Oxidative burst: an early plant response to pathogen infection
- 15 March 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 322 (3), 681-692
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj3220681
Abstract
As plants are confined to the place where they grow, they have to develop a broad range of defence responses to cope with pathogenic infections. The oxidative burst, a rapid, transient, production of huge amounts of reactive oxygen species (ROS), is one of the earliest observable aspects of a plant's defence strategy. First this Review describes the chemistry of ROS (superoxide radical, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radical). Secondly, the role of ROS in defence responses is demonstrated, and some important issues are considered, such as: (1) which of the ROS is a major building element of the oxidative burst; (2) the spatial and temporal regulation of the oxidative burst; and (3) differences in the plant's responses to biotic and abiotic elicitation. Thirdly, the relationships between the oxidative burst and other plant defence responses are indicated. These include: (1) an oxygen consumption, (2) the production of phytoalexins, (3) systemic acquired resistance, (4) immobilization of plant cell wall proteins, (5) changes in membrane permeability and ion fluxes and (6) a putative role in hypersensitive cell death. Wherever possible, the comparisons with models applicable to animal systems are presented. Finally, the question of the origin of ROS in the oxidative burst is considered, and two major hypotheses, (1) the action of NADPH oxidase system analogous to that of animal phagocytes, and (2) the pH-dependent generation of hydrogen peroxide by a cell wall peroxidase, are presented. On the basis of this material, a third 'unifying' hypothesis is presented, where transient changes in the pH of the cell wall compartment are indicated as a core phenomenon in evoking ROS production. Additionally, a germin/oxalate oxidase system which generates H2O2 in response to pathogenic infection is also described.Keywords
This publication has 93 references indexed in Scilit:
- Death Don't Have No Mercy: Cell Death Programs in Plant-Microbe Interactions.Plant Cell, 1996
- Assembly of the Human Neutrophil NADPH Oxidase Involves Binding of p67 and Flavocytochrome to a Common Functional Domain in p47Published by Elsevier ,1996
- Plant and human neutrophil oxidative burst complexes contain immunologically related proteinsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - General Subjects, 1996
- Generation of active oxygen in elicited cells of Arabidopsis thaliana is mediated by a NADPH oxidase‐like enzymeFEBS Letters, 1996
- Regulation of Plant Defense Response to Fungal Pathogens: Two Types of Protein Kinases in the Reversible Phosphorylation of the Host Plasma Membrane H+-ATPase.Plant Cell, 1996
- Evidence against specific binding of salicylic acid to plant catalaseFEBS Letters, 1995
- Coordinated Activation of Programmed Cell Death and Defense Mechanisms in Transgenic Tobacco Plants Expressing a Bacterial Proton Pump.Plant Cell, 1995
- The regulation of superoxide production by the NADPH oxidase of neutrophils and other mammalian cellsBioEssays, 1994
- H2O2 from the oxidative burst orchestrates the plant hypersensitive disease resistance responseCell, 1994
- Plant Pathology: Paranoid plants have their genes examinedCurrent Biology, 1994