Abstract
Root parasitic weeds in Orobanchaceae pose a tremendous threat to agriculture worldwide. We used an in vitro assay to screen libraries of small molecules for those capable of inhibiting or enhancing haustorium development in the parasitic plant Triphysaria versicolor. Several redox-modifying molecules and one structural analog of 2,6-dimethoxybenzoquine (DMBQ) inhibited haustorium development in the presence of the haustorium-inducing factor DMBQ, some of these without apparent growth inhibition to the root. Triphysaria seedlings were able to acclimate to some of these redox inhibitors. Transcript levels of four early-stage haustorium genes were differentially influenced by inhibitors. These novel haustorium inhibitors highlight the importance of redox cycling for haustorium development and suggest the potential of controlling parasitic weeds by interrupting early-stage redox-signaling pathways.
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