Abstract

This article reports events connected to cell survival and Botrytis cinerea infection development in cell suspension cultures of two tomato cultivars which show different levels of susceptibility to the pathogen: cv. Corindo (more susceptible) and cv. Perkoz (less susceptible). In parallel changes in reactive oxygen (ROS) and nitrogen (RNS) species generation and in S-nitrosoglutathione reductase (GSNOR) activity were studied. In vivo staining methods with acridine orange (AO) and ethidium bromide (EB) as well as fluorescent microscopy were used to assess tomato and B. cinerea cells death. The biochemical studies of ROS and RNS concentrations in plant cell extract were complemented by in vivo ROS and nitric oxide (NO) imaging using nitro blue tetrazolium (NBT), diaminobenzidine (DAB) and diaminofluorescein diacetate (DAF-DA) staining methods, and confocal microscope technique. B. cinerea infection proceeded slower in Perkoz cell cultures. It was evidenced by measuring the pathogen conidia germination and germination tube development in which nuclei revealing cell death dominated. Two different types of tomato cell death were observed: cells with necrotic nuclei dominated in Corindo whereas in Perkoz cells with characteristic of vacuolar death type prevailed. In Perkoz cells, constitutive levels of NO and S-nitrosothiols (SNO) were significantly higher and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and superoxide anion (O2 −) concentrations were slightly higher as compared with Corindo cells. Moreover, increases in these molecule concentrations as a result of B. cinerea inoculation were observed in both, Perkoz and Corindo cell cultures. The enzymatic GSNOR activity seems to be an important player in controlling the SNO level in tomato cells. Involvements of the studied compounds in molecular mechanisms of tomato resistance to B. cinerea are discussed in the paper.

Highlights

  • The necrotrophic pathogen Botrytis cinerea is a casual agent of gray mold in a broad host range (Elad et al 2007; Finkers et al 2007)

  • B. cinerea is difficult to control because it has a variety of modes of attack, diverse hosts as inoculum source, and it can survive as mycelia and/or conidia for extended periods as sclerotia in crop debris

  • In the present work, using cell cultures of two tomato cultivars differing in resistance to B. cinerea, we undertook a biochemical and cellular study of changes in ROS, nitric oxide (NO), SNO, MDA concentrations, and generation and in S-nitrosoglutathione reductase (GSNOR) activity as well as tomato cell viability and the pathogen infection development to explain the biochemical bases of tomato resistance to the pathogen

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Summary

Introduction

The necrotrophic pathogen Botrytis cinerea is a casual agent of gray mold in a broad host range (Elad et al 2007; Finkers et al 2007). Enhanced ROS generation was found to accompany an infection caused by necrotrophs, but in that case, their role in the interaction is still controversial; death of host cells during HR is considered advantageous for the pathogen. Vacuolar cell death is connected with formation of lytic vacuoles, tonoplast rupture, and releasing of hydrolases, gradual decreasing cytoplasm as well as nuclei segmentation and chromatin condensation This type of PCD mainly occurs during normal plant development and after mild abiotic stress. In the present work, using cell cultures of two tomato cultivars differing in resistance to B. cinerea, we undertook a biochemical and cellular study of changes in ROS, NO, SNO, MDA concentrations, and GSNOR activity as well as tomato cell viability and the pathogen infection development to explain the biochemical bases of tomato resistance to the pathogen

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