Brassinolide-2,3-acetonide: a brassinolide-induced rice lamina joint inclination antagonist.
A novel chemical tool compound that is an antagonist of brassinolide (BL, 1)- induced rice lamina joint inclination was developed. Although 2-O-, 3-O-, 22-O-, or 23-O-methylation of BL causes a critical decrease in biological activity,(5) a crystal structure of the extracellular leucine-rich repeat (LRR) domain of BRASSINOSTEROID-INSENSITIVE I (BRI1) bound to BL(3,4) indicates that the loss of activity of the O-methylated BL may result from not only the low affinity to BRI1, but also from blocking the interaction with another BR signaling factor, a partner protein of BRI1 (e.g., BRI1-ASSOCIATED KINASE 1, BAK1). On the basis of this hypothesis we synthesized the BL 2,3-acetonide 2, the 22,23-acetonide 3, and the 2,3:22,23-diacetonide 4 to assess the possibility of 2-O- and 3-O- or/and 22-O- and 23-O-alkylated BL as an antagonist in BR signaling evoked by exogenously applied BL. The 2,3-acetonide 2 more strongly inhibited the lamina inclination caused by BL relative to the 22,23-acetonide 3, whereas the diacetonide 4 had no effect most likely due to its increased hydrophobicity. This suggested that the 2,3-hydroxyl groups of BL play a more significant role in the interaction with a BRI1 partner protein rather than BRI1 itself in rice lamina joint inclination. Taken together it was demonstrated that BL, the most potent agonist of BRI1, is transformed into an antagonist by functionalization of the 2,3-dihydroxyl groups as the acetonide. This finding opens the door to the potential development of a chemical tool that modulates protein-protein interactions in the BR signaling pathway to dissect the BR-dependent processes.