When mycelium of Botrytis cinerea was treated with low concentrations of the anilinopyrimidine fungicide pyrimethanil the total amount of free amino acids increased. Qualitative variations were also induced : alanine, glutamine, lysine, glycine, histidine, asparagine, arginine, threonine and moreove
Ethylene biosynthesis in Botrytis cinerea
✍ Scribed by Véronique Chagué; Yigal Elad; Radwan Barakat; Paul Tudzynski; Amir Sharon
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 219 KB
- Volume
- 40
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0168-6496
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✦ Synopsis
Ethylene is often released during plant pathogenesis. Enhanced ethylene biosynthesis by the attacked plant, and formation of ethylene by the attacking pathogen may be involved. We defined the biosynthetic pathway of ethylene in the pathogenic fungus Botrytis cinerea, and characterized the conditions that affect ethylene production in vitro. During the first 48 h of culture the fungus uses methionine to produce K-keto Q-methylthiobutyric acid (KMBA) and secretes it to the medium. In darkness, KMBA accumulates in the medium. In light KMBA is photo-oxidized and ethylene is released. The photo-oxidation reaction is spontaneous and does not involve any enzymatic activity. Low levels of ethylene are produced in darkness between 48 and 96 h of culture. Adding peroxidase to dark-grown cultures induced ethylene formation. The results suggest that formation and secretion of KMBA by B. cinerea may affect ethylene levels during plant infection.
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## Abstract Conidia of __Botrytis cinerea__ germinated in the presence of sublethal concentrations of cytochalasin A, cytochalasin D, and monorden to produce swollen and distorted germ tubes which branched more frequently than those of normal conidia. Multiple germ‐tube emergence occurred to a grea