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1.
The chemical structure determination of two phytoalexins from wasabi (Wasabia japonica, syn. Eutrema wasabi), a plant resistant to virulent isolates of the blackleg fungus [Leptosphaeria maculans (Desm.) Ces. et de Not., asexual stage Phoma lingam (Tode ex Fr.) Desm.], as well as their synthesis and antifungal activity towards isolates of P. lingam and P. wasabiae is reported.  相似文献   

2.
The isolation, chemical structure elucidation, and bioactivity of polanrazines B-F, five new dioxopiperazines produced by isolates of the blackleg fungus [Phoma lingam, perfect stage Leptosphaeria maculans (Desm.) Ces. et de Not.] originating from Poland, are reported. Polanrazines C and E showed moderate but selective toxicity, causing necrotic and chlorotic lesions (1-3 mm diameter) on brown mustard leaves.  相似文献   

3.
Previous molecular chemotaxonomic analyses of isolates of the plant pathogenic fungus Leptosphaeria maculans (Desm.) Ces. et de Not. (asexual stage Phoma lingam (Tode ex Fr.) Desm.) in a chemically defined medium suggested that this species complex was composed of at least three distinct groups. Subsequently, a group within L. maculans was classified as Leptosphaeria biglobosa, on the basis of morphologic characteristics and the lack of sexual crossing. To obtain clarification regarding the metabolite profiles of the various groups or species of blackleg fungi, the objectives of this work were (i) to determine the chemical structures of metabolites produced by Canadian V isolates and Polish-type isolates in potato dextrose broth (PDB) and (ii) to determine the chemotaxonomic relationship among French isolates of L. biglobosa and among Canadian W isolates and Thlaspi isolates of L. maculans. Here, we report for the first time that Canadian V isolates grown in PDB produced 2,4-dihydroxy-3,6-dimethylbenzaldehyde, a metabolite never reported from L. maculans, but none of the usual phytotoxins (sirodesmins). In addition, we report a new metabolite, 2-[2-(5-hydroxybenzofuranyl)]-3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)propanenitrile, from Polish-type isolates of L. maculans grown in PDB and the metabolite profiles of 16 Thlaspi isolates. The metabolite profiles of Thlaspi isolates indicate that these are part of two distinct groups, the Polish W group and the Canadian W group, i.e., L. biglobosa. Finally, we demonstrate that the metabolite profiles of the French isolates classified as L. biglobosa are similar to those of Canadian W isolates.  相似文献   

4.
A comprehensive search for sesquiterpenic metabolites produced by isolates of the blackleg fungus [Leptosphaeria maculans (Desm.)] Ces. et de Not. [asexual stage Phoma lingam (Tode ex Fr.) Desm.] revealed that an isolate pathogenic on both canola and brown mustard (IBCN 18) and two isolates pathogenic on brown mustard (Laird 2 and Mayfair 2) produced similar sesquiterpenes. The isolation, chemical structure elucidation, and phytotoxicity of these new sesquiterpenes with silphinene and selinene type skeletons is reported. This is the first time that an isolate virulent on canola and brown mustard is found to produce metabolites characteristic of both virulent (sirodesmins) and avirulent (phomalairdenones) L. maculans/P. lingam. In the context of grouping the various isolates of L. maculans/P. lingam, this work suggests an additional pathogenicity group comprising isolates that produce both sirodesmins and phomalairdenones and are virulent on both canola and brown mustard.  相似文献   

5.
The chemical structure and bioactivity of phomalairdenone (7), a new sesquiterpenic host-selective phytotoxin produced by an unusual virulent type isolate of the blackleg fungus [Phoma lingam, perfect stage Leptosphaeria maculans (Desm.) Ces. et de Not.] are reported.  相似文献   

6.
Phytoalexins are inducible chemical defenses produced by plants in response to diverse forms of stress, including microbial attack. Our search for phytoalexins from cruciferous plants resistant to economically important fungal diseases led us to examine stinkweed or pennycress (Thlaspi arvense), a potential source of disease resistance to blackleg. We have investigated phytoalexin production in leaves of T. arvense under abiotic (copper chloride) and biotic elicitation by Leptosphaeria maculans (Desm.) Ces. et de Not. [asexual stage Phoma lingam (Tode ex Fr.) Desm.], and report here two phytoalexins, wasalexin A and arvelexin (4-methoxyindolyl-3-acetonitrile), their syntheses and antifungal activity against isolates of P. lingam/L. maculans, as well as the isolation of isovitexin, a constitutive glycosyl flavonoid of stinkweed, having antioxidant properties but devoid of antifungal activity.  相似文献   

7.
The spectrum of resistance to isolates of Leptosphaeria maculans and the map location of a new blackleg resistance gene found in the canola cultivar Brassica napus 'Surpass 400' are described. Two blackleg resistance genes, LepR1 and LepR2, from B. rapa subsp. sylvestris and introgressed in B. napus were identified previously. 'Surpass 400' also has blackleg resistance introgressed from B. rapa subsp. sylvestris. Using 31 diverse isolates of L. maculans, the disease reaction of 'Surpass 400' was compared with those of the resistant breeding lines AD9 (which contains LepR1), AD49 (which contains LepR2), and MC1-8 (which contains both LepR1 and LepR2). The disease reaction on 'Surpass 400' was different from those observed on AD9 and MC1-8, indicating that 'Surpass 400' carries neither LepR1 nor both LepR1 and LepR2 in combination. Disease reactions of 'Surpass 400' to most of the isolates tested were indistinguishable from those of AD49, which suggested 'Surpass 400' might contain LepR2 or a similar resistance gene. Classical genetic analysis of F1 and BC1 plants showed that a dominant allele conferred resistance to isolates of L. maculans in 'Surpass 400'. The resistance gene, which mapped to B. napus linkage group N10 in an interval of 2.9 cM flanked by microsatellite markers sR12281a and sN2428Rb and 11.7 cM below LepR2, was designated LepR3. A 9 cM region of the B. napus genome containing LepR3 was found to be syntenic with a segment of Arabidopsis chromosome 5.  相似文献   

8.
 A cell suspension culture assay to determine the phytotoxicity of the fungal toxins phomalide, a host-selective toxin produced by the fungus Phoma lingam (Tode ex Fr.) Desm., perfect stage Leptosphaeria maculans (Desm.) Ces. et de Not., and destruxin B, the major host-selective toxin produced by the fungus Alternaria brassicae (Berk.) Sacc., was carried out with three Brassica spp. It was established that phomalide was significantly less phytotoxic to Cutlass (Brassica juncea), the cultivar resistant to L. maculans, than to Westar (B. napus), the cultivar susceptible to L. maculans, at concentrations ≤2×10–5  M. Similar to phomalide, destruxin B, at concentrations ≤5×10–5  M, decreased the viability of cells of the cultivar resistant to A. brassicae (Ochre, Sinapis alba) less than the viability of cells of the susceptible cultivar (Westar, B. napus). Considering the high selectivity of phomalide and its direct correlation with plant disease resistance, phomalide may have great potential application in breeding programs screening/selecting for blackleg resistance in brassicas. Received: 23 November 1999 / Revision received: 11 April 2000 / Accepted: 8 May 2000  相似文献   

9.
The metabolism of the cruciferous phytoalexins brassinin and cyclobrassinin, and the related compounds indole-3-carboxaldehyde, glucobrassicin, and indole-3-acetaldoxime was investigated in various plant tissues of Brassica juncea and B. rapa. Metabolic studies with brassinin showed that stems of B. juncea metabolized radiolabeled brassinin to indole-3-acetic acid, via indole-3-carboxaldehyde, a detoxification pathway similar to that followed by the "blackleg" fungus (Phoma lingam/Leptosphaeria maculans). In addition, it was established that tetradeuterated brassinin was incorporated into the phytoalexin brassilexin in B. juncea and B. rapa. On the other hand, the tetradeuterated indole glucosinolate glucobrassicin was not incorporated into brassinin, although the chemical structures of brassinins and indole glucosinolates suggest an interconnected biogenesis. Importantly, tetradeuterated indole-3-acetaldoxime was an efficient precursor of phytoalexins brassinin, brassilexin, and spirobrassinin. Elicitation experiments in tissues of Brassica juncea and B. rapa showed that indole-3-acetonitrile was an inducible metabolite produced in leaves and stems of B. juncea but not in B. rapa. Indole-3-acetonitrile displayed antifungal activity similar to that of brassilexin, was metabolized by the blackleg fungus at slower rates than brassinin, cyclobrassinin, or brassilexin, and appeared to be involved in defense responses of B. juncea.  相似文献   

10.
The isolation and structure determination of phomapyrones D-G, three 2-pyrones and a coumarin, from a group of isolates of the fungal pathogen Leptosphaeria maculans (Desm.) Ces. et de Not., asexual stage Phoma lingam (Tode ex Fr.) Desm, is reported. As well, phomenin B, infectopyrone, and polanrazines B and C were also obtained for the first time from these isolates. In addition, based on results of incorporations of 13C-labeled acetate and malonate, and deuterated methionine, a polyketide pathway is proposed for the biosyntheses of phomapyrones.  相似文献   

11.
A thorough understanding of the relationships between plants and pathogens is essential if we are to continue to meet the agricultural needs of the world's growing population. The identification of genes underlying important quantitative trait loci is extremely challenging in complex genomes such as Brassica napus (canola, oilseed rape or rapeseed). However, recent advances in next-generation sequencing (NGS) enable much quicker identification of candidate genes for traits of interest. Here, we demonstrate this with the identification of candidate disease resistance genes from B.?napus for its most devastating fungal pathogen, Leptosphaeria maculans (blackleg fungus). These two species are locked in an evolutionary arms race whereby a gene-for-gene interaction confers either resistance or susceptibility in the plant depending on the genotype of the plant and pathogen. Preliminary analysis of the complete genome sequence of Brassica rapa, the diploid progenitor of B.?napus, identified numerous candidate genes with disease resistance characteristics, several of which were clustered around a region syntenic with a major locus (Rlm4) for blackleg resistance on A7 of B.?napus. Molecular analyses of the candidate genes using B.?napus NGS data are presented, and the difficulties associated with identifying functional gene copies within the highly duplicated Brassica genome are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Selecting insect-resistant plant varieties is a key component of integrated management programs of oligophagous pests such as diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella (L.) (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae), but rigorous research on important life history parameters of P. xylostella in relation to host plant resistance is rare. We evaluated six conventional brassicaceous species, namely, Brassica napus L. 'Q2', B. rapa L., B. juncea (L.) Czern., B. carinata L., B. oleracea L., and Sinapis alba L., and two herbicide-tolerant cultivars, namely, B. napus 'Liberty' and B. napus 'Conquest' for their resistance against P. xylostella. Brassicaceae species and cultivars varied considerably in their susceptibilities as hosts for P. xylostella. Sinapis alba and B. rapa plants were highly preferred by ovipositing females and trichome density on adaxial and abaxial leaf surfaces had nonsignificant effects on P. xylostella oviposition. Larval survival was similar on the genotypes we tested, but host plants significantly affected larval and pupal developmental time, herbivory, pupal weight, silk weight, adult body weight, forewing area and longevity (without food) of both male and female P. xylostella. Larval and pupal development of females was fastest on B. juncea and S. alba, respectively. Specimens reared on B. napus Liberty and B. oleracea, respectively, produced the lightest female and male pupae. Defoliation by both female and male larvae was highest on B. rapa, whereas least herbivory occurred on S. alba. Females reared on S. alba were heavier and lived longer in the absence of food than their counterparts raised on other tested host plants. Brassica oleracea could not compensate for larval feeding to the level of the other species we evaluated. B. napus Conquest, B. napus Q2, B. carinata, B. rapa, and S. alba produced, respectively, 1.6-, 1.8-, 1.8-, 3.9-, and 5.5-fold heavier root systems when infested than their uninfested counterparts, suggesting that these species were better able to tolerate P. xylostella infestations.  相似文献   

13.
Pedras MS  Yu Y 《Phytochemistry》2008,69(17):2966-2971
During a search for elicitors and phytotoxins produced by virulent isolates of the phytopathogenic fungus Leptosphaeria maculans (Desm.) Ces. et de Not. [asexual stage Phomalingam (Tode ex Fr.) Desm.], the selective phytotoxin maculansin A was isolated and its structure determined by analysis of spectroscopic data and chemical degradation. Maculansin A, a unique derivative of mannitol containing the unusual chromophore 2-isocyano-3-methyl-2-butenoyl, was isolated from potato dextrose cultures of L. maculans virulent on canola (Brassica napus L. cv. Westar). Surprisingly, maculansin A was more toxic to resistant plants (B. juncea L. cv. Cutlass, brown mustard) than to susceptible plants (canola). Maculansin A, however, did not elicit the production of phytoalexins either in resistant or susceptible plants. In addition, other maculansin type structures and the metabolite 2,4-dihydroxy-3,6-dimethylbenzaldehyde were isolated and the latter was found to be a strong inhibitor of root growth of both brown mustard and canola. Considering that L. maculans seems to be expanding its host range to infect brown mustard as well, maculansins could assist in chemotaxonomic studies to group the diverse isolates.  相似文献   

14.
The frequency of gene flow from Brassica napus L. (canola) to four wild relatives, Brassica rapa L., Raphanus raphanistrum L., Sinapis arvensis L. and Erucastrum gallicum (Willd.) O.E. Schulz, was assessed in greenhouse and/or field experiments, and actual rates measured in commercial fields in Canada. Various marker systems were used to detect hybrid individuals: herbicide resistance traits (HR), green fluorescent protein marker (GFP), species-specific amplified fragment length polymorphisms (AFLPs) and ploidy level. Hybridization between B. rapa and B. napus occurred in two field experiments (frequency approximately 7%) and in wild populations in commercial fields (approximately 13.6%). The higher frequency in commercial fields was most likely due to greater distance between B. rapa plants. All F(1) hybrids were morphologically similar to B. rapa, had B. napus- and B. rapa-specific AFLP markers and were triploid (AAC, 2n=29 chromosomes). They had reduced pollen viability (about 55%) and segregated for both self-incompatible and self-compatible individuals (the latter being a B. napus trait). In contrast, gene flow between R. raphanistrum and B. napus was very rare. A single R. raphanistrum x B. napus F1 hybrid was detected in 32,821 seedlings from the HR B. napus field experiment. The hybrid was morphologically similar to R. raphanistrum except for the presence of valves, a B. napus trait, in the distorted seed pods. It had a genomic structure consistent with the fusion of an unreduced gamete of R. raphanistrum and a reduced gamete of B. napus (RrRrAC, 2n=37), both B. napus- and R. raphanistrum-specific AFLP markers, and had <1% pollen viability. No hybrids were detected in the greenhouse experiments (1,534 seedlings), the GFP field experiment (4,059 seedlings) or in commercial fields in Québec and Alberta (22,114 seedlings). No S. arvensis or E. gallicum x B. napus hybrids were detected (42,828 and 21,841 seedlings, respectively) from commercial fields in Saskatchewan. These findings suggest that the probability of gene flow from transgenic B. napus to R. raphanistrum, S. arvensis or E. gallicum is very low (<2-5 x 10(-5)). However, transgenes can disperse in the environment via wild B. rapa in eastern Canada and possibly via commercial B. rapa volunteers in western Canada.  相似文献   

15.
Brassinin is a phytoalexin produced by plants from the family Brassicaceae that displays antifungal activity against a number of pathogens of Brassica species, including Leptosphaeria maculans (Desm.) Ces. et de Not. [asexual stage Phoma lingam (Tode ex Fr.) Desm.] and L. biglobosa. The interaction of a group of isolates of L. maculans virulent on brown mustard (Brassica juncea) with brassinin was investigated. The metabolic pathway for degradation of brassinin, the substrate selectivity of the putative detoxifying hydrolase, as well as the antifungal activity of metabolites and analogs of brassinin are reported. Brassinin hydrolase activity was detectable only in cell-free homogenates resulting from cultures induced with brassinin, N'-methylbrassinin, or camalexin. The phytoalexin camalexin was a substantially stronger inhibitor of these isolates than brassinin, causing complete growth inhibition at 0.5mM.  相似文献   

16.
Phyllotreta cruciferae is an important insect pest of spring-planted Brassica crops, especially during the seedling stage. To determine the effect of early season P. cruciferae infestation on seed yield, 10 genotypes from each of two canola species (Brassica napus L. and Brassica rapa L.) and two mustard species (Brassica juncea L. and Sinapis alba L.) were grown in 2 yr under three different P. cruciferae treatments: (1) no insecticide control; (2) foliar applications of endosulfan; and (3) carbofuran with seed at planting plus foliar application of carbaryl. Averaged over 10 genotypes, B. rapa showed most visible P. cruciferae injury and showed greatest yield reduction without insecticide application. Mustard species (S. alba and B. juncea) showed least visible injury and higher yield without insecticide compared with canola species (B. napus and B. rapa). Indeed, average seed yield of S. alba without insecticide was higher than either B. napus or B. rapa with most effective P. cruciferae control. Significant variation occurred within each species. A number of lines from B. napus, B. juncea, anid S. alba showed less feeding injury and yield reduction as a result of P. cruciferae infestation compared with other lines from the same species examined, thus having potential genetic background for developing resistant cultivars.  相似文献   

17.
Blackleg, caused by Leptosphaeria maculans, is one of the most important diseases of oilseed and vegetable crucifiers worldwide. The present study describes (1) the construction of a genetic linkage map, comprising 255 markers, based upon simple sequence repeats (SSR), sequence-related amplified polymorphism, sequence tagged sites, and EST-SSRs and (2) the localization of qualitative (race-specific) and quantitative (race non-specific) trait loci controlling blackleg resistance in a doubled-haploid population derived from the Australian canola (Brassica napus L.) cultivars Skipton and Ag-Spectrum using the whole-genome average interval mapping approach. Marker regression analyses revealed that at least 14 genomic regions with LOD ≥ 2.0 were associated with qualitative and quantitative blackleg resistance, explaining 4.6-88.9 % of genotypic variation. A major qualitative locus, designated RlmSkipton (Rlm4), was mapped on chromosome A7, within 0.8 cM of the SSR marker Xbrms075. Alignment of the molecular markers underlying this QTL region with the genome sequence data of B. rapa L. suggests that RlmSkipton is located approximately 80 kb from the Xbrms075 locus. Molecular marker-RlmSkipton linkage was further validated in an F(2) population from Skipton/Ag-Spectrum. Our results show that SSR markers linked to consistent genomic regions are suitable for enrichment of favourable alleles for blackleg resistance in canola breeding programs.  相似文献   

18.
The loculoascomycete Leptosphaeria maculans (anamorph: Phoma lingam) causes blackleg of Brassicas, including Brassica napus (canola or rapeseed). This fungus probably comprises several morphologically similar species; taxonomic relationships between them are being clarified and nomenclature is being revised. The pathotype ("A" group) responsible for major economic losses to canola has been studied in more detail than other members of this species complex and is the focus of this review. L. maculans is haploid, outcrossing, can be transformed, and has a genome size of about 34 Mb. Preliminary genetic and physical maps have been developed and three genes involved in host specificity have been mapped. As yet, few genes have been characterized. Chemical analysis of fungal secondary metabolites has aided understanding of taxonomic relationships and of the host-fungal interaction by the unraveling of pathways for detoxification of antimicrobial phytoalexins. Several phytotoxins (host and nonhost specific) have been identified and a complex pattern of regulation of their synthesis by fungal and host metabolites has been discovered.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Pedras MS  Jha M  Okeola OG 《Phytochemistry》2005,66(22):2609-2616
The impact of the phytoalexins camalexin and spirobrassinin on brassinin detoxification by Leptosphaeria maculans (Desm.) Ces. et de Not. [asexual stage Phoma lingam (Tode ex Fr.) Desm.], a pathogenic fungus prevalent on crucifers, was investigated. Brassinin is a plant metabolite of great significance due to its dual role both as an effective phytoalexin and as an early biosynthetic precursor of the majority of the phytoalexins produced by plants of the family Brassicaceae (Cruciferae). The rate of detoxification of brassinin in cultures of L. maculans increased substantially in the presence of camalexin, whereas spirobrassinin did not appear to have a detectable effect. In addition, the brassinin detoxifying activity of cell-free extracts obtained from cultures incubated with camalexin was substantially higher than that of control cell-free extracts or cultures incubated with spirobrassinin, and correlated positively with brassinin oxidase activity. The discovery of a potent synthetic modulator of brassinin oxidase activity, 3-phenylindole, and comparison with the commercial fungicide thiabendazole is also reported. The overall results indicate that brassinin oxidase production is induced by camalexin and 3-phenylindole but not by spirobrassinin or thiabendazole. Importantly, our work suggests that introduction of the camalexin pathway into plants that produce brassinin might make these plants more susceptible to L. maculans.  相似文献   

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