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Disease lesion mimics in maize: I. Effect of genetic background,temperature, developmental age,and wounding on necrotic spot formation with Les1
Authors:DA Hoisington  MG Neuffer  Virginia Walbot
Institution:1. Department of Agronomy, Curtis Hall, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211 USA;2. Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305 USA
Abstract:Les1, a dominant gene of maize (Zea mays L.), results in the production of necrotic leaf spots. Expression of this trait is temperature sensitive, and the nonpermissive temperature for expression is determined by the genetic background in which the gene is placed. Exposure to nonpermissive conditions for 24–48 hr will induce lesion production in the most sensitive genotype. Lesions form first at the leaf tip, the oldest part of the leaf, and progress basipetally through fully expanded tissue. Leaves excised from plants grown at either permissive or nonpermissive temperatures and placed in water, gibberellic acid, or abscisic acid solutions form no new lesions at either 20 or 30°C, and the leaves senesce rapidly. However, when leaves excised from normal and Les1 plants are placed in kinetin, senescence is delayed and numerous lesions develop at 20°C on Les1 plants. Our results suggest that there is a developmental time window during which maize leaf cells can be induced to form lesions: cells must be fully elongated but not yet senescent. This hypothesis is strengthened by the observation that pinprick wounding of leaves induces lesions only in a band of tissue approximately 2 days younger than the area of the leaf currently producing lesions. Various models for the action of Les1 in causing discrete lesion formation are discussed.
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