Response of Hard Red Winter Wheat to Soilborne wheat mosaic virus Using Novel Inoculation Methods

2002 ◽  
Vol 92 (4) ◽  
pp. 347-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara A. Driskel ◽  
Robert M. Hunger ◽  
Mark E. Payton ◽  
Jeanmarie Verchot-Lubicz

Soilborne wheat mosaic virus (SBWMV) is an agronomically important pathogen of wheat that is transmitted by the soilborne plasmodiophorid vector Polymyxa graminis. In the laboratory, attempts to generate SBWMV-infected plants are often hampered by poor infectivity of the virus. To analyze the mechanism for virus resistance in wheat cultivars, we developed novel inoculation techniques. A new technique for foliar inoculation of SBWMV was developed that eliminated wound-induced necrosis normally associated with rub inoculating virus to wheat leaves. This new technique is important because we can now uniformly inoculate plants in the laboratory for studies of host resistance mechanisms in the inoculated leaf. Additionally, wheat plants were grown hydroponically in seed germination pouches and their roots were inoculated with SBWMV either by placing P. graminis-infested root material in the pouch or by mechanically inoculating the roots with purified virus. The susceptibility of one SBWMV susceptible and three field resistant wheat cultivars were analyzed following inoculation of plants using these novel inoculation techniques or the conventional inoculation technique of growing plants in P. graminis-infested soil. The results presented in this study suggest that virus resistance in wheat likely functions in the roots to block virus infection.

1963 ◽  
Vol 41 (12) ◽  
pp. 1623-1638 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. G. S. Bidwell

C14-labelled substrates were supplied to leaves, and the labelling patterns in derived amino acids were examined. A new technique is described for the ninhydrin decarboxylation of amino acids separated on paper chromatograms, making use of the Dynacon electrometer. Succinate-1,4-C14, succinate-2,3-C14, pyruvate-1-C14, pyruvate-2-C14, pyruvate-3-C14, C14O2, and glutamate-1-C14 were supplied to wheat leaves, and the total C14 and carboxyl-C14 in alanine, aspartate, glutamate, asparagine, and glutamine were determined. The results indicated that the amino acids and amides were formed mainly from the corresponding Krebs cycle intermediates. Carbon entered the Krebs cycle mainly by decarboxylation of pyruvate, but partly by its carboxylation. Extensive cycling did not occur. Various other suggested pathways, including the conversion of succinate to glutamic acid via succinic semialdehyde and γ-aminobutyrate followed by carboxylation, did not occur.When glucose-UL-C14 was supplied to pea or bean seedlings, the labelling pattern in alanine and glutamine indicated their derivation from glucose via glycolysis and Krebs cycle pathways. However, the pattern in asparagine indicated that it may have been formed from products of glyoxalate cycle.


2003 ◽  
Vol 16 (10) ◽  
pp. 945-952 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicola Wiethölter ◽  
Barbara Graeßner ◽  
Manfred Mierau ◽  
Andrew J. Mort ◽  
Bruno M. Moerschbacher

Plants possess an efficient nonself surveillance system triggering induced disease resistance mechanisms upon molecular recognition of microbial invaders. Successful pathogens have evolved strategies to evade or counteract these mechanisms, e.g., by the generation of suppressors. Pectic fragments produced during host cell wall degradation can act as endogenous suppressors of the hypersensitive response in wheat leaves. We have isolated and characterized ho-mogalacturonans from cell walls of two wheat cultivars susceptible to the stem rust fungus, Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici, namely cvs. Prelude and Marquis, and from near-isogenic lines of both cultivars containing the Sr5-gene for hypersensitive rust resistance. Two independent approaches were used to compare their methyl esterification: i) immunochemistry using the monoclonal antibodies JIM5, JIM7, PAM1, and LM7 and ii) chromatography of oligogalacturonides representing stretches of contiguous nonmethyl-esterified GalA residues. The results clearly indicate a significant difference in the homogalacturonans from susceptible and resistant wheat lines. The difference can best be explained by assuming a nonrandom and more blockwise distribution of the methyl esters in the homoga-lacturonans of susceptible wheat cultivars as compared with a presumably more random distribution in the near-isogenic resistant lines. Possible consequences of this difference for the enzymatic generation of endogenous suppressors are discussed.


2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. S543-S543
Author(s):  
Satoshi Kimura ◽  
Keigo Matsumoto ◽  
Yoshio Imahori ◽  
Katsuyoshi Mineura ◽  
Toshiyuki Itoh

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