Background: Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is a disreputable plant pathogen that causes a decline in the quality and yield of various economic crops. Natural products are important potential sources of biopesticides to control TMV. This study focuses on the discovery of anti-TMV active flavonoid glycosides and their mode of action on TMV particles from Clematis lasiandra Maxim.
Results: A new benzoyl acylated flavonoid glycoside, kaempferol 3-O-(2''-benzoyl)-β-d-glucopyranosyl-7-O-α-l-rhamnopyranoside (1), and nine known flavonoids (2-10) were identified first from C. lasiandra. The hydroxyl group at C-7, E-p-coumarate at C-6'' in the Glc of C-6, and the glucuronic acid at C-3 were functional groups for the antiviral flavonoid glycosides. Flavonoids 2, 5, and 6 showed higher inactivation efficacies of 64.62% to 82.54% compared with ningnanmycin at 500 μg ml-1 . The protective and curative efficacies for 2 and 5 were 57.44-59.00% and 41.17-43.92% at 500 μg ml-1 , respectively. Compound 5 showed higher TMV systemic resistance with control efficacies of 41.64%, 36.56% and 27.62% at concentrations of 500, 250 and 125 μg ml-1 compared with ningnanmycin in K326 tobaccos, respectively. Compound 5 can directly fracture TMV particles into small fragments combining with the fusion phenomena, and TMV-CP was an important target for 5 to break TMV particles.
Conclusion: Flavonoid glycosides from C. lasiandra showed potent antiviral activities against TMV with multiple modes of action including inactivation, protective and curative effects, and inducing systemic resistance. TMV-CP was an important target for active flavonoid glycosides to fracture TMV particles. The results provided evidence that flavonoid glycosides from C. lasiandra have the potential to control TMV.
Keywords: Clematis lasiandra; TMV-CP; antiviral activity; flavonoid glycoside; systemic resistance; tobacco mosaic virus.
© 2021 Society of Chemical Industry.