Inositolphosphate glycans and a fucosylated xyloglucan oligosaccharide are accumulated upon Arabidopsis thaliana/ Botrytis cinerea infection
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Abstract
In mammals, insulin is involved in controlling blood glucose levels and its role in modulating immunity is being more and more documented. This hormone promotes the release of inositolphosphate glycans (IPG) which act as mediators. In plants, one IG has already been identified in plant culture cells (Smith and Fry, 1999; Smith et al., 1999) but, to our knowledge, no IPG have been yet identified. Here, we discovered 7 IPG that are accumulated upon Arabidopsis thaliana-Botrytis cinerea interaction, concomitantly with oligogalacturonides and a fucosylated xyloglucan oligosaccharide. Further structural characterization showed that they come from the hydrolysis of polar heads of Serie A to H glycosylinositol phosphorylceramides presumably via a phospholipase C activity. Taken together with the emerging role of insulin as immune regulator, these results question the role of IPG as damage associated molecular pattern both in animal and plant kingdoms.
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