamide as a Novel Succinate Dehydrogenase Inhibitor Scaffold with Broad-Spectrum Antifungal Activity on Phytopathogenic Fungi

  • J Agric Food Chem. 2023 Mar 1;71(8):3681-3693. doi: 10.1021/acs.jafc.2c07712.
Yu-Hao Zhang 1 Shan-Shan Yang 1 2 Qi Zhang 1 Tian-Tian Zhang 1 Tian-Yi Zhang 1 Bo-Hang Zhou 3 Le Zhou 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 College of Chemistry & Pharmacy, Northwest A&F University, 22 Xinong Road, Yangling, 712100 Shaanxi, China.
  • 2 Taizhou Polytechnic College, 8 Tianxing Road, Taizhou, 225300 Jiangsu, China.
  • 3 Bio-Agriculture Institute of Shaanxi, Xi'an, 710043 Shaanxi, China.
Abstract

Based on the structural features of both succinate dehydrogenase inhibitors (SDHIs) and targeted covalent inhibitors, a series of N-phenylpropiolamides containing a Michael acceptor moiety were designed to find new Antifungal compounds. Nineteen compounds showed potent inhibition activity in vitro on nine species of plant pathogenic fungi. Compounds 9 and 13 showed higher activity on most of the fungi than the standard drug azoxystrobin. Compound 13 could completely inhibit Physalospora piricola Infection on apples at 200 μg/mL concentration over 7 days and showed high safety to seed germination and seedling growth of Plants at ≤100 μg/mL concentration. The action mechanism showed that 13 is an SDH inhibitor with a median inhibitory concentration, IC50, value of 0.55 μg/mL, comparable with that of the positive drug boscalid. Molecular docking studies revealed that 13 can bind well to the ubiquinone-binding region of SDH by hydrogen bonds and undergoes π-alkyl interaction and π-cation interaction. At the cellular level, 1 as the parent compound could destruct the mycelial structure of P. piricola and partly dissolve the cell wall and/or membrane. Structure-activity relationship analysis showed that the acetenyl group should be a structure determinant for the activity, and the substitution pattern of the phenyl ring can significantly impact the activity. Thus, N-phenylpropiolamide emerged as a novel and promising lead scaffold for the development of new SDHIs for plant protection.

Keywords

antifungal activity; fungicide; phytopathogenic fungi; propiolamide; succinate dehydrogenase inhibitor.

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