Defence response of pepper (Capsicum annuum) suspension cells to Phytophthora capsici

Abstract
Cell suspension cultures of three cultivars of Capsicum annuum L., with different degrees of sensibility to the fungus Phytophthora capsici, responded to elicitation by both lyophilized mycelium and fungus filtrate. They showed conductivity changes, browning, production of the phytoalexin capsidiol and synthesis or accumulation of pathogenesis‐related (PR) proteins with glucanase (EC 3.2.1.39) and chitinase (EC 3.2.1.14) activities. The cultivation medium was optimised for growth of both the plant and the fungus in order to avoid any stress during their combination. The resistant cv. Smith‐5, showed a more rapid and intense response to the elicitor preparations than the sensitive cvs Americano and Yolo Wonder. This was particularly evident when the cell suspensions were elicited with the filtrate, when differences became clearly visible after only 6 h incubation. The greatest rate of capsidiol accumulation occurred after 18 h in the mycelium‐elicited cells and after 12 h in those elicited with the filtrate. These times are the optimal for capsidiol accumulation, and the phytoalexin is produced much more rapidly than it can be excreted into the extracellular medium. The inhibition threshold of fungal growth (300 µg capsidiol [g dry weight]−1) was reached only in the resistant cultivar. The induction of an intracellular glucanase (pI 8.9 and Rf 0.18) and an extracellular chitinase (pI 5.4 and Rf 0.70) only in the resistant cultivar 24 h after elicitation suggests that these enzymes are involved in the resistance to Phytophthora capsici, while other hydrolases common to all three cultivars form part of a more general defence. The results indicate that elicitation of pepper cell suspension cultures by signal molecules from P. capsici exhibits properties of a multicomponent dynamic system in which different protective mechanisms play complementary roles in the overall expression of the defence reaction. We confirm that the differential responses of resistant and susceptible pepper cultivars to P. capsici previously seen in plant stem sections are retained in suspension culture.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: