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Alejo-Iturvide, F; Marquez-Lucio, MA; Morales-Ramirez, I; Vazquez-Garciduenas, MS; Olalde-Portugal, V. 2008. Mycorrhizal protection of chili plants challenged by Phytophthora capsici. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PLANT PATHOLOGY. 120(1):13-20.
Address:
Olalde-Portugal, V, Ctr Invest & Estudios Avanzados, Dept Biotecnol &
Bioquim, Campus Guanjuato,Km 9-6 Libramiento N Carretera I, Guanajuato
36500, Mexico
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) has been implicated in many stress conditions.
Control of H2O2 levels is complex and dissection of mechanisms
generating and relieving H2O2 stress is difficult, particularly in
intact plants. Here the role of the mycorrhizal inoculation in chili
plants challenged with Phytophthora capsici was investigated to study
the effect on hypersensitive response. In the treatment without
mycorrhiza (treatment T3) and with mycorrhiza (considered treatment T4)
visible disorders were detected two days after inoculation with P.
capsici, but in the next days T3 plants rapidly developed 25% more
necrotic lesions on the leaves than T4 plants. Leaf necrosis correlated
with H2O2 accumulation and the greater damage observed in T3 plants
coincided with larger accumulation of H2O2 after 12 h of inoculation
accompanied with an increase in POX (peroxidase) and SOD (superoxide
dismutase) activity. T4-infected and mycorrhizal plants exhibited an
earlier accumulation of H2O2 starting 6 h after inoculation with lower
levels compared to T3 plants. Correlated with observed damage, POX and
SOD activity measured in T4 plants indirectly suggest a smaller
accumulation of ROS (reactive oxygen species) leading to a decrease in
the wounds observed and slightly diminishing the advance of the
pathogen. According to these findings, we conclude that mycorrhizal
colonization contributes significantly in maintaining the redox balance
during oxidative stress, but the exact mechanism is still uncertain.
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