Abstract

The diamine putrescine and the polyamines spermidine and spermine are ubiquitous in nature and are essential for cell proliferation. Since polyamine biosynthesis in plants can start from either ornithine or arginine, while fungal polyamine biosynthesis appears to utilise only the ornithine route, it was suggested that specific inhibition of fungal polyamine biosynthesis should be lethal. Indeed, inhibitors of polyamine biosynthesis, e.g. the ornithine decarboxylase inhibitor α‐difluoromethylornithine, have been shown to inhibit fungal growth in vitro and to control fungal infections on a variety of plants under glasshouse and field conditions. It is now known that polyamine analogues can perturb polyamine metabolism leading to powerful antiproliferative effects in cancer cells. This paper reviews the results of a research programme focused on the synthesis and evaluation of putrescine analogues as novel fungicides. A number of aliphatic, alicyclic and cyclic diamines have been shown to possess considerable fungicidal activity, but although many of these compounds perturb polyamine metabolism in fungal cells, such changes are not considered sufficient to account for the observed antifungal effects. More recent work on spermidine analogues is also described.

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