March
1998
, Volume
11
, Number
3
Pages
228
-
236
Authors
Rachel E.
Melton
,
1
Lynda M.
Flegg
,
2
James K. M.
Brown
,
3
Richard P.
Oliver
,
4
Michael J.
Daniels
,
1
and
Anne E.
Osbourn
1
Affiliations
1Sainsbury Laboratory, 2University of East Anglia, 3John Innes Centre, Norwich, UK; 4Carlsberg Laboratory, Copenhagen, Denmark
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RelatedArticle
Accepted 30 November 1997.
Abstract
The anti-fungal, steroidal, glycoalkaloid saponin, α-tomatine, is present in uninfected tomato plants in substantial concentrations, and may contribute to the protection of tomato plants against attack by phytopathogenic fungi. In general, successful fungal pathogens of tomato are more resistant to α-tomatine in vitro than fungi that do not infect this plant. For a number of tomato pathogens, this resistance has been associated with the ability to detoxify α-tomatine through the action of enzymes known as tomatinases. In contrast, the biotrophic tomato pathogen Cladosporium fulvum is sensitive to α-tomatine and is unable to detoxify this saponin. This paper describes the effects of heterologous expression of the cDNA encoding tomatinase from the necrotroph Septoria lycopersici in two different physiological races of C. fulvum. Tomatinase-producing C. fulvum transformants showed increased sporulation on cotyledons of susceptible tomato lines. They also caused more extensive infection of seedlings of resistant tomato lines. Thus, α-tomatine may contribute to the ability of tomato to restrict the growth of C. fulvum in both compatible and incompatible interactions.
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© 1998 The American Phytopathological Society