Host-Pathogen Interactions
Open Access
- 31 July 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 70 (2), 406-409
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.70.2.406
Abstract
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.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Host-Pathogen InteractionsPlant Physiology, 1981
- Host-Pathogen InteractionsPlant Physiology, 1981
- Host-pathogen interactions in plants. Plants, when exposed to oligosaccharides of fungal origin, defend themselves by accumulating antibiotics.The Journal of cell biology, 1978
- Phytoalexin production by hypocotyls of Phaseolus vulgaris in response to constitutive metabolites released by damaged bean cellsPhysiological Plant Pathology, 1978
- Phytoalexin formation in cell suspensions of Phaseolus vulgaris in response to an extract of bean hypocotylsPhytochemistry, 1978
- Host-Pathogen InteractionsPlant Physiology, 1976
- Host-Pathogen InteractionsPlant Physiology, 1976