Magnaporthe oryzae cell wall hydrolysate induces ROS and fungistatic VOCs in rice cell cultures
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2011
Abstract:
Plants react to microbial attack with a number of defense mechanisms, including the synthesis of
volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). These
responses are triggered by elicitors derived from either the cell surface of pathogens or the
incomplete hydrolysis of the plant cell wall. Here we show the response of rice (Oryza sativa L., cv
Gigante Vercelli) cell cultures following treatment with cell wall hydrolysates prepared from the
rice blast Magnaporthe oryzae. Elicitation prompted the production of several plant VOCs, which
were analyzed by stir bar sorptive extraction from both the liquid and head-space phase (SBSE and
HSSE, respectively) and gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (GC–MS) analysis.
VOCs included alkanes, alkenes and long-chain alcohols as well as cinnamyl alcohol, myristicin, a
sesquiterpene alcohol (caryolan-1-ol), 1-butanamide and 2-pentylfuran. The major released
compounds, 1-octanol and 1-decanol, were found to induce ROS production in both elicited and
non-elicited rice cells and showed fungistatic activity against the pathogen M. oryzae. The possible
role of induced VOCs and ROS production in the plant–pathogen interaction is discussed.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
M. oryzae; Rice (Oryza sativa); Volatile organic compounds; Reactive oxygen species; Long-chain alkanols; 1-Octanol; 1-Decanol; Cell wall hydrolysate
Elenco autori:
G. Forlani; A. Occhipinti; S. Bossi; C.M. Bertea; G.C. Varese; M. Maffei
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