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Plant Biotechnology 2016

The isoquinoline alkaloid sanguinarine which inhibits chaperone activity enhances the production of heat shock proteins in Arabidopsis.

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Erina Matsuoka
Takumi Matsubara
Ikuo Takahashi
Hiroki Murano
Masakazu Hara

Keywords

Abstract

Sanguinarine is an isoquinoline alkaloid produced by Papaveraceae plants. Because sanguinarine has antimicrobial activity, it is believed to be related to the plants' chemical defense systems. However, its action against plants has not been well understood. A previous study reported that among 12 alkaloids, sanguinarine was the only compound which enhanced heat tolerance in Arabidopsis. Here we performed a promoter assay using a heat shock protein gene (HSP17.6C-CI) of Arabidopsis to assess the induction of heat shock responses by alkaloids. Although sanguinarine induced the heat shock response, the other 11 alkaloids did not. Sanguinarine promoted the production of HSP17.6C-CI protein, but berberine and papaverine, which are isoquinoline alkaloids as well as sanguinarine, did not promote it. It is known that geldanamycin, a small molecule chaperone inhibitor, activates the heat shock response in Arabidopsis. Although sanguinarine inhibited the chaperone activities of wheat germ extract much like geldanamycin, berberine and papaverine influenced the activities very little. These results suggest that sanguinarine may promote the heat shock response by regulating the chaperone activities in the way that geldanamycin does in plants.

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