Phytoalexins
Phytoalexins
Phytoalexins
Abstract Inducible plant defence responses include antimicrobial compounds called phytoalexins, lytic enzymes, oxidizing agents, cell wall lignification and a number of pathogenesis related proteins. The antimicrobial properties of phytoalexins suggest that they are an important component of plant defence. A role for these compounds in defence has been revealed through several experimental approaches. Data have come, for example, through studies on the rate of phytoalexins in relation to cessation of pathogen development, quantification of phytoalexins at the infection site and relationship of pathogen virulence to the phytoalexin tolerance. Although there are some evidence suggesting a role for phytoalexins accumulation in resistance, there are also examples against it. Progress in the development of our understanding of the role of phytoalexins in resistance is discussed in this review.
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1997). In this case, host tissues often display activated defence functions that produce antimicrobial compounds, enzymes and structural reinforcement that may limit pathogen growth (Dixon and Lamb, 1999). Activated (infection-induced) defence mechanisms operates only once the pathogen attempts to infect the host, thus their products are normally either absent from healthy plant tissues, or present only in lower amounts than that can be detected during incompatible interactions. They therefore provide an excellent model for investigation of events involved in cellular signalling, and to evaluate the role played by specific defence mechanisms in resistance (Smith, 1996).
Phytoalexin concept Antimicrobial compounds from plants are broadly classified into two categories: phytoantipicins and phytoalexins (Mansfield, 1999). Phytoanticipins are described as "low molecular weight, antimicrobial compounds that are present in plants before challenge by micro-organisms, or are produced after infection solely, from pre-existing precursors". Phytoalexins are defined as "low molecular weight, anti-microbial compounds that are both synthesized and accumulated in plants after exposure to microorganisms or abiotic agents" (Paxton, 1980; VanEtten et al., 1994). Phytoalexins represents one component of a battery of induced defence mechanisms used by plants including lytic enzymes such as chitinases and glucanases, oxidizing agents, cell wall lignification and a number of pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins and transcripts of unknown functions (Dixon and Lamb, 1990; Lamb et al., 1989). It is important to recognise that phytoalexin accumulation may be part of a co-ordinated defence strategy, in which any one factor may alone be unable to account for restriction of the potential pathogen (Mansfield, 1999).
elicitors are not involved in normal host-pathogen interactions (Darvill and Albersheim, 1984). In natural conditions, the stimulus is provided by the presence of the micro-organism and its perception by the host initiates the chain of events leading to phytoalexin synthesis. Biotic elicitors may originate in the invading organism, in which case they are referred to as "exogenous", whereas "endogenous" elicitors are of plant origin and are generated by the interaction between micro-organism and plant. Molecules with elicitor activity have been identified across a wide range of structural types including polysaccharides, glycoproteins, lipids, lipopolysaccharides, oligosaccharides and even enzymes, though their activity can be attributed to their effect in releasing elicitor-active components from the cell walls of the pathogen or host (Anderson, 1989; Blein et al., 1991; Hahn et al., 1992; Ricker and Bostock, 1992; Alghisi and Favaron, 1995). Abiotic elicitors form a diverse collection of molecules that are not derived from natural sources, such as the tissues of the pathogen or host. Under normal circumstances, they would not be encountered by the plant. The group includes compounds such as fungicides; salts of heavy metals, for example Cu2+ and Hg2+; the detergents, basic molecules such as polylysine and histone; reagents that are intercalated DNA (Dixon et al., 1983; Darvill and Albersheim, 1984). Treatment of plant tissues with factors that cause stress, for example repeated freezing and thawing, wounding or exposure to UV light (Kodama et al., 1988; Kodama et al., 1992; Mert-Trk et al., 1998) can also induce phytoalexin synthesis.
Phytoalexins in disease resistance Phytoalexins accumulate at infection sites and they inhibit the growth of fungi and bacteria in vitro therefore, it is logical to consider them as possible plant-defence compounds against diseases caused by fungi and bacteria. Depending upon the phytoalexin, fungus and bioassay, the EC50 for fungi is generally 10-3 to 10-5 M (reviewed by Kuc, 1995). Thus they are comparatively weak as antifungal agents. Although there is no evidence that are phytoalexins are translocated, the speed of their accumulation and
Elicitors of phytoalexin accumulation The molecules that signal plants to begin the process of phytoalexin synthesis are called elicitors. Elicitors of biotic origin may be involved in the interaction of plants and potential pathogens, whereas abiotic
localization at the infection site may permit the pathogen to encounter concentrations far in excess of the EC50 at early stages in the infection process. There is evidence for this presumption. Concerning the accumulation of pisatin in pea and phaseollin in green bean, it was apparent that the phytoalexins accumulated to fungitoxic concentrations not only in inoculum droplets placed on opened pea or bean pods but also in the tissues immediately below the inoculum droplets (Cruickshank and Perrin, 1968). These data supported a role for phytoalexins in plant disease resistance, but there were and still are exceptions. There are also examples that phytoalexins accumulated during compatible plant-pathogen interactions. These include the induction of pisatin by the virulent Oomycete Aphanomyces eutiches (Pueppke and VanEtten, 1976) and by the pathogenic strains of the fungus Nectria hematococca and induction of spirobrassinin by virulent races of Leptosphaeria maculans (Pedras and Seguin-Swartz, 1992). Similarly Glazebrook and Ausubel (1994) reported that the virulent pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. maculicola elicits the synthesis of high levels of camalexin in Arabidopsis thaliana. Mert-Trk et al. (1998) also showed that camalexin accumulated during both compatible and incompatible interaction in A. thaliana when challenged with an Oomycete, Peronospora parasitica. If the results exemplified above are interpreted, in incompatible interactions, phytoalexin accumulation limits or stops pathogen growth, thereby conferring resistance to the plant (Figure 1). In compatible interactions, the pathogen apparently, either tolerates the accumulated phytoalexins, detoxifies them, suppresses phytoalexin accumulation, and/or avoids eliciting phytoalexin production (Mansfield, 1982).
Gene manipulation for resistance Phytoalexin definition described above does not include any criteria that would allow discrimination between a role for phytoalexins in defence versus just a response to stress. In order to evaluate the importance of phytoalexins in defence the following criteria can be used: 1. The restriction of the pathogen
development must be associated with phytoalexin production, 2. Phytoalexins must accumulate to antimicrobial levels at the infection site in resistant plants or cultivars that could result the cessation of the pathogen growth, 3. There must be strong evidence that the phytoalexins have vital importance in resistance, and absence of these compounds would result enhanced susceptibility (Hammerschmidt, 1999). The first two criteria are easy to satisfy through direct observation of pathogen development in relation to phytoalexin accumulation. The third criterion is the most difficult and complicated one that requires detailed analysis as exemplified below. A central part of evaluating the role of phytoalexins in resistance has been to manipulate phytoalexin accumulation synthesis with inhibitors and enhancers of phytoalexin synthesis and then to determine whether the degree of resistance is altered thereby. If phytoalexin accumulation makes a significant contribution to resistance, cultivars that are normally susceptible to a virulent race of pathogen would be expected to become more resistant, and cultivars that are resistant would become more susceptible to infection, according to whether the phytoalexin content is increased or decreased respectively. In order to find out the role of phytoalexins in resistance, a few elegant models have been studied. The gene for biosynthesis of stillbene phytoalexins has been transferred from Vitis vinifera (grapevine) to tobacco. In response to inoculation with Botrytis cinerea, the transformed plants accumulate mRNA for stilbene synthase, the enzyme specifically required for synthesis of the stilbene phytoalexin resveratrol, around the infection site. They also demonstrate an enhanced resistance to the pathogen that corresponds with accumulation of resveratrol to fungitoxic concentrations (Hain et al., 1993). This affords powerful evidence of the role of phytoalexin accumulation in disease resistance. Glazebrook and Ausubel (1994) and Glazebrook et al. (1997) isolated three phytoalexin-deficient (pad) mutants of A. thaliana accession Col-0 to help elucidate the role(s) of phytoalexins in plant-pathogen interactions. Infection by P. syringae induced the A. thaliana phytoalexin, camalexin, in the pad1, pad2 and pad3 mutants to 30, 10 and <1% (undetectable) of the
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Avirulent isolate
Growth inhibited by phytoanticipins Penetration prevented by cell wall alteration Inhibition by phytoanticipins Recognition HR or lesion formation Exposure to phytoanticipins Phytoalexin biosynthesis Phytoalexin accumulation
Attempted penetration Entry into plant Recognition process e.g. gene-for-gene interactions No recognition No HR Suppression of response No exposure to phytoanticipins Phytoalexin biosynthesis Degredation of inhibitors Degredation of inhibitors
Phytoalexin accumulation
Restricted growth
Figure 1: Activity of antimicrobial compounds at different stages of the plant-pathogen interaction. The dashed lines refer to the routes taken by virulent pathogens to avoid plant defence (adopted from Mansfield, 1999).
level in wild-type plants, respectively. None of pad mutants was compromised in their ability to resist infection by P. syringae strains carrying avirulence (avr) genes. However pad1 and pad2 exhibited enhanced susceptibility to virulent strains. In contrast, growth of these strains in the pad3 mutant was not significantly different from that in wild-type accession providing evidence that camalexin does not have an important role in protecting the plants from avirulent pathogens but might have a role on restricting the virulent pathogens. Similar results obtained using an Oomycete P. parasitica in a few wild-type accessions and the same mutants (Mert-Trk et al., 1998; Mert-Trk, 2001).
Genetic manipulation of secondary metabolites is an area of molecular biology that remains in its infancy. More detailed understanding of the enzymology of phytoalexin synthesis is needed (Mansfield, 1999). Dixon et al. (1996) pointed out that attempts to engineer metabolic pathways may give unexpected results, revealing fundamentally redundant enzyme systems, metabolic channelling, or unexpected translocational control mechanisms. A continued research focus on phytoalexins is therefore, likely to yield data on fundamental aspects of plant metabolism as well as being of indirect benefit to the development of disease control strategies.
Conclusions Phytoalexins are only one components of the complex mechanisms for disease resistance in plants. Studies on phytoalexins alone have contributed a great deal to plant biochemistry and molecular biology. As they accumulate both in susceptible and resistant plants, the real question is that whether they are contributors to defence or just the end product of pathogen- or stress-induced metabolism. More conclusive approaches could be used to answer the question. One of them could be to generate phytoalexin biosynthetic mutants that no longer synthesize phytoalexins, then to assess them whether phytoalexin deficiency causes enhanced susceptibility. There are two extremely critical points here that should be kept in mind. This approach should include genetical analyses using a system in which the biochemical and physiological evidence argues strongly in favour of a key role for phytoalexins in resistance. Second point is that the plants must be evaluated for changes in other defences that may compensate for the loss of phytoalexin production. As a result of advances in molecular biology, much better view of the role of phytoalexins in defence has established, though we do still not know for certain whether phytoalexin are contributors for defence. Clearly future studies on these compounds will allow us to understand and evaluate plantpathogen interactions as well as provide new approaches to disease control. All affords in molecular biology and biotechnology is to introduce new approaches into disease control for more friendly environment.
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