Abstract

A glucan elicitor from cell walls of the fungus Phytophthara megasperma f. sp. glycinea, a pathogen of soybean ( Glycine max), induced large and rapid increases in the activities of enzymes of general phenylpropanoid metabolism, phenylalanine ammonia-lyase, and of the flavonoid pathway, acetyl-CoA carboxylase and chalcone synthase, in suspensioncultured soybean cells. The changes in phenylalanine ammonia-lyase and chalcone synthase activities were correlated with corresponding changes in the mRNA activities encoding these enzymes, as determined by enzyme synthesis in vitro in a mRNA-dependent reticulocyte lysate. The time courses of the elicitor-induced changes in mRNA activities for both enzymes were very similar with respect to each other. Following the onset of induction, the two mRNA activities increased significantly at 3 h, reached highest levels at 5 to 7 h, and subsequently returned to low values at 10 h. Similar degrees of induction of mRNA activities and of the catalytic activities of phenylalanine ammonia-lyase and chalcone synthase were observed in response to three diverse microbial compounds, the glucan elicitor from P. megasperma, xanthan, an extracellular polysaccharide from Xanthomonas campestris, and endopolygalacturonase from Aspergillus niger. However, whereas the glucan elicitor induced the accumulation of large amounts of the phytoalexin, glyceollin, in soybean cells, endopolygalacturonase induced only low, albeit significant, amounts; xanthan did not enhance glyceollin accumulation under the conditions of this study. This result might imply that enzymes other than phenylalanine ammonia-lyase or chalcone synthase exert an important regulatory function in phytoalexin synthesis in soybean cells.

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