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1.
An extract of frozen and thawed soybean (Glycine max L. Merr. cv. Wayne) stems is active, in wounded soybean cotyledons, as a heat-labile elicitor of phytoalexins. The elicitor activity of the extract is destroyed by heating to 95°C for 10 minutes. The fraction that contains heat-labile elicitor activity releases heat-stable elicitor-active molecules from purified soybean cell walls. Heat-labile elicitor activity voids a Bio-Gel P-6 column and can be absorbed onto and eluted from a DEAE Sephadex ion exchange column. Using the cotyledon phytoalexin elicitor assay, maximum heatlabile elicitor activity was obtained when soybean stems were extracted with acetate buffer at pH 6.0. Addition of 1 millimolar CaCl2 increased apparent heat-labile elicitor activity. The heat-labile elicitor stimulated maximum phytoalexin accumulation when applied to cotyledons immediately after the cotyledons were cut. Partially purified stem extracts lost heat-labile elicitor activity during storage for several days at 3°C. The possible role of a heat-labile elicitor in stimulation of phytoalexin accumulation by both abiotic and biotic elicitors is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Elicitors of phytoalexin accumulation in soybean (Glycine max L. Merr., cv Wayne) cotyledons were released from soybean cell walls and from citrus pectin by partial acid hydrolysis. These two hydrolysates yielded nearly identical distributions of elicitor activity when fractionated on anion-exchange columns. Chromatography of the pectin elicitor on gel filtration and high-pressure anion-exchange columns did not further purify the elicitor. Elicitor activity of the preparation was lost by treatment with either endo-α-1,4-polygalacturonase or pectate lyase. Glycosyl residue compositions of the purified elicitors from cell walls and pectin were both found to be approximately 98% galacturonosyl residues. Linkage analysis of the pectin elicitor showed that most, if not all, of the galacturonosyl residues were α-1,4-linked. The high-mass molecular ions detected by fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry of the most active elicitor fractions from cell walls and pectin both corresponded precisely to a molecule composed of 12 galacturonosyl residues. These results suggest that dodeca-α-1,4-d-galacturonide is the active elicitor, but the possibility remains that the active component could be a slightly modified oligogalacturonide present, but not detected, in the purified fractions.  相似文献   

3.
Recent studies have demonstrated that an apparently homogeneous preparation of an α-1,4-d-endopolygalacturonic acid lyase (EC 4.2.2.2) isolated from the phytopathogenic bacterium Erwinia carotovora induced phytoalexin accumulation in cotyledons of soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv Wayne) and that this pectin-degrading enzyme released heat-stable elicitors of phytoalexins from soybean cell walls, citrus pectin, and sodium polypectate (KR Davis et al. 1984 Plant Physiol 74: 52-60). The present paper reports the purification, by anion-exchange chromatography on QAE-Sephadex columns followed by gel-permeation chromatography on a Bio-Gel P-6 column, of the two fractions with highest specific elicitor activity present in a crude elicitor-preparation obtained by lyase treatment of sodium polypectate. Structural analysis of the fraction with highest specific elicitor activity indicated that the major, if not only, component was a decasaccharide of α-1,4-d-galactosyluronic acid that contained the expected product of lyase cleavage, 4-deoxy-β-l-5-threohexopyranos-4-enyluronic acid (4,5-unsaturated galactosyluronic acid), at the nonreducing terminus. This modified decagalacturonide fraction exhibited half-maximum and maximum elicitor activity at 1 microgram/cotyledon (6 micromolar) and 5 micrograms/cotyledon (32 micromolar) galactosyluronic acid equivalents, respectively. Reducing 90 to 95% of the carboxyl groups of the galactosyluronic acid residues abolished the elicitor activity of the decagalacturonide fraction. The second most elicitor-active fraction contained mostly undeca-α-1,4-d-galactosyluronic acid that contained 4,5-unsaturated galactosyluronic acid at the nonreducing termini. This fraction exhibited half-maximum and maximum elicitor activity at approximately 3 micrograms/cotyledon (17 micromolar) and 6 micrograms/cotyledon (34 micromolar) galactosyluronic acid equivalents, respectively. These results confirm and extend previous observations that oligogalacturonides derived from the pectic polysaccharides of plant cell walls can serve as regulatory molecules that induce phytoalexin accumulation in soybean. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that oligogalacturonides play a role in disease resistance in plants.  相似文献   

4.
Cell suspension cultures of parsley (Petroselinum crispum) accumulated coumarin phytoalexins and exhibited increased β-1,3-glucanase activity when treated with either a purified α-1,4-d-endopolygalacturonic acid lyase from Erwinia carotovora or oligogalacturonides solubilized from parsley cell walls by endopolygalacturonic acid lyase. Coumarin accumulation induced by the plant cell wall elicitor was preceded by increases in the activities of phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL), 4-coumarate:CoA ligase (4CL) and S-adenosyl-l-methionine:xanthotoxol O-methyltransferase (XMT). The time courses for the changes in these three enzyme activities were similar to those observed in cell cultures treated with a fungal glucan elicitor. The plant cell wall elicitor was found to act synergistically with the fungal glucan elicitor in the induction of coumarin phytoalexins. As much as a 10-fold stimulation in coumarin accumulation above the calculated additive response was observed in cell cultures treated with combinations of plant and fungal elicitors. The synergistic effect was also observed for the induction of PAL, 4CL, and XMT activities. These results demonstrate that plant cell wall elicitors induce at least two distinct biochemical responses in parsley cells and further support the role of oligogalacturonides as important regulators of plant defense.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Plants often respond to microbial infection by producing antimicrobial compounds called phytoalexins. Plants also produce phytoalexins in response to in vitro treatment with molecules called elicitors. Specific elicitors, including a hexa--glucosyl glucitol derived from fungal cell walls, the pectin-degrading enzyme endopolygalacturonic acid lyase, and oligogalacturonides obtained by either partial acid hydrolysis or enzymatic degradation of plant cell walls or citrus polygalacturonic acid, induce soybean (Glycine max. L.) cytoledons to accumulate phytoalexins. The experiments reported here demonstrate that the elicitor-active hexa--glucosyl glucitol acts synergistically with several biotic and abiotic elicitors in the induction of phytoalexins in soybean cotyledons. At concentrations below 50 ng/ml, the hexa--glucosyl glucitol does not induce significant phytoalexin accumulation. When assayed in combination with either endopolygalacturonic acid lyase or with a decagalacturonide released from citrus polygalacturonic acid by this lyase, however, the observed elicitor activity of the hexa--glucosyl glucitol is as much as 35-fold higher than the sum of the responses of these elicitors assayed separately. A similar synergism was also demonstrated for the combination of the hexa--glucosyl glucitol with dilute solutions of sodium acetate, sodium formate, or sodium propionate buffers. These buffers are thought to damage or kill plant cells, which may cause the release of oligogalacturonides from the plant cell wall. The results suggest that oligogalacturonides act as signals of tissue damage and, as such, can enhance the response of plant tissues to other elicitor-active molecules during the initiation of phytoalexin accumulation.Supported by the United States Department of Energy DE-ACO2-84ER13161. This paper is number XXXI in a series, Host-Pathogen Interactions. The preceding paper, Host-Pathogen Interactions XXX is Characterization of elicitors of phytoalexin accumulation in soybean released from soybean cells by endopolygalacturonic acid lyase, by K. R. Davis, A. G. Darvill, P. Albersheim, and A. Dell. Zeitschrift für Naturforsschung, in press.  相似文献   

6.
Three unique classes of carbohydrates were isolated from the hyphal cell walls of Phytophthora megasperma f.sp. glycinea (Pmg) and compared with other substances for their activity as elicitors of the phytoalexin glyceollin in soybean tissues. Glucomannans extracted from cell walls with soybean β-1,3-endoglucanase were purified and proved to be the most active elicitors yet reported. They were approximately 10 times more active in soybean cotyledons than the heterogeneous β-glucan elicitor fraction extracted from Pmg walls. In addition, the glucomannan fraction gave race-specific elicitor activity in soybean hypocotyls. Pronase was found to be a suitable reagent for the mild extraction of glycopeptides from Pmg cell walls. All of the carbohydrates isolated from Pmg cell walls possessed significant elicitor activity, but other glucans, a glucomannan and mannan from other sources, were much less active. Chitin and chitosan, reported to function as elicitors in other plants, had low activity in soybean cotyledons. Arachidonic acid was inactive, despite its previously observed elicitor activity in potato tubers. The results indicated that, for Pmg, the carbohydrate elicitor most probably involved in the initiation of phytoalexinmediated defense during fungus infection of soybean plants is the glucomannan fraction liberated by endoglucanase.  相似文献   

7.
The ability of β-glucosylase I, a soybean cell wall β-glucosyl hydrolase, to degrade elicitors of phytoalexin accumulation was studied. Extensive β-glucosylase I treatment of the glucan elicitor isolated from the mycelial walls of Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae results in hydrolysis of 77% of the glucosidic bonds of the elicitor and destruction of 94% of its activity. Soybean cell walls contain some additional factor, probably one or more additional enzymes, which can assist β-glucosylase I in hydrolyzing the glucan elicitor. This was demonstrated by the more rapid hydrolysis of the glucan elicitor by a mixture of soybean cell wall enzymes (containing β-glucosylase I). In a single treatment, the mixture of cell wall enzymes hydrolyzed 91% of the glucosidic bonds and destroyed 85% of the activity of the elicitor. The enzymes from soybean cell walls will also hydrolyze elicitor-active oligoglucosides prepared from the mycelial walls of Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae. The active oligoglucosides are more susceptible than the glucan elicitor to hydrolysis by these enzymes. The mixture of cell wall enzymes or β-glucosylase I, by itself, hydrolyzes more than 96% of the glucosidic bonds and destroys more than 99% of the activity of the oligoglucoside elicitor. Two possible advantages for the existence of these enzymes in the walls of soybean cells are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The patterns of substrate degradation by purified pectate lyase(PGL) (E.C. 4.2.2.2 [EC] ) from Erwinia carotovora and Bacillus polymyxawere compared. Reaction products released by both enzymes frompotato cell walls, sodium polypectate and citrus pectin wereseparated by anion exchange chromatography using a TSK DEAE-5PWcolumn and measured quantitatively. The relative amounts ofoligomers released by both enzymes varied, especially the levelof unsaturated tetramers. Degradation patterns also varied accordingto the substrate used and results with citrus pectin suggestedthat methylation reduced the ability of E. carotovora PGL torelease wall fragments. Oligomers released from potato cell walls by E. carotovora PGLwere pooled separately and assayed for phytoalexin elicitoractivity using the soybean cotyledon bioassay. Fractions containingdeca- and undecagalacturonides had the highest elicitor activitywhen tested at 5.0µg of uronic acid per cotyledon. Key words: Pectic enzyme, elicitor, phytoalexin  相似文献   

9.
Resistance of soybean (Glycine max L.) seedlings to Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae (Pms) is in part due to the accumulation in infected tissue of a compound which is toxic to Pms. The accumulation of this compound, a phytoalexin called glyceollin, is triggered by infection, but it can also be triggered by molecules, “elicitors,” present in cultures of Pms. The ability of the Pms elicitor to stimulate phytoalexin accumulation in soybean tissues has been used as the basis for biological assays of elicitor activity. Two bioassays were developed and characterized in this study of the Pms elicitor. These bioassays use the cotyledons and the hypocotyls of soybean seedlings. The cotyledon assay was used to characterize the extracellular Pms elicitor. This elicitor was isolated from Pms cultures and purified by ion exchange and molecular sieving chromatography. The extracellular Pms elicitor was determined to be a predominantly 3-linked glucan, which is similar in composition and structure to a polysaccharide component of Pms mycelial walls.  相似文献   

10.
An elicitor of phytoalexin accumulation (endogenous elicitor) is solubilized from purified cell walls of soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr., cv. Wayne) by extracting the walls with hot water or by subjecting the walls to partial acid hydrolysis. The endogenous elicitor obtained from soybean cell walls binds to an anion exchange resin. The elicitor-active material released from the resin contains oligosaccharides rich in galacturonic acid; small amounts of rhamnose and xylose are also present. The preponderance of galacturonic acid in the elicitor-active fragments suggests that the elicitor is, in fact, a fragment of a pectic polysaccharide. This possibility is supported by the observation that treatment of the wall fragments with a highly purified endopolygalacturonase destroys their ability to elicit phytoalexin accumulation. This observation, together with other evidence presented in this paper, suggests that galacturonic acid is an essential constituent of the elicitor-active wall fragments. Endogenous elicitors were also solubilized by partial hydrolysis from cell walls of suspension-cultured tobacco, sycamore, and wheat cells.  相似文献   

11.
A soluble elicitor of glyceollin accumulation was released from insoluble mycelial walls of Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae after incubation with soybean cotyledon tissue for as little as 2 minutes. Various enzymic and chemical treatments of the released elicitor indicated that the activity resided in a carbohydrate moiety, and gel filtration disclosed the presence of at least two active molecular species. Cell-free extracts from soybean cotyledons or hypocotyls also released soluble elicitors from fungal cell walls that were similar to those released by living cotyledon tissue. These results may suggest that contact of fungal pathogens with host tissues is required to release fungal wall elicitors which then initiate phytoalexin accumulation in the plant.  相似文献   

12.
Transformed root cultures of Lotus corniculatus L. cv. Leo weretreated with a range of thiol and carbohydrate elicitors. Boththiol reagents and fungal carbohydrate preparations resultedin an increase in the activity of phenylalanine ammonia lyase(PAL) in a concentration-dependent manner. One representativethiol elicitor, glutathione (GSH), and one fungal elicitor,derived from Rhynchosporium orthosporum autoclaved cell walls(Ro), were analysed in more detail. Both elicitors induced thetransient accumulation of vestitol, an isoflavan phytoalexin,in tissue and in culture medium. Treatment of Lotus root cultureswith the Ro elicitor resulted in a more rapid initial accumulationof this end product when compared with GSH, however, sativan(the 2–methoxy ester of vestitol) previously reportedto co-accumulate in Lotus leaves was only detected followingelicitation with high concentrations of GSH. Ro and GSH elicitorsalso induced the accumulation of a number of other phenylpropanoidcompounds putatively identified as chalcones. The addition ofthiol and carbohydrate elicitors to Lotus root cultures alsoresulted in characteristic changes in root morphology. Glutathione,in particular, resulted in the inhibition of root growth dueto differential damage of meristem cells. Key words: Lotus corniculatus, hairy roots, elicitors, phytoalexins.  相似文献   

13.
Fungal elicitor induced phytoalexin formation and the corresponding fluorescence transitions of the molecular probes pyranine and oxonol VI, in soybean (Glycine max Merr var Kent) and cotton (Gossypium arboreum L. Nanking) cell suspensions were both significantly affected by the age of the cells. During the lag phase and the beginning of the exponential growth phase both cultures exhibited stress responses (i.e. phytoalexin formation and molecular probe fluorescence transitions) in the absence of added elicitors. This behavior was termed autoelicitation because elicitation occurred without added external stimuli. In contrast, cells in the late exponential-early stationary phase were relatively unresponsive to elicitor. During intermediate growth periods the cell suspensions behaved optimally, producing no phytoalexins until stimulated with an elicitor. It would appear, therefore, that the culture period can be divided into 3 phases, with respect to susceptibility to fungal elicitors: a distinct autoelicitation period (immediately after transfer of the cells into fresh medium), followed by a period in which negligible amounts of phytoalexins are synthesized without elicitor, and culminating in a late period in which the cells respond poorly to elicitor. The onset and duration of these periods are somewhat different for soybean and cotton cells.  相似文献   

14.
Evidence has been obtained for the presence in filtrates of 3-day-old cultures of the fungus Rhizopus stolonifer grown on potato-dextrose medium of both high molecular weight and low molecular weight elicitors of the production of the phytoalexin casbene in cell-free extracts of castor bean (Ricinus communis L.) seedlings. The high molecular weight elicitor activity was purified by means of gel filtration chromatography. Both protein and carbohydrate are associated with the most purified fraction containing elicitor activity. The elicitor is inactivated by treatments at 60 C or higher temperatures for 15 minutes. The molecular weight of the purified elicitor was estimated from gel filtration chromatography in 10 mm Na-phosphate (pH 7) to be 30,000 ± 5,000. Treatments of the purified elicitor fraction with either sodium periodate or the nonspecific protease preparation, pronase, substantially reduced its activity as an elicitor of casbene production. On the basis of these properties it is concluded that the elicitor is most likely a protein and may be a glycoprotein. It is estimated that 2 × 10−8 m elicitor gives about a 14-fold increase in casbene synthetase activity in extracts of treated split seedlings in comparison with controls. This corresponds to about 50% of the maximal activity obtainable in this assay system developed to measure elicitor activity.  相似文献   

15.
Elicitor induction of phenylpropanoid metabolism was investigated in suspension-cultured cells of the fast-growing poplar hybrid (Populus trichocarpa Torr. & Gray × Populus deltoides Marsh) H11-11. Treatment of cells with polygalacturonic acid lyase or two fungal elicitors resulted in rapid and transient increases in extractable l-phenylalanine ammonia lyase and 4-coumarate:coenzyme A ligase enzyme activities. The substrate specificity of the inducible 4-coumarate:coenzyme A ligase enzyme activity appeared to differ from substrate specificity of 4-coumarate:coenzyme A ligase enzyme activity in untreated control cells. Large and transient increases in the accumulation of l-phenylalanine ammonia-lyase and 4-coumarate:coenzyme A ligase mRNAs preceded the increases in enzyme activities and were detectable by 30 minutes after the start of elicitor treatment. Chalcone synthase, cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase, and coniferin β-glucosidase enzyme activities were unaffected by the elicitors, but a large and transient increase in β-glucosidase activity capable of hydrolyzing 4-nitrophenyl-β-glucoside was observed. Subsequent to increases in l-phenylalanine ammonialyase and 4-coumarate:coenzyme A ligase enzyme activities, cell wall-bound thioglycolic acid-extractable compounds accumulated in elicitor-treated cultures, and these cells exhibited strong staining with phloroglucinol, suggesting the accumulation of wall-bound phenolic compounds.  相似文献   

16.
A novel thermophilic spore-forming anaerobic microorganism (strain Ab9) able to grow on citrus pectin and polygalacturonic acid (pectate) was isolated from a thermal spa in Italy. The newly isolated strain grows optimally at 70°C with a growth rate of 0.23 h−1 with pectin and 0.12 h−1 with pectate as substrates. Xylan, starch, and glycogen are also utilized as carbon sources and thermoactive xylanolytic (highest activity at 70°–75°C), amylolytic as well as pullulolytic enzymes (highest activity at 80°–85°C) are formed. Two thermoactive pectate lyases were isolated from the supernatant of a 300-l culture of isolate Ab9 after growth on citrus pectin. The two enzymes (lyases a and b) were purified to homogeneity by ammonium sulfate treatment, anion exchange chromatography, hydrophobic chromatography and finally by preparative gel electrophoresis. After sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) gel electrophoresis, lyase a appeared as a single polypeptide with a molecular mass of 135 000 Da whereas lyase b consisted of two subunits with molecular masses of 93 000 Da and 158 000 Da. Both enzymes displayed similar catalytic properties with optimal activity at pH 9.0 and 80°C. The enzymes were very stable at 70°C and at 80°C with a half-life of more than 60 min. The maximal activity of the purified lyases was observed with orange pectate (100%) and pectate-sodium salt (90%), whereas pectin was attacked to a much lesser extent (50%). The K m values of both lyases for pectate and citrus pectin were 0.5 g·l−1 and 5.0 g·l−1, respectively. After incubation with polygalacturonic acid, mono-, di-, and tri-galacturonate were detected as final products. A 2.5-fold increase of activity was obtained when pectate lyases were incubated in the presence of 1 mM Ca2+. The addition of 1 mM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) resulted in complete inhibition of the enzymes. These heat-stable enzymes represent the first pectate-lyases isolated and characterized from a thermophilic anaerobic bacterium. On the basis of the results of the 16S rRNA sequence comparisons and the observed phenotypic differences, we propose strain Ab9 as a new species of Thermoanaerobacter, namely Thermoanaerobacter italicus sp. nov. Received: May 25, 1997 / Accepted: June 5, 1997  相似文献   

17.
Ren YY  West CA 《Plant physiology》1992,99(3):1169-1178
Cell-free extracts of UV-irradiated rice (Oryza sativa L.) leaves have a much greater capacity for the synthesis from geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate of diterpene hydrocarbons, including the putative precursors of rice phytoalexins, than extracts of unstressed leaves (KA Wickham, CA West [1992] Arch Biochem Biophys 293: 320-332). An elicitor bioassay was developed on the basis of these observations in which 6-day-old rice cell suspension cultures were incubated for 40 hours with the substance to be tested, and an enzyme extract of the treated cells was assayed for its diterpene hydrocarbon synthesis activity as a measure of the response to elicitor. Four types of cell wall polysaccharides and oligosaccharide fragments that have elicitor activity for other plants were tested. Of these, polymeric chitin was the most active; a suspension concentration of approximately 7 micrograms per milliliter gave 50% of the maximum response in the bioassay. Chitosan and a branched β-1,3-glucan fraction from Phytophthora megasperma f. sp. glycinea cell walls were only weakly active, and a mixture of oligogalacturonides was only slightly active. A crude mycelial cell wall preparation from the rice pathogen, Fusarium moniliforme, gave a response comparable to that of chitin, and this activity was sensitive to predigestion of the cell wall material with chitinase before the elicitor assay. N-Acetylglucosamine, chitobiose, chitotriose, and chitotetrose were inactive as elicitors, whereas a mixture of chitin fragments solubilized from insoluble chitin by partial acid hydrolysis was highly active. Constitutive chitinase activity was detected in the culture filtrate and enzyme extract of cells from a 6-day-old rice cell culture; the amount of chitinase activity increased markedly in both the culture filtrate and cell extracts after treatment of the culture with chitin. We propose on the basis of these results that soluble chitin fragments released from fungal cell walls through the action of constitutive rice chitinases serve as biotic elicitors of defense-related responses in rice.  相似文献   

18.
An elicitor of phytoalexin production in soybean (Glycine max L.) tissues was isolated from purified Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae mycelial walls by a heat treatment similar to that used to solubilize the surface antigens from the cell walls of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The wall-released elicitor is a discrete, minor portion of the P. megasperma var. sojae mycelial walls. The elicitor released from the mycelial walls was divided by diethylaminoethylcellulose and concanavalin A-Sepharose chromatography into four fractions, each having different chemical characteristics. The four fractions were obtained from each of the three races of P. megasperma var. sojae. The corresponding fractions from each of the three races are very similar in composition and elicitor activity. The results suggest that the elicitor activity of each fraction resides in the glucan component of the fraction. Evidence is presented to demonstrate that the elicitors are not race-specific and that the accumulation of glyceollin is not sufficient to account for race-specific resistance.  相似文献   

19.
Soybean membrane preparations specifically bound [14C]mycolaminaran, a branched β-1,3-glucan produced by Phytophthora sp. which elicits production of the phytoalexin glyceollin in soybean tissues. A Scatchard plot of the binding data disclosed the presence of a single affinity class of binding sites with a Kd value of 11.5 micromolar for the glucan. To assess the physiologic importance of mycolaminaran binding in phytoalexin elicitation, several derivatives of mycolaminaran were prepared. Reduced mycolaminaran had slightly greater elicitor activity and binding affinity than the native substance, while periodinated mycolaminaran was virtually devoid of either elicitor activity orbinding capability. Phosphorylated mycolaminaran, on the other hand, gave values for both elicitor activity and membrane binding which were intermediate between the native and periodinated preparations. No other tested carbohydrates competed with the binding of [14C]mycolaminaran. Soybean membrane preparations contained β-1,3-endoglucanase activity that degraded mycolaminaran and reduced both its efficiency as a phytoalexin elicitor and its membrane binding at temperatures above 0°C. Once [14C]mycolaminaran bound to membranes, however, it was not appreciably susceptible to glucanase attack and could not be displaced with excess unlabeled ligand. Taken collectively, the observations suggest that the membrane binding sites are mycolaminaran-specific receptors which are physiologically involved in the initiation of phytoalexin production in soybean cotyledons. Because the binding of mycolaminaran to membranes was abolished by heat and proteolytic enzymes, the receptor is probably a protein(s) or glycoprotein(s).  相似文献   

20.
Eicosapentaenoic and arachidonic acids in extracts of Phytophthora infestans mycelium were identified as the most active elicitors of sesquiterpenoid phytoalexin accumulation in potato tuber slices. These fatty acids were found free or esterified in all fractions with elicitor activity including cell wall preparations. Yeast lipase released a major portion of eicosapentaenoic and arachidonic acids from lyophilized mycelium. Concentration response curves comparing the elicitor activity of the polyunsaturated fatty acids to a cell-free sonicate of P. infestans mycelium indicated that the elicitor activity of the sonicated mycelium exceeded that which would be obtained by the amount of eicosapentaenoic and arachidonic acids (free and esterified) present in the mycelium. Upon acid hydrolysis of lyophilized mycelium, elicitor activity was obtained only from the fatty acid fraction. However, the fatty acids accounted for only 21% of the activity of the unhydrolyzed mycelium and the residue did not enhance their activity. Centrifugation of the hydrolysate, obtained from lyophilized mycelium treated with 2n NaOH, 1 molarity NaBH4 at 100°C, yielded a supernatant fraction with little or no elicitor activity. Addition of this material to the fatty acids restored the activity to that which was present in the unhydrolyzed mycelium. The results indicate that the elicitor activity of the unsaturated fatty acids is enhanced by heat and base-stable factors in the mycelium.  相似文献   

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