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Piperonyl-Tethered Rhodanine Derivatives Potently Inhibit Chitinolytic Enzymes of <i>Ostrinia furnacalis</i>

Qing Han, Nan Wu, Yaoyang Liu, Jingyu Zhang, Ru-Lei Zhang, Huilin Li, Zhiyang Jiang, Jiaxing Huang, Hongxia Duan, Qing Yang

2022Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry24 citationsDOI

Abstract

Insect pest chitinases are potential target for developing new insect growth regulators. Piperine was found first to inhibit the insect chitinase (OfChi-h) from Ostrinia furnacalis (Asian corn borer) in this work, except for previously reported OfChtI. Novel piperonyl-tethered rhodanine derivatives 7a–j were rationally designed with piperine as lead and synthesized by introducing a unique rhodanine moiety into the piperine scaffold based on the similar binding cavity of OfChtI and OfChi-h. Compared to piperine, compounds 7a–j showed approximately 100- to 400-fold or 110- to 210-fold higher inhibitory capacity against two chitinases, respectively. Molecular mechanism studies indicated that π interactions are crucial for improving inhibitory activity against two chitinases due to the introduction of the conjugated rhodanine ring. Moreover, compounds 7a–c could dramatically inhibit the growth and development of O. furnacalis larvae by in vivo activity evaluation. This study provides novel piperonyl-tethered rhodanine derivatives inhibiting dual chitinases as insect growth regulator candidates.

Topics & Concepts

RhodanineOstrinia furnacalisPiperonyl butoxideChemistryBiochemistryStereochemistryBiologyBotanyToxicityOrganic chemistryLarvaStudies on Chitinases and ChitosanasesInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesPiperaceae Chemical and Biological Studies
Piperonyl-Tethered Rhodanine Derivatives Potently Inhibit Chitinolytic Enzymes of <i>Ostrinia furnacalis</i> | Litcius