Abstract
There has been a considerable amount of recent research aimed at elucidating the roles of chitinase in fungi and plants. In filamentous fungi and yeasts, chitinase is involved integrally in cell wall morphogenesis. Chitinase is also involved in the early events of host—parasite interactions of biotrophic and necrotrophic mycoparasites, entomopathogenic fungi and vesicular arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. In plants, induction of chitinase and other hydrolytic enzymes is one of a coordinated, often complex and multifaceted defense mechanism triggered in response to phytopathogen attack. Chitinase induction in plants is not considered solely as an antifungal resistance mechanism. Plant chitinases can be induced by various abiotic factors as well and there is some circumstantial evidence to suggest a morphogenetic role despite the apparent absence of the substrate in plant cells. Finally, some chitinases and other chitin-binding proteins including some plant lectins share chitin-binding domains as part of their molecular structure and provide fuel for the so-called ‘lectin-chitinase’ debate and speculation for the origin of chitinase in plants.
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