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Deborah Giordano
Deborah Giordano

Public Documents 1
On the capacity of putative plant odorant-binding proteins to bind volatile plant iso...
Deborah Giordano
Angelo Facchiano

Deborah Giordano

and 3 more

March 30, 2022
Plants use odors not only to recruit other organisms for symbioses, but to ‘talk’ to each other. Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from “emitting” plants inform the “receiving” (listening) plants of impending stresses or simply of their presence. However, the receptors that allow receivers to perceive the clue are elusive. Most likely, plant receptors are odorant bind proteins (OBPs), as in animals, and few OBPs are known to bind “stress-induced” VOCs. We investigated whether OBPs may bind volatile isoprenoids that make the most important class of constitutive and stress-induced plant VOCs. First, we performed a data base search that generated a list of candidate plant OBPs. Second, we investigated in silico the ability of the identified candidate plant OBPs to bind VOCs by molecular simulation experiments. Our results show that monoterpenes can bind the same OBPs that were described to bind stress-induced VOCs. Whereas, the constitutive hemiterpene isoprene does not bind any investigated OBP and may not have an info-chemical role. We conclude that, as for animal OBPs, plant OBPs may bind different VOCs. Despite being generalist and not specialized, plant OBPs may play an important role in allowing plants to eavesdrop messages sent by other plants.

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