Circumstantial Evidence for Phytoalexin Involvement in the Resistance of Peanuts to Aspergillus flavus
- 1 March 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Microbiology Society in Microbiology
- Vol. 131 (3) , 487-494
- https://doi.org/10.1099/00221287-131-3-487
Abstract
Three stilbene phytoalexins, elicited by slicing and incubating imbibed peanut kernels under aerobic conditions, inhibited spore germination and hyphal extension of A. flavus with ED50 values in the range 4.9-12.8 .mu.g ml-1. Phytoalexin yield was dependent on cultivar, conditions and duration of incubation after slicing and crop history. The yield of phytoalexin from 10 cultivars studied after slicing and incubating at 25.degree. C for 24 h, ranged from 28-935 .mu.g/g fresh weight, and was negatively correlated with dry kernel colonization by A. flavus [r = -0.868 when plotted as 1n (phytoalexin concentration) against 1n (percentage peanut colonization)]. When the incubation period was extended to 96 h there was no such correlation. Reduced phytoalexin yields were obtained when sliced kernels of 1 cultivar studied were incubated in water or at 37.degree. C, and no phytoalexin was obtained when the slices were incubated under N2 gas or frozen before aerobic incubation. Drought stress during pod development in 4 cultivars studied reduced phytoalexin yields of sliced kernels incubated at 25.degree. C for 24 h by 17-65% compared with non-stressed controls.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Two novel stilbene phytoalexins from Arachis hypogaeaPhytochemistry, 1981
- Testa Comparisons of Four Peanut Cultivars 1Crop Science, 1977