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1.
The infection of tomato leaves by Phytophthora infestans was followed using cytological methods. Fungal ingress and plant reactions in untreated and induced resistant plants were studied. Systemic disease resistance was induced by a local pre-infection with the same fungus. Induction retarded fungal progress at the leaf surface, epidermis and in the mesophyll. The reduced numbers of germinated cysts indicate the presence of fungitoxic substances on the leaf surface of induced plants. Frequency of fungal penetration through the outer epidermal cell wall was reduced, but only in plants exhibiting a high level of induced resistance. Autofluor-escent material, indicating the presence of lignin-like substances, accumulated rapidly beneath some of the appressoria, but this plant response was similar in induced and non-induced plants. Staining with aniline blue indicated that callose deposition was not involved in induced resistance. Thus, none of the cytologically investigated plant reactions correlated with the reduced penetration frequency observed. In the mesophyll, however, the cytological picture corresponding to a hypersensitive reaction occurred more often in induced plants. It is concluded that reduction of disease severity by induction is the result of the combined action of several successive defence reactions.Dedicated to the memory of Professor H. Grisebach  相似文献   

2.
Systemically induced resistance against Phytophthora infestans in the potato cultivar ‘Bintje’ was studied histologically at the light microscopy level on the leaf surface, in the epidermis and in the mesophyll of challenged potato leaves. Systemic disease resistance was induced by a local pre-infection with the same fungus. On the leaf surface of induced plants, the germination of cysts was enhanced. In the epidermis of induced plants, papilla deposition increased and penetration decreased, whereas in the mesophyll of induced plants the spread of hyphae was reduced. It is suggested that the reduction of disease severity in induced plants is the result of the combined action of several successive defence reactions.  相似文献   

3.
Pisum sativum L. myc mutants which fail to form arbuscular mycorrhiza have recently been identified amongst nod mutants (Duc et al., 1989, Plant Sci. 60, 215–222). The reason for this resistance to symbiotic fungi has been investigated in the case of a locus a mutant (P2) inoculated with Glomus mosseae (Nicol. and Gerd.) Gerd, and Trappe. The fungal symbiont formed viable appressoria in contact with the root surface but its development was stopped at the root epidermis. Abundant material was deposited on the inner face of root cell walls adjacent to the appressoria in the P2 mutant, but not in the wild-genotype parent cultivar (Frisson) forming a symbiotic mycorrhizal infection. Fluorescence, histochemical, cytochemical and immunocytological approaches were used to characterize the paramural deposits in epidermal and hypodermal cells of the mutant. Strong fluorescence under blue light indicated the accumulation of phenolic compounds although polymers like lignin or suberin were not localized. Proteins and glycoproteins were homogeneously distributed within the paramural deposits. In the latter, the periodic acid-thiocarbohydrazide-silver proteinate (PATAg) reaction for 1,4-polysaccharide detection showed a heterogeneous composition with electron-dense points surrounded by non-reactive material, but cytological tests for cellulose and pectin gave weak responses as compared to epidermal and hypodermal walls of the wild genotype. -1,3-Glucans indicative of callose were detected by in-situ immunolocalization in the paramural deposits below appressoria on mutant roots, but not in walls of the wild genotype. Thus, appressorium formation by G. mosseae on roots of the locus a P. sativum mutant elicits wall modifications usually associated with activation of defence responses to pathogens. It is proposed that this locus must be involved in a key event in symbiotic infection processes in P. sativum, and the possible role of complex regulatory interactions between symbiosis and defence genes in endomycorrhiza development is discussed.Abbreviations DAPI 4,6-diamino-2-phenylindole - FDA fluo-rescein diacetate - PATAg periodic acid-thiocarbohydrazide-silver proteinate The authors are grateful to C. Arnould for technical assistance, K. Niehaus for the purified Sirofluor, K. Roberts for the AFRC JIM5 antibody and J. Lherminier (INRA, Dijon, France), for useful discussion. This collaborative research programme was financially supported by MRT, INRA, EPR-Bourgogne (grant to A.G., Contrat de Plan project 3060A), EEC COST ACTION 8.10 (Endomycorrhizas) and the National Research Council of Italy, Special Project RAISA, Sub-project N.2, Paper N. 801  相似文献   

4.
Infection of cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) with the bacterial pathogen Erwinia tracheiphila E. F. Smith causes vascular wilt disease in leaves, which may alter the suitability of the host plant for insects and other pathogens. In this study, densities of spotted (Diabrotica undecimpunctata howardi Barber) and striped (Acalymma vittata (Fab.) cucumber beetles (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) were higher on wilted leaves of mature and seedling field plants inoculated with E. tracheiphila. Bacterial infection or feeding by D. undecimpunctata howardii beetles increased total peroxidase enzyme activity in inoculated or infested leaves of greenhouse seedlings, but only beetle feeding induced higher activities in untreated systemic leaves on the same plants. Neither bacterial infection nor beetle infestation led to the development of systemic acquired resistance (SAR) to the fungal pathogen Colletotrichum orbiculare (Berk & Mont.) Arx. Susceptibility to this fungus was greater on E. tracheiphila-infected plants than on controls. The positive association between leaf wilt symptom development and beetle occurrence thus occurs in the presence of an oxidative but not anti-pathogenic response induced by both the insect and the pathogen.  相似文献   

5.
Differences in water binding were measured in the leaf cells ofMesembryanthemum crystallinum L. plants grown under high-salinity conditions by using nuclear-magnetic-resonance (NMR) imaging. The 7-Tesla proton NMR imaging system yielded a spatial resolution of 20·20·100 m3. Images recorded with different spin-echo times (4.4 ms to 18 ms) showed that the water concentrations in the bladder cells (located on the upper and lower leaf surface), in the mesophyll cells and in the water-conducting vessels were nearly identical. All of the water in the bladder cells and in the water-conducting vessels was found to be mobile, whilst part of the water in the mesophyll cells was bound. Patches of mesophyll cells could be identified which bound water more strongly than the surrounding mesophyll cells. Optical investigations of leaf cross-sections revealed two types of mesophyll cells of different sizes and chloroplast contents. It is therefore likely that in the small-sized mesophyll cells water is strongly bound. A long-term asymmetric water exchange between the mesophyll cells and the bladder cells during Crassulacean acid metabolism has been described in the literature. The high density of these mesophyll cells in the lower epidermis is a possible cause of this asymmetry.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - NMR nuclear magnetic resonance - TE spin-echo time  相似文献   

6.
Summary The effects of saline conditions on the water relations of cells in intact leaf tissue of the facultative CAM plantMesembryanthemum crystallinum were studied using the pressure probe technique. During a 12-hr light/dark regime a maximum in turgor pressure was recorded for the mesophyll cells of salttreated (CAM) plants at the beginning of the light period followed 6 hr later by a pressure maximum in the bladder cells of the upper epidermis. In contrast, the turgor pressure in the bladder cells of the lower epidermis remained constant during light/dark regime. Turgor pressure maxima were not observed in untreated (C3) plants.This finding strongly supports the assumption that water movement during malate accumulation and degradation in salttreated plants occurs predominantly between the mesophyll cells and the bladder cells of the upper epidermis. The necessary calculations take differences in the compartment volumes and in the elastic moduli of the cell walls () of the bladder cells of the lower and upper epidermis into account.Measurements of the kinetics of water transport showed that the half-time of water exchange for the two sorts of bladder cells were nearly identical in CAM plants and in C3 plants. The absolute values of the half-times increased by about 45% in salttreated plants (about 113 sec) compared to the control plants (78 sec). Simultaneously, the half-time of water exchange of the mesophyll cells increased by about 60% from 14 sec (untreated plants) to 22 sec (salt-exposed plants). The leaves of this plant are apparently able to closely maintain the time of propagation of short-term osmotic pressure changes over a large salinity range.A cumulative plot of the data measured on both C3 and CAM plants showed that the differences between the values of the elastic moduli of bladder cells from the lower and from the upper epidermis are due to differences in volume and suggested that the intrinsic elastic properties of the differently located bladder cells of C3 and CAM plants were identical.A cumulative plot of the hydraulic conductivity of the membrane obtained both on mesophyll and on bladder cells of salttreated and of untreated plantsvs. the individual turgor pressure yielded a relationship well-known from giant algal cells and some higher plant cells: The hydraulic conductivity increased at very low pressure, indicating that the water permeability properties of the membrane of the various cell types of C3 and CAM plants are pressure dependent, but otherwise identical.The results suggest that a few fundamental physical relationships control the adaptation of the tissue cells to salinity.  相似文献   

7.
Chitosan (CHT), a deacetylated chitin derivative, and benzo-(1,2,3)-thiadiazole-7-carbothioic acid S-methyl ester (BTH), a non toxic synthetic functional analogue of salicylic acid, were applied as foliar spray to barley plants (Hordeum vulgare L.), to compare their effectiveness in inducing resistance against Blumeria graminis f. sp. hordei and to investigate the underlying defence response. After an induction phase of 3 days (IP, time elapsed between treatment and fungal inoculation) both compounds reduced significantly the infection on the primary leaf, namely of 55.5% for CHT and of 68.9% for BTH, showing the induction of a good level of local resistance (LAR). A 5-day IP further reduced the infected areas in BTH treated plants (−77.2%) but not in CHT treated ones (−47.1%). Furthermore, both CHT and BTH also induced SAR, being the infection in the second non treated leaves reduced of 57% and 76.2%, respectively, as evaluated at 10-day IP. Both BTH and CHT induced oxidative burst and phenolic compound deposition in treated leaves, creating an hostile environment that slowed down the fungal spreading by impairing haustorium development. However, the greater efficacy of BTH was possibly due to: i) a greater reinforcement of papilla; ii) a higher level and the more homogeneous diffusion of H2O2 in the treated leaf tissues and iii) an induced hypersensitive-like response in many penetrated cells.  相似文献   

8.
Chye ML  Zhao KJ  He ZM  Ramalingam S  Fung KL 《Planta》2005,220(5):717-730
Brassica juncea BjCHI1 is a unique chitinase with two chitin-binding domains. Here, we show that, unlike other chitinases, potato-expressed BjCHI1 shows hemagglutination ability. BjCHI1 expression in B. juncea seedlings is induced by Rhizoctonia solani infection, suggesting its protective role against this fungus. To verify this, transgenic potato (Solanum tuberosum L. cv. Desiree) plants expressing BjCHI1 generated by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation were challenged with R. solani. We also transformed potato with a cDNA encoding Hevea brasiliensis -1,3-glucanase, designated HbGLU, and a pBI121-derivative that contains cDNAs encoding both BjCHI1 and HbGLU. In vitro fungal bioassays using Trichoderma viride showed that extracts from transgenic potato lines co-expressing BjCHI1 and HbGLU inhibited fungal growth better than extracts from transgenic potato expressing either BjCHI1 or HbGLU, suggesting a synergistic effect. Consistently, in vivo fungal bioassays with soil-borne R. solani on young transgenic potato plants indicated that the co-expressing plants showed healthier root development than untransformed plants or those that expressed either BjCHI1 or HbGLU. Light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy revealed abundant intact R. solani hyphae and monilioid cells in untransformed roots and disintegrated fungus in the BjCHI1-expressing and the BjCHI1 and HbGLU co-expressing plants. Observations of collapsed epidermal cells in the co-expressing potato roots suggest that these proteins effectively degrade the fungal cell wall, producing elicitors that initiate other defense responses causing epidermal cell collapse that ultimately restricts further fungal penetration.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Restricted (non-systemic) inoculation of cucurbits, green bean, tobacco, and other plants with certain viruses, bacteria, or fungi has been shown to induce persistent, systemic resistance to a wide range of diseases caused by diverse pathogens. The non-specificity of this response has fueled speculation that it may also affect plant suitability for arthropod herbivores, and there is limited evidence, mainly from work with tobacco, which suggests that this may indeed occur. Young cucumber plants were immunized by restricted infection of a lower leaf with tobacco necrosis virus (TNV), and upper leaves were later challenged with anthracnose fungus, Colletotrichum lagenarium, to confirm induction of systemic resistance to a different pathogen. The response of arthropod herbivores was simultaneously measured on non-infected, systemically protected leaves of the same plants. As has been reported before, immunization with TNV gave a high degree of protection from C. lagenarium, reducing the number of lesions and the area of fungal necrosis by 65–93%. However, there was no systemic effect on population growth of twospotted spider mites, Tetranychus urticae Koch, on upper leaves, nor did restricted TNV infection of leaf tissue on one side of the mid-vein systemically affect mite performance on the opposite, virus-free side of the leaf. Similarly, there were no effects on growth rate, pupal weight, or survival when fall armyworm larvae were reared on systemically protected leaves from induced plants. In free-choice tests, greenhouse whiteflies oviposited indiscriminately on induced and control plants. Feeding preference of fall armyworms was variable, but striped cucumber beetles consistently fed more on induced than on control plants. There was no increase in levels of cucurbitacins, however, in systemically-protected foliage of induced plants. These findings indicate that pathogen-activated induced resistance of cucumber is unlikely to provide significant protection from herbivory. The mechanisms and specificity of induced resistance in cucurbits apparently differ in response to induction by pathogens or herbivores.  相似文献   

10.
Turgor (p) and osmotic potential (s) in epidermal and mesophyll cells, in-situ xylem water potential (-xyl) and gas exchange were measured during changes of air humidity and light in leaves ofTradescantia virginiana L., Turgor of single cells was determined using the pressure probe. Sap of individual cells was collected with the probe for measuring the freezing-point depression in a nanoliter osmometer. Turgor pressure was by 0.2 to 0.4 MPa larger in mesophyll cells than in epidermal cells. A water-potential gradient, which was dependent on the rate of transpiration, was found between epidermis and mesophyll and between tip and base of the test leaf. Step changes of humidity or light resulted in changes of epidermal and mesophyll turgor (p-epi, p-mes) and could be correlated with the transpiration rate. Osmotic potential was not affected by a step change of humidity or light. For the humidity-step experiments, stomatal conductance (g) increased with increasing epidermal turgor.g/p-epi appeared to be constant over a wide range of epidermal turgor pressures. In light-step experiments this type of response was not found and stomatal conductance could increase while epidermal turgor decreased.Symbols E transpiration - g leaf conductance - w leaf/air vapour concentration difference - -epi water potential of epidermal cells - -mes water potential of mesophyll cells - -xyl water potential of xylem - p-epi turgor pressure of epidermal cells - p-mes turgor pressure of mesophyll cells - s-epi osmotic potential of epidermal cells - s-mes osmotic potential of mesophyll cells  相似文献   

11.
This study investigated the demographic consequences of fungal infection of a perennial grass, Stipa leucotricha. The rate of parasitism of this grass by the host-specific, systemic fungus Atkinsonella texensis varies over short distances. Infection was frequent (57% of plants) in mottes (clusters of woody plants) but rarer in adjacent open grasslands (9%). To test the hypothesis that the relative performance of infected and uninfected plants differed in the two habitats, infected and uninfected genotypes were collected from mottes in a central Texas population, propagated in the green-house and then transplanted into the same site in replicate plots within mottes, at the edges of mottes, and in open grassy areas. Demographic data were recorded for 30 months over three growing seasons. Plants were observed to lose and gain infection. Infection had no significant effect on plant survival, tiller number or dry mass although infected plants tended to be larger. Uninfected plants had a significantly higher probability of setting seed but there were no differences in seed production by reproductive plants. There were significant effects of planting environment on all of these measures. Motte edges were most favorable for S. leucotricha transplants while motte interiors were least favorable and open areas were intermediate. There was no evidence of habitat x infection interactions; therefore the fungal infection had similar effects in different habitats. The high frequency of infection in motte habitats is best explained by more efficient contagious spread there. The favorability of motte edges for plant growth is substantially offset by higher infection rates at the edges of mottes.  相似文献   

12.
Haixin Xu  Kurt Mendgen 《Planta》1994,195(2):282-290
Te penetration hypha of basidiospore-derived infection structures of the cowpea rust fungus (Uromyces vignae Barclay) in epidermal cells of the nonhost, broad bean (Vicia faba L.), was studied with the electron microscope after high-pressure freezing and freeze substitution. After fungal invasion of the epidermis, a plug in the penetration hypha separated the infection structures on the cuticle from the intraepidermal vesicle of the fungus. The plug and the fungal cell wall reacted with a polyclonal 1,3-β-glucan antibody. The plug in the haploid stage seems to have a task similar to the septum formed in the diploid stage of the fungus. Around the penetration hypha, the plant wall stained darkly and a papilla was deposited by the plant. In the papilla, 1,3-β-glucans were labelled by a monoclonal and a polyclonal antibody. In the infected epidermal cell, clathrin-coated pits, coated vesicles, partially coated reticula and multivesicular bodies were found. The contents of the coated pits, coated vesicles, partially coated reticula and multivesicular bodies bound to monoclonal and polyclonal 1,3-β-glucan antibodies. Accumulation and uptake of this paramural material into the plant cell by endocytosis is concentrated at the fungal penetration site. It may influence the host-parasite interaction.  相似文献   

13.
M. Malone 《Planta》1992,187(4):505-510
Displacement transducers were used to demonstrate that localised wounding causes a rapid and systemic increase in leaf thickness in seedlings of wheat (Triticum durum Desf. cv. Iva). These increases are interpreted as reflecting wound-induced hydraulic signals. The duration of the wound-induced increase was found to be about 1 h or more, and it was shown that repeated wounds could induce repeated responses. The increase occurred even when plants had no access to an external water supply. Change in leaf thickness was shown closely to reflect change in leaf water potential. The velocity and kinetics of the wound-induced hydraulic signal were measured using multiple transducers ranged along a single leaf. The front of the signal was shown to travel through the plant at rates of at least 10 cm · s–1. Development of the increase in leaf thickness was found to be relatively faster furthest from the wound. Onset of the change in leaf thickness in leaves remote from the wound was shown to precede onset of changes in surface electrical potential (variation potential) which are also induced by wounding. In contrast to reports from other species, variation potentials in wheat were here shown to spread extremely rapidly, at rates similar to that of the hydraulic signal. These data support the view that wound-induced hydraulic signals are the trigger for variation potentials in wheat.Symbol: w water potential Grateful thanks are due to Paul Springer of the HRI (Wellesbourne) mechanical workshop for building equipment, and to H.G. Jones for helpful discussion.  相似文献   

14.
Seed predation,pathogen infection and life-history traits in Brassica rapa   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Herbivory and disease can shape the evolution of plant populations, but their joint effects are rarely investigated. Families of plants of Brassica rapa (Brassicaceae) were grown from seeds collected in two naturalized populations in an experimental garden. We examined leaf infection by the fungus Alternaria, seed predation by a gall midge (Cecidomyiidae) and plant life-history traits. Plants from one population had heavier seeds, were more likely to flower, had less fungal infection, had more seed predation and were more fecund. Fungal infection score and seed predation rate increased with plant size, but large plants still had the greatest number of undamaged fruits. Spatial heterogeneity in the experimental garden was significant; seed predation rate and fecundity varied among blocks. An apparent tradeoff existed between susceptibility to disease and seed predation: plants with the highest fungal infection score had the lowest seed predation rate. Alternaria infection varied between populations, but the disease had no effect on fecundity. Seed predation did reduce fecundity. Damaged fruits had 31.4% fewer intact seeds. However, evidence for additive genetic variation in resistance to seed predation was weak. Therefore, neither disease nor seed predation was likely to be a strong agent of genetically based fecundity selection.  相似文献   

15.
This study investigated the cellular and subcellular compartmentation of Ni in the Eurasian serpentine species Alyssum murale, Alyssum bracteatum and Cleome heratensis and a non-serpentine population of A. murale (as a control) grown in hydroponic culture. Plant growth responses and Ni uptake clearly revealed the higher Ni tolerance of serpentine plants than the non-serpentine plants. Serpentine A. murale and A. bracteatum grew better at elevated (0.01 mM) Ni in the nutrient solution, supporting the view that the Ni hyperaccumulators have a higher requirement for Ni than normal plants. Low shoot Ni content of C. heratensis in response to the high Ni treatments indicated that this species employs an avoidance strategy for Ni tolerance. Energy-dispersive X-ray microanalysis showed that Ni was highly concentrated in the cell walls and cell lumen, most likely the vacuoles, of leaf epidermis of A. murale and A. bracteatum rather than in the mesophyll cells. EDX spectra from leaves of the non-serpentine A. murale suggested that Ni accumulated in both epidermal and mesophyll cells but not in the epidermal cell walls. Growth reduction and Ni toxicity in plants of the non-serpentine A. murale could be due to accumulation of Ni in the lumen of leaf mesophyll cells. Our data suggest that cellular and subcellular compartmentation are both possible mechanisms for Ni tolerance employed by the serpentine A. murale and A. bracteatum.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The cytoskeleton in plant cells is a dynamic structure that can rapidly respond to extracellular stimuli. Alteration of the organization of microtubules and actin microfilaments was examined in mesophyll cells of flax, Linum usitatissimum L., during attempted infection by the flax rust fungus, Melampsora lini (Ehrenb.) Lev. Flax leaves that had been inoculated with either a compatible (yielding a susceptible reaction) or an incompatible (yielding a resistant reaction) strain of M. lini were embedded in butyl-methylmethacrylate resin; sections of this material were immunofluorescently labelled with anti-tubulin or anti-actin and examined using confocal laser scanning microscopy. In uninfected leaves, microtubules in the mesophyll cells formed a transverse array in the cell cortex. Microfilaments radiated through the cytoplasm from the nucleus. In an incompatible interaction, microtubules and microfilaments were extensively reorganized in mesophyll cells that were in contact with fungal infection hyphae or haustorial mother cells before penetration of the cell by the infection peg. After the initiation of haustorium development, microtubules disappeared from the infected cells, and growth of the haustoria ceased. In an incompatible interaction, hypersensitive cell death occurred in more than 70% of infected cells but occurred in less than 20% of cells in compatible interactions. After the infected cell had undergone hypersensitive cell death, the cytoskeleton in neighbouring cells became focused on the walls shared with the necrotic cell. In compatible interactions, reorganization of the cytoskeleton was either not observed at all or was observed much less frequently up to 48 h after inoculation.Abbreviations FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - WGA wheatgerm agglutinin We thank Dr. G.J. Lawrence for providing valuable discussions and materials.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of four polyamines, putrescine, cadaverine, spermidine and spermine, on arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) infection by Glomus intraradices was tested on Pisum sativum, cv. Frisson (nod+myc+) and two isogenic mutants of this cultivar, P56 (nod-myc+) and P2 (nod-myc-). Polyamines were applied at 0 and 5.10-4M as soil drenches. Endomycorrhizal infection parameters were measured 3 weeks after inoculation. Polyamine treatment significantly increased the frequency of mycorrhizal infection in the myc+ pea lines (cv. Frisson and P56) and the number of appressoria formed in the myc- line (P2). A positive correlation was found between polyamine chain length and their stimulation of fungal development. Results are discussed in relation to the possibility that polyamines may act as regulatory factors in plant-AM fungus interactions.  相似文献   

19.
Biomass production of micropropagated oregano was induced by inoculation with the fungus Glomus viscosum. The effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis on morphological and metabolic variations of regenerated oregano plants were investigated at different growth stages. AM greatly increased parameters such as plant leaf area, fresh and dry weight, number of spicasters and verticillasters in infected plants. An increase of the gland density, especially on the upper leaf epidermis, was also observed following the physiological ageing of the tissues. The in vitro plants of O. vulgare ssp. hirtum described in this study provided a qualitatively and quantitatively good source of essential oils that have a chemical profile comparable to that of the control mother plants with carvacrol as the main compound.  相似文献   

20.
  • 1 Cross‐effects between a herbivorous insect and a phytopathogenic fungus on their common host plant were examined. Specifically, we addressed the questions whether (i) infection of Chinese cabbage leaves by the fungus Alternaria brassicae affects the development and host selection behaviour of the leaf beetle Phaedon cochleariae and (ii) whether herbivory influences host suitability of Chinese cabbage for A. brassicae.
  • 2 Feeding on fungus‐infected leaves prolonged larval development and reduced pupal weight of P. cochleariae. Adult beetles avoided feeding and egg deposition on fungus‐infected leaves. In contrast to these local effects, no systemic effect of phytopathogenic infection on the herbivore was detected.
  • 3 Herbivory did not influence fungal growth neither locally nor systemically.
  • 4 Thus, our results demonstrate an asymmetric relationship between herbivore and fungus. Whereas herbivory had no visible impact on fungal growth, fungal infection of the plant induced local resistance against P. cochleariae.
  相似文献   

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