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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Planta 157 (1983), S. 180-189 
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Hypersensitivity ; Nicotiana (enzyme activity and virus infection) ; O-methyltransferase ; Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase ; Plasmolysis ; Tobacco mosaic virus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Tobacco varieties carrying the N gene from Nicotiana glutinosa respond to infection by Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV) by forming necrotic local lesions (hypersensitive reaction), thereby localizing the infection. In this study, infected mesophyll leaf tissue of N. tabacum Samsun NN was treated with the non-permeating, non-metabolizable carbohydrate mannitol. The local lesions developed under iso-osmotic conditions (0.28 M mannitol), though with a slight delay and with a reduced rate of growth, as compared to those on attached leaves. At increasing plasmolysing concentrations of mannitol, necrotization was progressively inhibited, but not completely suppressed. The leaf tissue produced tiny translucent zones, with a delay that increased between the virus inoculation and application of the plasmolytica. Activities of phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL, EC 4.3.1.5) and O-methyltransferase (OMT, EC 2.1.1.6) are strongly stimulated in hypersensitively reacting tobacco and were used as biochemical markers in the present study. This study was done to determine whether the inhibitory effect of plasmolysis on the elicitation of the hypersensitive response is due to a decrease in virus spread, resulting from the rupture of plasmodesmata or, at least in part, to metabolic alterations of the host cell exposed to osmotic stress. Since necrotization is normally preceded by intense virus multiplication, the inhibitory effects found for early applications (i.e., before local lesion appearance) of plasmolytica could easily be related to an inhibition of virus spread which also occurred in similarly treated leaf tissue of the systemically reacting variety Samsun. The most meaningful data were obtained from mannitol treatments performed on leaf tissue already carrying local lesions, i.e., in which the elicitor(s) and/or the factor(s) of necrotization were already operating. Under iso-osmotic conditions, we found the stimulated PAL and OMT activities characteristic of the hypersensitive response. At plasmolysing concentrations of mannitol, we observed the counteracting effects of two different mechanisms controlling the phenylpropanoid enzymes. Floating the leaf material on the liquid medium induced an ageing-like effect with a continuous increase in enzyme activities that was independent on osmotic pressure and sensitive to cycloheximide. At the same time, the stimulated enzyme activities related to hypersensitivity decreased at a rate related to osmotic pressure. Since PAL and OMT of tobacco leaves are long-lived enzymes, it is likely that the increased de novo synthesis of the enzymes was suppressed by plasmolysis while their degradation and/or inactivation was maintained or even increased. From these results it is concluded that the apparent inhibition of the hypersensitive response by plasmolysis is due to both a decrease in virus spead (artificially caused by the rupture of connections between cells) and to drastic metabolic alterations of the host cell exposed to high osmotic pressure.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Hypersensitivity ; Necrogenesis ; Nicotiana ; Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase ; Protoplasts ; Tobacco mosaic virus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Leaves of tobacco varieties carrying the N gene for hypersensitiviy react to tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) infection by forming necrotic lesions and by localizing the virus in the vicinity of these lesions. These changes are accompanied in the host by an increased metabolic activity, in particular by an increased production of phenolic compounds derived from phenylalanine. Necrogenesis apparently destroys cells which have become heavily infected despite this strong defense reaction. However, it has been demonstrated previously (Otsuki et al., 1972) that protoplasts derived from leaves which normally respond in vivo to virus inoculation by forming necrotic local lesions, show no such response when inoculated in vitro. In the present study we have investigated the effect of pre-infecting hypersensitive leaves with TMV on the production or the non-production of the factor(s) of necrosis at the level of either protoplasts or mesophyll cells isolated from these preinfected leaves. Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL), whose rate of synthesis has been shown (Duchesne et al., 1977) to increase in stimulated cells of infected leaves, was used as a biochemical marker in the search for the stimulus preceding necrogenesis. We found that this stimulus concerning PAL activity was never elicited in either protoplasts or mesophyll cells which were prepared just before the appearance of necrotic local lesions. This result did not depend on the conditions of pre-infection or on the methods used to isolate the protoplasts or mesophyll cells. We also assayed samples derived from pre-infected leaves that were already carrying local lesions, i.e., in which the stimulus and necrogenesis were already operating: not only did the isolated protoplasts and mesophyll cells not sustain the stimulus concerning PAL activity, but the stimulated enzyme activity decreased abruptly and, in most of the experiments, had disappeared within the time necessary for maceration. Evidence is presented showing that the non-elicitation or the abrupt decrease of stimulated PAL activity could not result from a selection of unstimulated cells or from a preferential destruction of stimulated cells during maceration of the leaves. Our results support the view that hypertonic osmotic pressure is responsible for the non-occurence of the hypersensitive response by acting according to one or both of the following processes: it suppresses the contacts through plasmodesmata between neighboring cells and, hence, it also suppresses the cell-to-cell diffusion of the factor(s) eliciting the stimulus; and/or since hypertonic osmotic pressure causes striking differences between leaf cells and protoplasts in total RNA and protein synthesis, these differences might include the suppression of synthesis of the elicitor of hypersensitivity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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