Comparison of Proteinase Inhibitor-Inducing Activities and Phytoalexin Elicitor Activities of a Pure Fungal Endopolygalacturonase, Pectic Fragments, and Chitosans

Abstract
Rhizopus stolonifer endopolygalacturonase, an elicitor of casbene synthetase activity in castor bean seedlings, was found to be a potent elicitor of the phytoalexin pisatin in pea pods and of proteinase Inhibitor I in tomato leaves. The enzyme was an active elicitor or inducer only in its active native state; heat-denatured enzyme was inactive in all three systems. The activities of (a) the tomato pectic polysaccharide proteinase inhibitor-inducing factor, (b) a partially acid hydrolyzed proteinase inhibitor-inducing factor, (c) citrus pectic fragments, and (d) chitosan, were also compared in the three bioassay systems. The four oligosaccharide preparations were active in all three systems, but with different degrees of potency. In tomato leaves and pea pods, chitosans were most active, whereas in castor beans, the citrus pectic fragments were the best elicitors. The data presented support the hypothesis that plant and fungal cell wall fragments are important signals in mobilizing a wide variety of biochemically different types of plant defense responses, and that endopolygalacturonases play a key role in releasing the plant cell wall fragments during pest attacks.