In a previous paper we have shown that ⑀-(phenoxyalkanecarboxylyl)-l-Lys conjugates are potent inhibitors of amino acid transport systems and that it is possible to modulate the uptake inhibition by hydrophobic or hydrophilic additions in the 4-position of the aromatic ring (J.F. Chollet, C. Delétage, M. Faucher, L. Miginiac, J.L. Bonnemain [1997] Biochem Biophys Acta 1336: 331-341). In this report we demonstrate that ⑀-(2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetyl)-l-Lys (2,4D-Lys), one of the largest molecules of the series and one of the most potent inhibitors, is a highly permeant conjugate. Uptake of 2,4D-Lys by broad bean (Vicia faba) leaf discs is mediated by an active carrier system (K m 1 ϭ 0.2 mm; V max 1 ϭ 2.4 nmol cm Ϫ2 h Ϫ1 at pH 5.0) complemented by an important diffusive component. Among the compounds tested (neutral, basic, and acidic amino acids, auxin, glutathione, and sugars), only the aromatic amino acids clearly compete with 2,4D-Lys. The conjugate accumulates in the vein network, is exported toward the growing organs, and exhibits a distribution pattern different from that of the herbicide moiety. However, over time 2,4D-Lys progressively splits into 2,4D and lysine. Analyses by highperformance liquid chromatography and liquid scintillation spectrometry of the phloem sap collected from the castor bean system, used as a systemy test, indicate decreasing capacities of 2,4D, 2,4D-Lys, and glyphosate, respectively, to move from the epidermis cell wall to the sieve element. Our results show that it is possible to design synthesis of large-size xenobiotics (approximately 350 D) with a lipophilic pole, exhibiting high mobility within the vascular system.
Grass cell wall degradability is conventionally related to the lignin content and to the ferulic-mediated cross-linking of lignins to polysaccharides. To better understand the variations in degradability, 22 maize inbred lines were subjected to image analyses of Fasga- and Mäule-stained stem sections and to chemical analyses of lignins and p-hydroxycinnamic acids. For the first time, the nearness of biochemical and histological estimates of lignin levels was established. Combination of histological and biochemical traits could explain 89% of the variations for cell wall degradability and define a maize ideotype for cell wall degradability. In addition to a reduced lignin level, such an ideotype would contain lignins richer in syringyl than in guaiacyl units and preferentially localized in the cortical region rather than in the pith. Such enrichment in syringyl units would favor wall degradability in grasses, contrary to dicots, and could be related to the fact that grass syringyl units are noticeably p-coumaroylated. This might affect the interaction capabilities of lignins and polysaccharides.
A series of derivatives of the phenylpyrrole fungicide fenpiclonil was synthesized in which a carboxyl group was present at various sites of this non-phloem-mobile molecule. Using the Kleier model, all these acidic analogues were predicted to be moderately phloem-mobile, especially the N-substituted derivatives. One of these latter molecules, N-carboxymethyl-3-cyano-4-(2,3-dichlorophenyl)pyrrole, exhibited some fungicidal activity on the pathogenic fungus Eutypa lata, and was then tested as a phloem-mobile pesticide in the Ricinus system. The compound was indeed mobile in the sieve tubes and was not degraded to fenpiclonil in the phloem sap under our experimental conditions. Its concentration in the sap was closely correlated to the percentage of the undissociated form of the molecule in the external medium, and was similar under acidic conditions (external pH 4.6-5.0) to that of the herbicide glyphosate.
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