Abstract

AbstractThe pathogenicity to tobacco of a large set of Phytophthora parasitica isolates has been assessed using several procedures: root inoculation of young plants, leaf inoculation on detached disks and stem inoculation of decapitated plants, with or without healing. Analysing various aspects of the plantpathogen interaction with this array of tests led to the discrimination between three groups of isolates. In the isolates from hosts other than tobacco, none was truly pathogenic to tobacco, and all but one produced parasiticein, a proteinaceous elicitor of the elicitin family which induces a hypersensitive‐like response in tobacco. Isolates producing parasiticein in vitro induced necrotic fleks on the leaves upon inoculation of roots orof, freshly wounded stems. Most tobacco isolates, including all the highly virulent ones, were characterized by a lack of elicitin production. However, those collected in Australia and Zimbabwe differed in that they exhibited reduced virulence, induced leaf, necrotic flecks and produced parasiticein. The incidence of elicitin production on virulence and the significance of two types of tobacco‐pathogenic strains for tobacco pathology are discussed.

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