4.7 Review

Caged Phytohormones: From Chemical Inactivation to Controlled Physiological Response

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 69, Issue 41, Pages 12111-12125

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.1c02018

Keywords

caged compound; phytohormone; photoremovable protecting group; photochemistry; plant physiology; chemical biology

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic from European Regional Development Fund-Project Plants as a tool for sustainable global development [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000827]
  2. Internal Grant Agency of Palacky University [IGA_PrF_2021_007]

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Plant hormones, or phytohormones, are small signaling molecules that regulate growth and development in response to external and internal factors. Research shows that these hormones act through interconnected responses and the development of novel tools is needed to further study their complex interactions.
Plant hormones, also called phytohormones, are small signaling molecules regulating a wide range of growth and developmental processes. These unique compounds respond to both external (light, temperature, water, nutrition, or pathogen attack) and internal factors (e.g., age) and mediate signal transduction leading to gene expression with the aim of allowing plants to adapt to constantly changing environmental conditions. Within the regulation of biological processes, individual groups of phytohormones act mostly through a web of interconnected responses rather than linear pathways, making elucidation of their mode of action in living organisms quite challenging. To further progress with our knowledge, the development of novel tools for phytohormone research is required. Although plenty of small molecules targeting phytohormone metabolic or signaling pathways (agonists, antagonists, and inhibitors) and labeled or tagged (fluorescently, isotopically, or biotinylated) compounds have been produced, the control over them in vivo is lost at the time of their administration. Caged compounds, on the other hand, represent a new approach to the development of small organic substances for phytohormone research. The term caged compounds refers to light-sensitive probes with latent biological activity, where the active molecule can be freed using a light beam in a highly spatio/temporal-, amplitude-, or frequency-defined manner. This review summarizes the up-to-date development in the field of caged plant hormones. Research progress is arranged in chronological order for each phytohormone regardless of the cage compound formulation and bacterial/plant/animal cell applications. Several known drawbacks and possible directions for future research are highlighted.

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