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1.
A β-glucan isolated from the mycelial walls of Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae and a glucan purified from yeast extract stimulate the accumulation of phytoalexins in red kidney bean, Phaseolus vulgaris, and stimulate the accumulation of the phytoalexin, rishitin, in potato tubers, Solanum tuberosum. These glucans have previously been shown to be potent elicitors of glyceollin accumulation in soybean, Glycine max.

Treatment of kidney bean cotyledons with the glucan elicitors resulted in the accumulation of at least five fungistatic compounds. These compounds migrate during thin layer chromatography identically to the fungistatic compounds which accumulate in kidney beans which have been inoculated with Colletotrichum lindemuthianum, a fungal pathogen of kidney beans.

Potatoes accumulate as much as 29 micrograms of rishitin per gram fresh weight following exposure to the glucan from Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae and as much as 19.5 micrograms of rishitin per gram fresh weight following exposure to yeast glucan. Potatoes accumulated 28 micrograms of rishitin per gram fresh weight following inoculation with live Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae.

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2.
《Phytochemistry》1995,40(3):739-743
A sensitive gas chromatography-mass spectrometry method is described for detection and quantification of small amounts of phytoalexins, especially glyceollins. This method allowed identification of canescacarpin (glyceollin V) besides appreciable amounts of glyceollin isomers I–III and glyceofuran in unchallenged parts of soybean seedlings. Based on this quantification method the glyceollin content of soybean roots, either untreated, wounded or incubated with a glucan elicitor from Phytophthora sojae, was compared. The proportions of glyceollin isomers in the mixture of compounds were determined in different soybean tissues. Single-ion monitoring revealed the presence of four additional glyceollin isomers with benzofuranoid structure.  相似文献   

3.
Soybean seedlings (Glycine max, cv. Harosoy 63) which had been inoculated in the hypocotyls with mycelium from either race 1 (incompatible) or race 3 (compatible) of Phytophthora megasperma f. sp. glycinea were pulse labeled with 14CO2. The time course of accumulation of glyceollin and daidzein and of 14C incorporation into these compounds was determined. Metabolic rates of glyceollin were measured by pulse-chase experiments. Differences in glyceollin accumulation between the incompatible and compatible interaction were not apparent before about 14 h after inoculation. Subsequently glyceollin accumulated to a higher level in the incompatible interaction. This difference is also reflected in the rate of 14C incorporation, which declines more rapidly in the compatible interaction. The apparent half-life of glyceollin metabolism was 28 ± 7 h for inoculation with race 1, while no metabolism was observed with race 3. In contrast to a previous report (M. Yoshikawa, K. Yamauchi, and H. Masago (1979)Physiol. Plant Pathol.14, 157–169), our data prove that the higher accumulation of glyceollin in the incompatible interaction is due to a longer duration of synthetic activity and that the level of glyceollin in both the incompatible and compatible interaction is determined predominantly by its rate of synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
《Plant science》1988,54(3):203-209
Immersion of roots of 2-day-old soybean seedlings (Glycine max cv. Harosoy 63) into solutions of several glucan elicitors caused the accumulation to various degrees of the soybean phytoalexin glyceollin. Laminarin and polytran proved to be more effective elicitors in this system than the glucan elicitor from Phytophthora megasperma f.sp. glycinea (Pmg). Digitonin and tomatin caused, in addition to glyceollin accumulation, the deposition of callose in the rhizodermis. Pretreatment of the soybean roots with laminarin effected an increase in resistance of the seedlings against a compatible race of Pmg.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
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   

7.
Cell wall preparations (elicitors) from Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae increase C2H4 formation, phenylalanine ammonia lyase activity, and glyceollin accumulation in soybean cotyledons within about 1.5, 3, and 6 hours after treatment, respectively. The immediate precursor of C2H4, 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid, stimulates C2H4 formation like the elicitor within 1.5 hours after administration, whereas phenylalanine ammonia lyase activity and glyceollin concentration remain unchanged. Aminoethoxyvinylglycine, a specific inhibitor of C2H4 formation in higher plants, inhibits elicitor-induced C2H4 formation by about 95% but has no effects on phenylalanine ammonia lyase or glyceollin accumulation. It was concluded that C2H4 is a signal accompanying the specific recognition process which finally leads to the induction of phytoalexin formation, but it is not functioning as a link or messenger in the induction sequence of glyceollin accumulation.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
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   

11.
The structures of the four wall-released elicitor fractions isolated from the Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae mycelial walls have been examined. The results demonstrate that fraction I is primarily composed of a branched β-1,3-glucan, similar in structure to the extracellular elicitors described previously (Ayers, A., J. Ebel, F. Finelli, N. Burger, and P. Albersheim. 1976. Plant Physiol. 57: 751-759). Fractions II and IV are primarily composed of a highly branched mannan-containing glycoprotein, with fraction IV richer in protein than fraction II. Fraction III contains, attached to protein, a mixture of the two polysaccharide types found in fraction I and in fractions II and IV. The structural data presented here, in concert with the biological data presented in the previous two papers (Ayers et al. 1976. Plant Physiol. 57: 751-759; 760-765), demonstrate that the only compound produced by P. megasperma var. sojae which contains elicitor activity is the glucan. Evidence is presented that the terminal glycosyl residues of the glucan are required for elicitor activity. In addition, it is demonstrated that 90% of the glucan can be removed enzymically without any loss of biological activity. The active residue of the enzymic digestion is a highly branched 3- and 3,6-linked glucan containing about 4% mannosyl residues. The results presented suggest that the mannosyl residues of the glucan, which represent only about 1% of the undegraded glucan, are likely to participate in the active site of this molecule. The role of elicitors and phytoalexins in host-pathogen interactions is discussed. Evidence for the existence of and possible identity of another factor, which determines race specificity of host-pathogen interactions, is summarized.  相似文献   

12.
The glucan elicitor isolated from the mycelial walls of Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae, the fungus which causes stem and root rot in soybeans, stimulates the activity of phenylalanine ammonia-lyase and the accumulation of glyceollin in suspension-cultured soybean cells. Nigeran, a commercially available fungal wall glucan, was the only other compound tested which has any activity in this system. Glyceollin is a phenylpropanoid-derived phytoalexin which is toxic to P. megasperma var. sojae. Evidence is presented to support the hypothesis that the action of elicitors in stimulating phytoalexin synthesis is not species or variety specific but, rather, is part of a general defensive response of plants.  相似文献   

13.
A radioimmunoassay for glyceollin I, the major phytoalexin produced by soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.), has been developed. Antibodies were raised in rabbits against a glyceollin I-bovine serum albumin conjugate. The antisera were used to establish a radioimmunoassay for glyceollin I using [125I]glyceollin I as the tracer. A logit plot of a standard concentration series yielded a straight line in the range of 1 to 100 picomoles (0.34-34 nanograms) of glyceollin I. The structurally related pterocarpan phytoalexins, glyceollins II and III, glyceollidin II and glycinol, which also accumulate in infected soybean tissue, show a low cross-reactivity in the radioimmunoassay (0.5-5% at 50% displacement of the tracer). Two related isoflavones present constitutively in soybean tissue, daidzein and genistein, have cross-reactivities of less than 0.84% and 1.1%, respectively. The radioimmunoassay permitted the quantitative determination of glyceollin I in 15-micrometer microtome sections of soybean hypocotyl tissue infected with zoospores of Phytophthora megasperma f. sp. glycinea.  相似文献   

14.
To elucidate the role of aquaporins in the control of the root pressure, we tested the effects of HgCl2 (aquaporin blocker) at concentrations from 10?8 to 10?2 M on the exudation rate (J w). Experiments were performed with detached roots of 5–7-day-old etiolated maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings. HgCl2 suppressed exudation by 50–70% at the concentration of 2 × 10?5 M. At the concentration of 2.5 × 10?4 M, HgCl2 reduced J w during first 20–40 min, but in 2 h, it activated exudation by ten and more times. In this case, the root and osmotic pressures of the exudates increased by 1.5 times. The hydraulic conductance reduced approximately by 30% during first 30 min and increased severalfold in 2 h. The temperature coefficient (Q10) of J w attained 14 in 2 h. At the concentration of 10?2 M, HgCl2-induced acceleration of exudation was replaced by its inhibition essentially immediately. We suggested that a driving force for HgCl2-induced stimulation of the J w might be an increase in the osmotic component of the root pressure or the involvement of its nonosmotic (so-called metabolic) component. The results allow a supposition that aquaporins are involved in the control of water transport in the root.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
HgCl2 was used at up to 10 mg l–1 as an elicitor of phytoalexins in sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam. cv Centennial) cell suspension cultures. Maximum stimulation of a coumarin compound was after one day of exposure using 1 mg HgCl2 l–1. The compound was identified by HPLC and GC-MS analyses as 7-hydroxycoumarin (umbelliferone).  相似文献   

17.
Tracer kinetic experiments were performed using [ureido-14C] citrulline, [1-14C]ornithine, and isotope trapping techniques to determine if arginine is synthesized via the urea cycle in developing cotyledons of Glycine max (L.) Merrill. Excised cotyledons were injected with the 14C-solution and incubated in sealed vials containing a CO2 trap. The free and protein amino acids were analyzed using high performance liquid chromatography and arginine-specific enzyme-linked assays. In the 14C-citrulline feeding experiment argininosuccinate was the most highly labeled compound after 5 minutes and it was the first compound to lose 14C later in the time course. Carbon-14 was also recovered in free arginine, protein arginine, and CO2 up to 4 hours after introduction of label. All of the 14C in free and protein arginine could be accounted for in the C-6 position. Metabolism of 14C-ornithine resulted in 14C-incorporation into citrulline and free and protein arginine and the evolution of 14CO2. Citrulline was the most highly labeled compound after 15 minutes and was the first compound to reach a steady state level of 14C. With the addition of 800 nanomoles unlabeled citrulline to the 14C-ornithine feeding solution citrulline was the only compound labeled after 5 minutes and the steady state level of 14C-citrulline increased 12-fold. The appearance of 14C in free arginine and protein arginine was also delayed. In both 14C-ornithine feedings all of the 14C in free and protein arginine could be accounted for in the C-1 position. Together, the data support the reaction sequence: ornithine → citrulline → argininosuccinate → arginine → protein arginine.  相似文献   

18.
Artificially wounded 22–27-day old developing cotton bolls were initially inoculated with, (1) a cell-free, hot water-soluble mycelial extract (CFME) of an atoxigenic strain of Aspergillus flavus or with, (2) chitosan lactate (CHL) or with, (3) CFME or CHL and then exposed to gaseous methyl jasmonate (MJ) or, (4) exposed to MJ alone. Five days after these treatments, the induction of the sesquiterpenoid naphthol phytoalexins, 2,7-dihydroxycadalene (DHC) and 2-hydroxy-7-methoxy cadalene (HMC), lacinilene C, lacinilene C7-methyl ether, and the coumarin phytoalexin-scopoletin was determined on the excised carpel discs surrounding the inoculated surfaces of the developing cotton bolls. The results indicated a two- or three-fold increase in the production of the phytoalexins when gaseous MJ was added in combination to the CFME or the CHL elicitors. In a separate experiment, 22–27-day old developing cotton bolls were pretreated for a five-day period as described above and then a spore suspension of a toxigenic strain of A. flavus was introduced into a second artificial wound which was produced adjacent to the first wound. On boll maturity, the cottonseeds located within the locules underlying the areas that were pretreated with both elicitors and MJ then later infected with toxigenic A. flavus exhibited a 75–95% aflatoxin B1 inhibition. These results suggest a host defense mechanism which may be triggered by both elicitors and MJ.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
An elicitor of glyceollin accumulation in soybeans (Glycine max L.) has been isolated from a commercially available extract of brewers' yeast. Yeast is not a known pathogen of plants. The elicitor was isolated by precipitation in 80% (v/v) ethanol followed by column chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, sulfopropyl-Sephadex, and concanavalin A-Sepharose. Compositional and structural analysis showed the elicitor to be a glucan containing terminal, 3-, 6-, and 3,6-linked glucosyl residues. The yeast elicitor stimulates the accumulation of glyceollin in the cotyledons and hypocotyls of soybeans when as little as 15 nanograms or 100 nanograms of the elicitor is applied to the respective tissues. The yeast elicitor is very similar in both structure and absolute elicitor activity to an elicitor isolated from the mycelial walls of Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae, a pathogen of soybeans. These and other results of this laboratory suggest that plants are able to respond to the presence of a wide range of fungi by recognizing, as foreign to the plant, structural polysaccharides of the mycelial walls of the fungi.  相似文献   

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