251. Stimulation of defense reactions in Medicago truncatula by antagonistic lipopeptides from Paenibacillus sp. strain B2.
- Author
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Selim S, Negrel J, Wendehenne D, Ochatt S, Gianinazzi S, and van Tuinen D
- Subjects
- Cell Culture Techniques, Coculture Techniques, Fusarium growth & development, Fusarium pathogenicity, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Hydrogen Peroxide metabolism, Medicago truncatula metabolism, Medicago truncatula microbiology, Plant Roots microbiology, Lipopeptides immunology, Lipopeptides isolation & purification, Medicago truncatula immunology, Paenibacillus chemistry, Paenibacillus immunology
- Abstract
With the aim of obtaining new strategies to control plant diseases, we investigated the ability of antagonistic lipopolypeptides (paenimyxin) from Paenibacillus sp. strain B2 to elicit hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂) production and several defense-related genes in the model legume Medicago truncatula. For this purpose, M. truncatula cell suspensions were used and a pathosystem between M. truncatula and Fusarium acuminatum was established. In M. truncatula cell cultures, the induction of H₂O₂ reached a maximum 20 min after elicitation with paenimyxin, whereas concentrations higher than 20 μM inhibited H₂O₂ induction and this was correlated with a lethal effect. In plant roots incubated with different concentrations of paenimyxin for 24 h before inoculation with F. acuminatum, paenimyxin at a low concentration (ca. 1 μM) had a protective effect and suppressed 95% of the necrotic symptoms, whereas a concentration higher than 10 μM had an inhibitory effect on plant growth. Gene responses were quantified in M. truncatula by semiquantitative reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR). Genes involved in the biosynthesis of phytoalexins (phenylalanine ammonia-lyase, chalcone synthase, chalcone reductase), antifungal activity (pathogenesis-related proteins, chitinase), or cell wall (invertase) were highly upregulated in roots or cells after paenimyxin treatment. The mechanisms potentially involved in plant protection are discussed.
- Published
- 2010
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