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Article

Nematicidal Activity of 3-Acyltetramic Acid Analogues Against Pine Wood Nematode, Bursaphelenchus xylophilus

1
Department of Forest Sciences, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Korea
2
Research Institute of Agriculture and Life Science, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Korea
3
Chemistry Research Laboratory, University of Oxford, Oxford OS1 3TA, UK
4
Division of Forest Insect Pests and Diseases, National Institute of Forest Science, Seoul 02455, Korea
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Molecules 2017, 22(9), 1568; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules22091568
Submission received: 1 September 2017 / Revised: 13 September 2017 / Accepted: 15 September 2017 / Published: 18 September 2017

Abstract

:
Among 98 3-acyltetramic acid analogues, compounds 1c, 2c, 2f and 2g, showed >90% nematicidal activity against the pine wood nematode Bursaphelenchus xylophilus at a 10 μg/mL concentration. The nematicidal activities of compounds 1d, 1h, and 2k were a little lower at 88.0%, 85.8%, and 57.2% at a 10 μg/mL concentration, respectively. The nematicidal activity of emamection benzoate, widely used in Korea for the prevention of pine wilt disease, was 32.3% at a 10 μg/mL concentration. Other 3-acyltetramic acid analogues showed less than 30% nematicidal activity. A structure-activity relationship study indicated that the chain length of the C-acyl substituent was very important for high nematicidal activity. All active compounds had C13H27 or C11H23 acyl substituents, in two closely related groups with the common physicochemical properties of a polar surface area 57.6A2, PSA (polar surface area) 7.8–8.6% and ClogP (calculated partition coefficient) 5.1–5.9 and a polar surface area 75–84A2, PSA 11.1–11.6% and ClogP 4.7–5.1, respectively. Our study indicates that active 3-acyltetramic acid analogues could have potential as lead compounds for developing novel pine wood nematode control agents.

1. Introduction

Pine wilt disease is a serious problem in the pine forests of several Asian and European countries [1]. After pine wilt disease was first reported at Mt. Gumjung, Busan, this disease spread to several areas of the middle and southern parts of the Korean peninsula [2], leading to 1.74 million dead pine trees in 2015 [3]. Several kinds of methods have been developed for the control of pine wilt disease in Korea, and the Korean government has invested significant financial and human resources for several years to attempt to stop the spread of the disease [2]. Felling and fumigation of dead trees with metham sodium is used to kill the larvae of Monochamus alternatus or Monochamus saltuarius and the pine wood nematode. Aerial spraying with thiacloprid has been used to manage the adults of M. alternatus or M. saltuarius. However, the application of aerial spraying has decreased annually because of concerns over environmental contamination and toxicity to non-target organisms. Another control method is trunk injection of nematicides such as avamectin or emamectin benzoate, and this method is considered to be safer for the environment since the chemical agent is not widely dispersed. Avamectin and emamectin benzoate have been widely used for several years in Korea. Long and frequent usage of these nematicides increases the possibility of the emergence of resistance in the pine wood nematode, although there has been no research in this area as of yet.
Concern for the occurrence of resistant strains increases the need for the development of new and safer types of pine wood nematode control agents. Natural products derived from plants or microorganisms and their analogues provide good sources of lead compounds to develop new pest control agents. For this purpose, nematicidal activities of plant-derived natural products and their analogues against the pine wood nematode have been investigated in several studies [4,5,6,7,8,9].
In this study, we investigated the nematicidal activities of 98 3-acyltetramic acid analogues against the pine wood nematode, and developed their structure-activity relationships and physicochemical property–nematicidal activity relationships, in an attempt to find new alternatives for conventional nematicides.

2. Results and Discussion

2.1. Nematicidal Activities of 3-Acyltetramic Acids

The nematicidal activities of 3-acyltetramic acid analogues (Figure 1 and Figure 2) and emamectin benzoate are shown in Table 1. Among the test compounds, 1c, 1d, 1h, 2c, 2f, 2g, and 2k showed very strong nematicidal activities against the pine wood nematode, and mortalities for compounds 1c, 2c, 2f and 2g were 99.6%, 100%, 95.8% and 98.9% at a 10 μg/mL concentration, respectively, while compounds 1d, 1h, and 2k showed slightly lower nematicidal activities (85.8%, 88.0% and 57.2%) at a 10 μg/mL concentration, respectively. However, other 3-acyltetramic acid analogues showed less than 30% nematicidal activity. The nematicidal activity of 3-acyltetramic acids with ≥50% mortality at 10 μg/mL was tested at lower concentrations. Nematicidal activities of compounds 1c and 2g were 96.2% and 96.4% at a 5 μg/mL concentration, but their activities reduced to 15.0% and 6.3% at a 2.5 μg/mL concentration, respectively. Compounds 1d and 2f showed 80.2% and 76.4% nematicidal activities against the pine wood nematode at a 5 μg/mL concentration, but showed less than 40% mortality at a 2.5 μg/mL concentration, respectively. Other 3-acyltetaramic acids analogues showed <60% mortality at a 5 μg/mL concentration. This outcome is better than the nematicidal activities of emamectin benzoate, widely used for the prevention of pine wilt disease in Korea, which were 32.3%, 28.2% and 24.1% at 10, 5, and 2.5 μg/mL concentrations, respectively. Analogues with less than 30% mortality are not shown in Table 1. Recently, finding novel lead compounds inspired by bioactive natural compounds has been demonstrated to be an effective strategy for the development of pesticides [10]. Naturally occurring 3-acyltetramic acids are core structural skeletons with various biological activities such as magnesidin A [11], reutericyclin [12], integramycin [13], the melophlins [14] and the macrocidins [15]. Although antibacterial activities of 3-acyltetramic acids have been reported in a previous study [16], this is the first report of the nematicidal activities of 3-acyltetramic acid analogues against the pine wood nematode.

2.2. Structure-Activity Relationship

Understanding the structure-activity relationship is very important for developing lead compounds for novel pesticides. The chemical structures of compounds 1e, 1f, 1g, and 1h are very similar, but they differ in the identity of the acyl side chain, and among them, only compound 1h showed strong nematidal activity against the pine wood nematode; compound 1h has C13H27 at the C-acyl position while compounds 1e, 1f and 1g have methyl, C9H19 and C11H23, respectively. Compounds 2a, 2b, and 2c also showed similar structure-activity relationships, again with the only structural difference being the acyl side chain length. Compound 2c with C13H27 at the R4 position showed strong nematicidal activity against the pine wood nematode, but compounds 2a and 2b with C9H19 and C11H23 on the side chain displayed very weak activity. All of compounds 2h, 2i, 2j and 2k have the same N-group, but different acyl side chain lengths, and the nematicidal activity of 2k with C13H27 on the side chain was much higher than that of compounds 2h, 2i and 2j with C6H13, C9H19, and C11H23 as R4 substituents, respectively. Compounds 1c and 1d have C11H23 and C13H27 on the side chain, and they all showed very strong nematicidal activities against the pine wood nematode. Another 3-acyltetramic acid group, compounds 2d, 2e, 2f and 2g, showed a similar result, and the nematicidal activities of compounds 2f and 2g with C11H23 and C13H27 on the side chain were much better than those of compounds 2d and 2e with C4H9 and C6H13. These results clearly indicate that an optimal chain length is essential for nematicidal activity against the pine wood nematode, and that biological activity is strongly correlated to chemical structure; this is developed further below. Seo et al. [17] investigated the structure-activity relationship of aliphatic compounds against the pine wood nematode, and also found that the chain length of the aliphatic compounds was very important for nematicidal activity; thus, among the alkanols and 2E-alkenols, the nematicidal activities of compounds with a C9–C11 chain length were much stronger than those of the other compounds with different chain lengths. In the 2E-alkenals and alkanoic acids groups, compounds with C8, C9 and C9, C10 chain lengths, respectively, exhibited strong nematicidal activity compared to compounds with C12–C14 chain lengths.

2.3. Physiocochemical Property–Nematicidal Activity Relationships

The 3-acyltetramate library comprises a series of substituted systems, varying in ring and nitrogen groups, as shown in Figure 1 and Figure 2. Of interest is that only a small subset of the examined compounds showed nematicidal activity against the pine wood nematode B. xylophilus at a 10 μg/mL concentration, and those compounds which were active (namely 2c, 1c, 2g, 2f, 1h, 1d and 2k) were very similar in structure and possessed similar physicochemical properties (Table 2); thus, all active compounds had C13H27 or C11H23 acyl substituents in two closely related structural groups with the common physicochemical properties of a polar surface area (PSA) 57.6A 2, rel-PSA (relative polar surface area) 7.8–8.6% and ClogP 5.1–5.9 and a PSA 75–84A2, rel-PSA 11.1–11.6% and ClogP 4.7–5.1, respectively. This is a comparatively narrow range of parameters, at least in comparison with the full library, which has a much wider range of physicochemical properties (−0.43 < ClogD7.4 (calculated distribution coefficient at pH 7.4) < 5.3; −0.43 < ClogP < 6.1; 57 < PSA < 117A2; 7.8 < rel-PSA < 27.6% and 257 < MSA (molecular surface area) < 800A3). Of interest is that analysis of the physicochemical properties of acyltetramates in relation to their antibacterial activity has also been studied, and maximal activity also occurs for a narrow band of physicochemical descriptors, consistent with similar structures giving similar activities [16,18].

3. Materials and Methods

3.1. Chemicals

The chemical structures of 98 3-acyltetramic acid analogues are shown in Figure 1 and Figure 2. Their synthesis and characterization have been previously documented [16,19]. Emamectin benzoate (purity > 98%) was used as a positive control, and supplied form Syngenta Korea (Seoul, Korea).

3.2. Collection of the Pine Wood Nematode

Pine wood nematode B. xylophilus was supplied from National Institute of Forest Science, Seoul, Korea. We reared pine wood nematode on a lawn of Botrytis cinerea cultured on potato dextrose agar medium (PDA) in the dark at 28 °C. We extracted pine wood nematode by using Baermann funnel method [20] one day before bioassay.

3.3. Nematicidal Activity Test

To test the nematicidal activity of 3-acyltetramic acid analogues, test analogues were dissolved in ethanol (Daejung Chemical, Siheun, Gyeonggi-do, Korea) at a concentration of 1 mg/mL. 3-acyltetramic acid solutions (1 µL) were applied to the wells of a 96-well plate (JET Bio-Filtration co., Ltd, Guangzhou, China). Numbers of pine wood nematode in each well were about 50–150 nematodes (mixture of juvenile and adult nematodes, male:female:juvenile ≈ 1:1:2) in 99 µL of water. The total volume of the solution in each well was 100 µL, and the concentration of the test 3-acyltetramic acid analogues was 10 μg/mL. Ethanol (1 µL) and emamectin benzoate (Syngenta Korea, Seoul, Korea) were used as negative and positive control, respectively. In four adjacent wells (i.e., in a column) on the plate, pine wood nematodes were treated with 3-acyltetramic acid and a set of other 3-acyltetramic acid was placed in the wells of every next column. All experiments were replicated 4 times. We applied 3-acyltetramic acids randomly. The treated 96-well plates were stored in the dark at 25 ± 1 °C and 60% relative humidity. Mortality of pine wood nematode was determined after 48 h of treatment under microscope (65×). Nematodes were considered as dead if their bodies were motionless and straightened.

3.4. Statistical Analysis

The percentages of mortality of pine wood nematode were transformed to arcsine square-root values prior to analysis of variance (ANOVA). Treatment mean values were compared and separated using Scheffe’s test. Statistical analyses were performed using IBM SPSS Statistics 23.0 (2015). Mean (±SE) values of untransformed data have been reported.

4. Conclusions

In this study, the nematicidal activities of 98 3-acyltetramic acids analogues against the pine wood nematode were evaluated. Among test compounds, compounds 1c, 1d, 1h, 2c, 2f, 2g, and 2k showed very strong nematicidal activity. The structure-activity relationship study indicated that the chain length at the C-acyl position is essential for high nematicidal activity against the pine wood nematode. Further studies including the safety of active 3-acyltetramic acid analogues to human and non-target organisms, their formulations, and their modes of action are necessary to develop the practical use of 3-acyltetramic acid analogues as novel pine wood nematode control agents.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the Korea Institute of Planning and Evaluation for Technology in Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (IPET) through the Agro-Bio Industry Technology Development Program, funded by the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs (MAFRA) (grant number 316030-3) to IK Park. MGM gratefully acknowledges funding from the Oxford Innovation Fund.

Author Contributions

H.-R.L., M.G.M. and I.K.P. conceived and designed the experiments; H.-R.L., S.-C.L., S.-M.S., J.-E.L. and C.-S.J. performed the experiments; Y.-C.J. synthesized 3-acyltetramic acid analogues; H.R.L., M.G.M. and I.-K.P. analyzed the data; H.R.L., M.G.M. and I.-K.P. wrote the paper.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Sample Availability: Samples of the compounds are not available from the authors.
Figure 1. Chemical structures of monocyclic 3-acyltetramic acid analogues.
Figure 1. Chemical structures of monocyclic 3-acyltetramic acid analogues.
Molecules 22 01568 g001
Figure 2. Chemical structures of 3-acyltetramic acid analogues.
Figure 2. Chemical structures of 3-acyltetramic acid analogues.
Molecules 22 01568 g002
Table 1. Nematicidal activities of 3-acyltetramic acid analogues against B. xylophilus.
Table 1. Nematicidal activities of 3-acyltetramic acid analogues against B. xylophilus.
Compounds 1Mortality (%, Mean ± SE, n = 4)
10 252.5
1c99.6 ± 0.7a 396.2 ± 0.9a15.0 ± 3.0bc
1d85.8 ± 3.5a80.2 ± 6.8ab35.5 ± 3.2a
1h88.0 ± 7.3a0.7 ± 1.3e4
2c100a66.8 ± 8.1bc6.3 ± 0.5cd
2f95.8 ± 1.1a76.4 ± 3.1b10.8 ± 2.8c
2g98.9 ± 1.9a96.4 ± 1.8a6.3 ± 3.6cd
2k57.2 ± 18.8b50.6 ± 10.1c13.1 ± 3.9c
Emamectin benzoate32.3 ± 2.7c28.2 ± 3.9d24.1 ± 4.3b
Control0d0e0d
F8, 27 = 80.208
p < 0.0001
F8, 27 = 156.542
p < 0.0001
F7, 24 = 41.067
p < 0.0001
Compounds 1 with >30% mortality at 10 μg/mL are shown. 2 μg/mL. 3 Means within a column followed by the same letters are not significantly different (Scheffe’s test). 4 Not tested.
Table 2. Physicochemical properties of active 3-acyltetramic acid analogues.
Table 2. Physicochemical properties of active 3-acyltetramic acid analogues.
CompoundsMw 1MSA(A 3) 2PSA(A 2) 3rel-PSA (%) 4ClogP 5ClogD7.4 6H-D 7/H-A 8RB 9
1c36667457.68.555.124.511/315
1d39473557.67.845.925.301/317
1h41072183.911.65.134.261/414
2c38067374.711.14.693.911/414
2f36667457.68.555.124.511/315
2g39473557.67.845.925.301/317
2k37864274.711.64.773.921/413
Mw 1: Molecular weight. MSA 2: Molecular surface area. PSA 3: Polar surface area. rel-PSA 4: Relative polar surface area (%) = (PSA/MSA) × 100. ClogP 5: Calculated partition coefficient. ClogD7.4 6: Calculated distribution coefficient at pH 7.4. H-D 7: Hydrogen bond donor count. H-A 8: Hydrogen bond acceptor count. RB 9: Rotatable bond count.

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MDPI and ACS Style

Lee, H.-R.; Lee, S.-C.; Lee, J.-E.; Seo, S.-M.; Jeong, Y.-C.; Jung, C.-S.; Moloney, M.G.; Park, I.-K. Nematicidal Activity of 3-Acyltetramic Acid Analogues Against Pine Wood Nematode, Bursaphelenchus xylophilus. Molecules 2017, 22, 1568. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules22091568

AMA Style

Lee H-R, Lee S-C, Lee J-E, Seo S-M, Jeong Y-C, Jung C-S, Moloney MG, Park I-K. Nematicidal Activity of 3-Acyltetramic Acid Analogues Against Pine Wood Nematode, Bursaphelenchus xylophilus. Molecules. 2017; 22(9):1568. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules22091568

Chicago/Turabian Style

Lee, Hyo-Rim, Sung-Chan Lee, Ji-Eun Lee, Seon-Mi Seo, Yong-Chul Jeong, Chan-Sik Jung, Mark G. Moloney, and Il-Kwon Park. 2017. "Nematicidal Activity of 3-Acyltetramic Acid Analogues Against Pine Wood Nematode, Bursaphelenchus xylophilus" Molecules 22, no. 9: 1568. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules22091568

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