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Plant Antimicrobial Peptides: State of the Art, In Silico Prediction and Perspectives in the Omics Era.

Carlos André Dos Santos-SilvaLuisa ZupinMarx Oliveira-LimaLívia Maria Batista VilelaJoão Pacifico Bezerra-NetoJosé Ribamar Ferreira-NetoJosé Diogo Cavalcanti FerreiraRoberta Lane de Oliveira SilvaCarolline de Jesús PiresFlávia Figueira AburjaileMarianne Firmino de OliveiraEderson Akio KidoSergio CrovellaAna Maria Benko-Iseppon
Published in: Bioinformatics and biology insights (2020)
Even before the perception or interaction with pathogens, plants rely on constitutively guardian molecules, often specific to tissue or stage, with further expression after contact with the pathogen. These guardians include small molecules as antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), generally cysteine-rich, functioning to prevent pathogen establishment. Some of these AMPs are shared among eukaryotes (eg, defensins and cyclotides), others are plant specific (eg, snakins), while some are specific to certain plant families (such as heveins). When compared with other organisms, plants tend to present a higher amount of AMP isoforms due to gene duplications or polyploidy, an occurrence possibly also associated with the sessile habit of plants, which prevents them from evading biotic and environmental stresses. Therefore, plants arise as a rich resource for new AMPs. As these molecules are difficult to retrieve from databases using simple sequence alignments, a description of their characteristics and in silico (bioinformatics) approaches used to retrieve them is provided, considering resources and databases available. The possibilities and applications based on tools versus database approaches are considerable and have been so far underestimated.
Keyphrases
  • poor prognosis
  • gram negative
  • risk assessment
  • gene expression
  • candida albicans
  • single cell
  • emergency department
  • genome wide
  • antimicrobial resistance
  • mouse model
  • transcription factor
  • single molecule