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1.
Two purified oligosaccharide elicitors generatable from fungal cell walls, N-acetylchitoheptaose and a tetraglucosyl glucitol from rice blast fungus (Magnaporthe grisea), synergistically activated phytoalexin biosynthesis in cultured rice cells. Inhibition experiments for the binding of radiolabeled N-acetylchitooligosaccharide elicitor to the plasma membrane from rice cells indicate that the two elicitors are recognized by different receptors. These results also indicate the presence of a positive interaction between the signal transduction cascade downstream of each elicitor/receptor, which enhances resistance against pathogens.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
We are studying the cellular signaling pathway leading to pterocarpan phytoalexin biosynthesis in soybean that is induced by a branched hepta-β-glucoside originally isolated from the mycelial walls of the phytopathogenic oomycete Phytophthora sojae. Our research has focused on the specific recognition of the hepta-β-glucoside elicitor by binding proteins in soybean cells. Elicitor-binding proteins with properties expected of physiological receptors for the hepta-β-glucoside elicitor have been identified in soybean root membranes. These elicitor-binding proteins co-migrate with a plasma membrane marker (vanadate-sensitive H+-ATPase) on linear sucrose density gradients. Binding of a radio-iodinated derivative of the hepta-β-glucoside elicitor by membrane-localized elicitor-binding proteins is specific, reversible, saturable, and of high affinity (Kd? 1 nM). After solubilization with the nonionic detergent, n-dodecylsucrose, the elicitor-binding proteins retain their high affinity (Kd= 1.8 nM) for the radiolabeled elicitor and their binding specificity for elicitor-active oligoglucosides. A direct correlation is observed between the ability of oligoglucosides to displace labeled elicitor from the elicitor-binding proteins and the elicitor activity of the oligosaccharides. Thus, the elicitor-binding proteins recognize the same structural elements of the hepta-β-glucoside elicitor that are essential for its phytoalexin-inducing activity, suggesting that the binding proteins are physiological receptors for the elicitor. Current research is directed toward the purification of the hepta-β-glucoside elicitor-binding proteins by using ligand affinity chromatography. Purification and characterization of the hepta-β-glucoside binding proteins are among the first steps toward elucidating how the hepta-β-glucoside elicitor triggers the signal transduction pathway that ultimately leads to the synthesis of phytoalexins in soybean.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
The release of elicitor-active carbohydrates from fungal cell walls by beta-1,3-endoglucanase contained in host tissues has been implicated as one of the earliest processes in the interaction between soybean (Glycine max) and the fungal pathogen Phytophthora megasperma f. sp. glycinea leading to host defense responses such as phytoalexin production. The present study was conducted to evaluate the primary structure of the glucanase-released elicitor (RE). Gel-filtration chromatography of carbohydrates released from mycelial walls by purified soybean beta-1,3-endoglucanase resolved them into the four fractions (elicitor-active RE-I, -II, and -III and elicitor-inactive RE-IV). Sugar composition analysis indicated that all of the fractions were composed almost entirely of glucose. 1H- and 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance analysis indicated the presence of both beta-1,3- and beta-1,6-linkages for the elicitor-active RE-I, -II, and -III fractions and only beta-1,3 linkage for the elicitor-inactive RE-IV fraction. Methylation analysis and degradation studies employing beta-1,3-endo- and beta-1,3-exoglucanase further suggested that the basic structure of elicitor-active RE consists of beta-1,6-linked glucan backbone chains of various lengths with frequent side branches composed of beta-1,3-linked one or two glucose moieties. From these structural analyses of RE, a structural model of how RE is originally present in fungal cell walls and released by host beta-1,3-endoglucanase is also proposed.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
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   

11.
J J Cheong  R Alba  F Ct  J Enkerli    M G Hahn 《Plant physiology》1993,103(4):1173-1182
Total membranes prepared from roots of soybean (Glycine max L.) seedlings have previously been shown to contain proteinaceous binding site(s) for a hepta-beta-glucoside elicitor of phytoalexin accumulation. The hepta-beta-glucoside elicitor-binding proteins have now been shown to co-migrate with a plasma membrane marker enzyme (vanadate-sensitive H(+)-ATPase) on linear sucrose density gradients. With the use of detergents, the elicitor-binding proteins have been solubilized in functional form from soybean root membranes. The nonionic detergents n-dodecylsucrose, n-dodecylmaltoside, and Triton X-114, at concentrations of 5 to 10 mg/mL, each solubilizes between 50 and 60% of the elicitor-binding activity in a single extraction of the membranes. A zwitterionic detergent, N-dodecyl-N,N-dimethyl-3-ammonio-1-propane-sulfonate (ZW 3-12), also solubilizes about 40% of the total binding activity at detergent concentrations between 1 and 2 mg/mL, but the total binding activity recovered is only approximately 50% of that recovered with the nonionic detergents. The elicitor-binding proteins solubilized with either n-dodecylsucrose or ZW 3-12 retain the high affinity for radiolabeled hepta-beta-glucoside elicitor (apparent dissociation constant [Kd] = 1.8 nM and 1.4 nM, respectively) that was observed with the membrane-localized binding proteins (apparent Kd = 1 nM). Competitive ligand-binding experiments with several structurally related synthetic oligoglucosides demonstrate that the solubilized binding proteins retain specificity for elicitor-active oligosaccharides, irrespective of the detergent used for solubilization. Moreover, the binding affinities of the oligoglucosides for the solubilized binding proteins correlate well with their abilities to induce phytoalexin accumulation in soybean cotyledon tissue. Gel-permeation chromatography of n-dodecylsucrose-solubilized elicitor-binding proteins demonstrate that the bulk of the elicitor-binding activity is associated with large detergent-protein micelles (relative molecular weight > 400,000). Our results suggest that n-dodecylsucrose is a suitable detergent for solubilizing elicitor-binding proteins from soybean root membranes with minimal losses of binding activity. More importantly, we demonstrate that solubilization does not significantly after the binding properties of the proteins for elicitor-active oligoglucosides.  相似文献   

12.
The presence of a specific binding site for a hepta-beta-glucoside elicitor of phytoalexin accumulation has been demonstrated in soybean microsomal membranes. A tyramine conjugate of the elicitor-active hepta-beta-glucoside was prepared and radiolabeled with 125I. The labeled hepta-beta-glucoside-tyramine conjugate was used as a ligand in binding assays with a total membrane fraction prepared from soybean roots. Binding of the radiolabeled hepta-beta-glucoside elicitor was saturable, reversible, and with an affinity (apparent Kd = 7.5 x 10(-10) M) comparable with the concentration of hepta-beta-glucoside required for biological activity. A single class of hepta-beta-glucoside binding sites was found. The binding site was inactivated by proteolysis and by heat treatment, suggesting that the binding site is a protein or glycoprotein. Competitive inhibition of binding of the radiolabeled hepta-beta-glucoside elicitor by a number of structurally related oligoglucosides demonstrated a direct correlation between the binding affinities and the elicitor activities of these oligoglucosides. Thus, the hepta-beta-glucoside-binding protein fulfills criteria expected of a bona fide receptor for the elicitor-active oligosaccharin.  相似文献   

13.
Heat-labile elicitors of phytoalexin accumulation in soybeans (Glycine max L. Merr. cv Wayne) were detected in culture filtrates of Erwinia carotovora grown on a defined medium containing citrus pectin as the sole carbon source. The heat-labile elicitors were highly purified by cation-exchange chromatography on a CM-Sephadex (C-50) column, followed by agarose-affinity chromatography on a Bio-Gel A-0.5m gel filtration column. The heat-labile elicitor activity co-purified with two α-1,4-endopolygalacturonic acid lyases (EC 4·2·2·2). Endopolygalacturonic acid lyase activity appeared to be necessary for elicitor activity because heat-inactivated enzyme preparations did not elicit phytoalexins. The purified endopolygalacturonic acid lyases elicited pterocarpan phytoalexins at microbial-inhibitory concentrations in the soybean-cotyledon bioassay when applied at a concentration of 55 nanograms per milliliter (1 × 10−9 molar). One of these lyases released heat-stable elicitors from soybean cell walls, citrus pectin, and sodium polypectate. The heat-stable elicitor-active material solubilized from soybean cell walls by the lyase was composed of at least 90% (w/v) uronosyl residues. These results demonstrate that endopolygalacturonic acid lyase elicits phytoalexin accumulation by releasing fragments from pectic polysaccharides in plant cell walls.  相似文献   

14.
Plants recognize potential microbial pathogens through microbial‐associated molecular patterns (MAMPs) and activate a series of defense responses, including cell death and the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and diverse anti‐microbial secondary metabolites. Mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades are known to play a pivotal role in mediating MAMP signals; however, the signaling pathway from a MAPK cascade to the activation of defense responses is poorly understood. Here, we found in rice that the chitin elicitor, a fungal MAMP, activates two rice MAPKs (OsMPK3 and OsMPK6) and one MAPK kinase (OsMKK4). OsMPK6 was essential for the chitin elicitor‐induced biosynthesis of diterpenoid phytoalexins. Conditional expression of the active form of OsMKK4 (OsMKK4DD) induced extensive alterations in gene expression, which implied dynamic changes of metabolic flow from glycolysis to secondary metabolite biosynthesis while suppressing basic cellular activities such as translation and cell division. OsMKK4DD also induced various defense responses, such as cell death, biosynthesis of diterpenoid phytoalexins and lignin but not generation of extracellular ROS. OsMKK4DD‐induced cell death and expression of diterpenoid phytoalexin pathway genes, but not that of phenylpropanoid pathway genes, were dependent on OsMPK6. Collectively, the OsMKK4–OsMPK6 cascade plays a crucial role in reprogramming plant metabolism during MAMP‐triggered defense responses.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Presence of a high-affinity binding protein for N-acetylchitooligosaccharide (fragments of chitin) elicitor in the plasma membrane from rice leaf and root cells was shown by affinity labeling experiments with an 125I-labeled N-acetylchitooligosaccharide derivative. Binding studies also showed that binding site in the leaf cells has a high affinity to highly elicitor-active, larger chitin fragments but much lower or no affinity to less elicitor-active or elicitor-inactive oligosaccharides. The amount of the binding protein in the leaf cells was slightly smaller than that in the suspension-cultured cells but much larger compared to that in the root cells. These results indicate the possible- involvement of the elicitor binding protein in the perception of the elicitor signal in intact rice plant.  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
(1) The regulation of the accumulation of the isoflavonoid-derived phytoalexin phaseollin in cell suspension cultures of Dwarf French Bean (Phaseolus vulgaris/ has been investigated. (2) An elicitor preparation from cell walls of Colletotrichum lindemuthianum, the causal agent of anthracnose disease of French bean, caused a marked accumulation of phaseollin in the cultures. The elicitor induced phaseollin accumulation to a level of 60% that obtained with the artificial elicitor autoclaved ribonuclease A and was maximally active at a concentration (weight basis) of at least 50 times lower than required for maximal response to ribonuclease. (3) Elicitor preparations from cell walls of Phytophthora megasperma var. sojae, a fungal pathogen of soybean, and Botrytis cinerea, the common grey mould, were much less effective than the C. lindemuthianum wall-released elicitor. (4) There was a marked but transient increase in the extractable activity of phenylalanine ammonia-lyase, the enzyme catalysing the first reaction in the biosynthesis of phaseollin from L-phenylalanine, in response to the elicitor from C. lindemuthianum. (5) Comparative density labelling with 2H from 2H2O indicated that the elicitor stimulates de novo synthesis of phenylalanine ammonie findings provide the basis of a scheme for elicitor induction of phytoalexin accumulation.  相似文献   

20.
Plants use pattern recognition receptors to defend themselves from microbial pathogens. These receptors recognize pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) and activate signaling pathways that lead to immunity. In rice (Oryza sativa), the chitin elicitor binding protein (CEBiP) recognizes chitin oligosaccharides released from the cell walls of fungal pathogens. Here, we show that the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae overcomes this first line of plant defense by secreting an effector protein, Secreted LysM Protein1 (Slp1), during invasion of new rice cells. We demonstrate that Slp1 accumulates at the interface between the fungal cell wall and the rice plasma membrane, can bind to chitin, and is able to suppress chitin-induced plant immune responses, including generation of reactive oxygen species and plant defense gene expression. Furthermore, we show that Slp1 competes with CEBiP for binding of chitin oligosaccharides. Slp1 is required by M. oryzae for full virulence and exerts a significant effect on tissue invasion and disease lesion expansion. By contrast, gene silencing of CEBiP in rice allows M. oryzae to cause rice blast disease in the absence of Slp1. We propose that Slp1 sequesters chitin oligosaccharides to prevent PAMP-triggered immunity in rice, thereby facilitating rapid spread of the fungus within host tissue.  相似文献   

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