Involvement of reactive oxygen species and the induction of the cellular antioxidant machinery in the necrotic death of two Capsicum Annuum cultivars with different sensitivity to Phytophthora Capsici
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Fisiología VegetalPublication date
2017-01Publisher
Edizioni ETSBibliographic Citation
Requena, M. E, Egea-Gilabert, C., & Candela, M. E. (2017). Involvement of reactive oxygen species and the induction of the cellular antioxidant machinery in the necrotic death of two capsicum Annuum cultivars with different sensitivity to Phytophthora capsici. Journal of plant pathology, 99, 185-196. doi: 10.4454/jpp.v99i1.3828Keywords
Hydrogen peroxideSuperoxide anion
Catalase
Peroxidase
Lipid peroxidase
Superoxide dismutase
Abstract
This study analyses the defence response of two pepper cultivars, Serrano Criollo de Morelos (SCM, resistant) and California Wonder (CW, sensitive) to oomycete pathogen Phytophthora capsici. We compare the production of reactive oxygen species (O2 - and H2O2) in vitro and in vivo, as well as the activity of antioxidative enzymes in the cuts of the decapitated stems elicited with P. capsici. In all tests, following elicitation O2 - and H2O2 are produced in both cultivars, but in higher amount in SCM cells. In vivo assays show that infection by the pathogen causes progressive necrosis in the decapitated SCM and CW stems and that necrosis length is inversely proportional to resistance. The antioxidative enzymes tested (superoxide dismutase, peroxidase, catalase and glutathione reductase) increase their activity after infection, to a significant extent in SCM plants and to a lesser extent in CW plants. Therefore, we conclude that if H2O2 were to play a role in resistance, it would be due to ...
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