Plant seed lectins disrupt growth of germinating fungal spores |
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Authors: | Robert Brambl Wayne Gade |
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Affiliation: | Dept of Plant Pathology, Univ. of Minnesota, Saint Paul, MN 55108, USA. |
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Abstract: | Plant seed lectins are well-characterized proteins and glycoproteins whose natural function remains unknown. We found that eleven purified seed lectins (representing five groups of lectin sugar specificities) bound to the germ tubes of asexual spores of Neurospora crassa, Aspergillus amstelodami , and Botryodiplodia theobromae. The lectins caused several types of quantifiable growth disruption during germination of these seed- or soil-borne fungal spores, including sensitivity to osmotic lysis, adventitious branching of the spore germ tubes, and inhibition of germ tube elongation. These anti-fungal effects of purified lectins, which were reversible with the sugar hapten specific for each lectin, were partially duplicated by lectin-like factors in the homologous crude seed extracts. The seed lectins may disrupt fungal growth by interfering with normal cell wall deposition and assembly. |
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Keywords: | Aspergillus amstelodami Botryodiplodia theobromae cell wall assembly Neurospora crassa |
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