Acibenzolar-S-Methyl-Induced Resistance to Japanese Pear Scab Is Associated with Potentiation of Multiple Defense Responses
Open Access
- 1 June 2004
- journal article
- Published by Scientific Societies in Phytopathology®
- Vol. 94 (6) , 604-612
- https://doi.org/10.1094/phyto.2004.94.6.604
Abstract
This study reports the mode of action of acibenzolar-S-methyl (ASM) against Japanese pear scab, caused by Venturia nashicola. Pretreatment of potted Japanese pear trees with ASM reduced scab symptoms and potentiated several lines of plant defense response. This included transcripts encoding polygalacturonase-inhibiting protein (PGIP) that were highly and transiently promoted after scab inoculation of plants pretreated with ASM, suggesting a possible role for defenses involved in direct interaction with the pathogen. The activity of the key enzyme of phenylpropanoid pathway, phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL), was enhanced in scab-inoculated leaves pretreated with ASM only 7 days after inoculation, suggesting that it may play a minor role in induced resistance. In this work, salicylic acid (SA) accumulation was enhanced in ASM-treated leaves for the first time, according to an equivalent time course to that of PAL activity. However, a delayed induction of SA accumulation in ASM-treated leaves compared with kinetics of induction of several pathogenesis- related (PR) proteins or their encoding genes suggested that resistance triggered by ASM may be SA-independent. Among these PR proteins, PR-1, chitinase and PR-10 were promoted early by ASM after scab inoculation. Peroxidase, as well as enzymes involved in the oxidative burst such as superoxide dismutase, catalase, and ascorbate peroxidase were weakly activated with ASM treatment alone or pathogen inoculation alone and highly enhanced in ASM pretreated plants upon challenge inoculation, suggesting the occurrence of priming phenomenon during the interaction of Japanese pear-ASM-V. nashicola. An early potentiation of the activity of these enzymes after scab inoculation of leaves pretreated with ASM suggested that active oxygen species may be involved as a signal for the activation of PR proteins or genes.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of Treating Apple Trees with Acibenzolar-S-Methyl on Fire Blight and Expression of Pathogenesis-Related Protein GenesPlant Disease, 2002
- Isolation and characterization of a polygalacturonase-inhibiting protein from potato leaves. Accumulation in response tosalicylic acid, wounding and infectionPlant Physiology and Biochemistry, 2001
- Venturia nashicola, the scab fungus of Japanese and Chinese pears: a species distinct from V. pirinaMycological Research, 2000
- Accumulation of Salicylic Acid and 4-Hydroxybenzoic Acid in Phloem Fluids of Cucumber during Systemic Acquired Resistance Is Preceded by a Transient Increase in Phenylalanine Ammonia-Lyase Activity in Petioles and Stems1Plant Physiology, 1998
- THE OXIDATIVE BURST IN PLANT DISEASE RESISTANCEAnnual Review of Plant Biology, 1997
- Dichloroisonicotinic and salicylic acid, inducers of systemic acquired resistance, enhance fungal elicitor responses in parsley cellsThe Plant Journal, 1992
- Fungal- and Plant-Specific Gene Markers to Follow the Bean Anthracnose Infection Process and Normalize a Bean Chitinase mRNA InductionMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 1992
- Association of enhanced peroxidase activity with induced systemic resistance of cucumber to Colletotrichum lagenariumPhysiological Plant Pathology, 1982
- A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye bindingAnalytical Biochemistry, 1976
- Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4Nature, 1970