Abstract

The hypersensitive reaction represents one of the major means by which plants actively defend themselves against infection by pathogenic bacteria, fungi, viruses, and nematodes. This complex defense reaction, often associated with the synthesis of phytoalexins (antimicrobial secondary metabolites), involves at the cellular level highly dynamic cytoplasmic rearrangements, rapid metabolic changes, and finally cell death. It also correlates with the rapid and transient activation of various defense-related genes in a region of tissue surrounding infection sites and later, with the systemic increase in expression of a number of other genes. Examination of the reactions of individual living cells of potato leaves infected with Phytophthora infestans enabled the comprehensive description of the dynamic aspects of all stages of the defense response. Cytochemical investigations, employing cultured cells of parsley infected with P. infestans as a versatile model system, have contributed to a better understanding of cytoplasmic and metabolic processes occurring during the defense response, and suggest that hypersensitive cell death requires the preceding activation of respiration and specific metabolic pathways. Key words: defense responses, defense-related genes, hypersensitive reaction, programmed cell death.

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