Metyltetraprole

Metyltetraprole is a quinone outside inhibitor fungicide sold under the brand name Pavecto by its inventor, Sumitomo Chemical.[1] It is the only tetrazolinone fungicide and the only one in the Fungicide Resistance Action Committee's subgroup 11A.[2]

Metyltetraprole
Names
IUPAC name
1-[2-[[1-(4-chlorophenyl)pyrazol-3-yl]oxymethyl]-3-methylphenyl]-4-methyltetrazol-5-one
Identifiers
3D model (JSmol)
ChEBI
ChemSpider
UNII
  • InChI=1S/C19H17ClN6O2/c1-13-4-3-5-17(26-19(27)24(2)22-23-26)16(13)12-28-18-10-11-25(21-18)15-8-6-14(20)7-9-15/h3-11H,12H2,1-2H3
    Key: XUQQRGKFXLAPNV-UHFFFAOYSA-N
  • CC1=C(C(=CC=C1)N2C(=O)N(N=N2)C)COC3=NN(C=C3)C4=CC=C(C=C4)Cl
Properties
C19H17ClN6O2
Molar mass 396.84 g·mol−1
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
Infobox references

Development

Metyltetraprole was developed specifically to find an a.i. with the same mode of action (a QoI) but with sufficiently different chemistry as to avoid "critical" QoI resistance increasing around the world.[3]

Target pathogens

Metyltetraprole is highly effective against Alternaria triticina.[1]

Resistance

Developed because of increasing resistance to the main group of QoIs. See §Development above.

Cross-resistance

It does not suffer cross-resistance with the resistance against 11 conferred by the cytochrome b mutation G143A. Cross-resistance against F129L is unassessed.[2]

Binding Mode

The structure of the tetrazolinone pharmacophore is very similar to the triazolone pharmacophore of an inhibitor developed by AgoEva, for which the binding mode has been elucidated in the structure deposited as 3L73 in the protein databank.

References

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