The immobility of pectic substances in injured tomato leaves and its bearing on the identity of the wound hormone |
| |
Authors: | E A-H Baydoun S C Fry |
| |
Institution: | (1) Department of Botany, University of Edinburgh, The King's Buildings, Mayfield Road, EH9 3JH Edinburgh, UK;(2) Present address: Yarmouk University, Irbid, Jordan |
| |
Abstract: | It has been suggested that pectic polysaccharides (or oligosaccharides cleaved from them) are liberated from the cell wall upon wounding of leaf tissue, and that they act as long-distance hormones evoking a defence response in neighbouring uninjured leaves (P.D. bishop et al. 1981, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 78, 3536–3540, and cited literature). We have tested this hypothesis by infiltration of radioactive pectic fragments (rhamnogalacturonans and homogalacturonans of degrec of polymerisation down to 6) into wounds on tomato leaves. No radioactivity was exported from the treated leaf. 14C]Sucrose, applied in the same way, was effectively translocated, probably via the phloem. We suggest that pectic substances are not themselves long-distance wound hormones. The possibility remains that pectic substances, solubilised on wounding, act in the immediate vicinity of the wound to stimulate the dispatch of a second messenger, which would be the long-distance wound hormone.Abbreviations DP
degree of polymerisation
- PI
proteinase inhibitor protein
- PIIF
PI inducing factor
- QAE
quaternary aminoethyl
- TLC
thin-layer chromatography |
| |
Keywords: | Pectic oligosaccharide Wound hormone Lycopersicon (wound hormone) Proteinase inhibitor inducing factor |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|