posted on 2018-08-25, 00:00authored byThomas Perrot, Mathieu Schwartz, Fanny Saiag, Guillaume Salzet, Stéphane Dumarçay, Frédérique Favier, Philippe Gérardin, Jean-Michel Girardet, Rodnay Sormani, Mélanie Morel-Rouhier, Nadine Amusant, Claude Didierjean, Eric Gelhaye
The natural durability
of wood is linked to its chemical composition
and in particular the presence of metabolites called extractives that
often possess chemical reactivity. For dealing with these compounds,
wood degraders have developed detoxification systems usually involving
enzyme families. Among these enzymes, glutathione transferases (GSTs)
are involved in the decrease of the reactivity of toxic compounds.
In this study, the hypothesis that the detoxification systems of wood
decaying fungi could be indicators of the chemical reactivity of wood
extracts has been tested. This approach has been evaluated using 32
wood extracts coming from French Guiana species, testing their antimicrobial
ability, antioxidative properties, and reactivity against six GSTs
from the white rot Trametes versicolor. From the
obtained data, a significant correlation between the antimicrobial
and antioxidative properties of the tested wood extracts and GST interactions
was established. In addition, the chemical analysis performed on one
of the most reactive extracts (an acetonic extract of Bagassa
guianensis) has demonstrated oxyresveratrol as a major constituent.
We were able to cocrystallize one GST with this commercially interesting
compound. Taken together, the presented data support the hypothesis
that detoxifying enzymes could be used to identify the presence of
molecules of industrial interest in wood extracts.