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PLANT PHYSIOLOGY , Vol 115, Issue 3 1039-1048, Copyright © 1997 by American Society of Plant Biologists
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GENE REGULATION AND MOLECULAR GENETICS |
Characterization and Expression of Caffeoyl-Coenzyme A 3-O-Methyltransferase Proposed for the Induced Resistance Response of Vitis vinifera L
G. Busam, K. T. Junghanns, R. E. Kneusel, H. H. Kassemeyer and U. Matern
Lehrstuhl fur Biochemie der Pflazen, Institut fur Biologie II, Universitat Freiburg, Schanzlestrasse 1, D-79104 Freiburg, Germany (G.B., K.T.J., R.E.K., U.M.)
Cell-suspension cultures of Vitis vinifera L. cv Pinot Noir accumulated
resveratrol upon fungal elicitation, and the activity of
S-adenosyI-L-methionine:trans-caffeoyl-coenzyme A 3-O-methyl-transferase
(CCoAOMT), yielding feruloyl-CoA, increased to a transient maximum at 12 to
15 h. CCoAOMT cDNA was cloned from the elicited cells and was shown to
encode a polypeptide highly homologous to CCoAOMTs from cells of
Petroselinum species or Zinnia species. The expression of the cDNA in
Escherichia coli revealed that grapevine CCoAOMT methylates both
caffeoyl-and 5-hydroxyferuloyl-coenzyme A and is probably involved in
phenolic esterification and lignification. Commercial plant activators
induce the disease-resistance response of test plants and are considered to
mimic the action of salicylic acid. Among these chemicals,
2,6-dichloroisonicotinic acid and benzo(1,2,3)-thiadiazole-7-carbothioic
acid S-methyl ester provoke systemic acquired resistance (SAR) and were
also shown to induce the expression of class III chitinase in grapevine.
The SAR response is classified by an unchanged phenotype of tissues, but
the mechanistic basis is unknown. Treatment of the cultured V. vinifera
cells with either fungal elicitor or low concentrations of salicylic acid
and 2,6-dichloroisonicotinic acid, respectively, raised the CCoAOMT or
stilbene synthase transcript abundance, suggesting that grapevine is
capable of the SAR response, whereas benzo(1,2,3)-thiadiazole-7-carbothioic
acid S-methyl ester was ineffective. The data imply for the first time (to
our knowledge) that the expression of phenylpropanoid genes in grapevine is
induced by SAR activators without phenotypic consequences and suggest a
role for CCoAOMT and stilbene synthase in the disease-resistance response
leading beyond the level of pathogenesis-related proteins as markers of the
SAR.
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