The rare sugar D-tagatose protects plants from downy mildews and is a safe fungicidal agrochemical.
Susumu MochizukiTakeshi FukumotoToshiaki OharaKouhei OhtaniAkihide YoshiharaYoshio ShigematsuKeiji TanakaKoichi EbiharaShigeyuki TajimaKenji GomiKazuya IchimuraKen IzumoriKazuya AkimitsuPublished in: Communications biology (2020)
The rare sugar D-tagatose is a safe natural product used as a commercial food ingredient. Here, we show that D-tagatose controls a wide range of plant diseases and focus on downy mildews to analyze its mode of action. It likely acts directly on the pathogen, rather than as a plant defense activator. Synthesis of mannan and related products of D-mannose metabolism are essential for development of fungi and oomycetes; D-tagatose inhibits the first step of mannose metabolism, the phosphorylation of D-fructose to D-fructose 6-phosphate by fructokinase, and also produces D-tagatose 6-phosphate. D-Tagatose 6-phosphate sequentially inhibits phosphomannose isomerase, causing a reduction in D-glucose 6-phosphate and D-fructose 6-phosphate, common substrates for glycolysis, and in D-mannose 6-phosphate, needed to synthesize mannan and related products. These chain-inhibitory effects on metabolic steps are significant enough to block initial infection and structural development needed for reproduction such as conidiophore and conidiospore formation of downy mildew.