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First published online July 18, 2002; 10.1104/pp.004432

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Plant Physiol, September 2002, Vol. 130, pp. 120-127

A Strobilurin Fungicide Enhances the Resistance of Tobacco against Tobacco Mosaic Virus and Pseudomonas syringae pv tabaci1

Stefan Herms, Kai Seehaus,2 Harald Koehle, and Uwe Conrath*

Department of Biology, University of Kaiserslautern, P.O. Box 3049, D-67653 Kaiserslautern, Germany (S.H., K.S., U.C.); and BASF Inc., Agricultural Center, P.O. Box 120, D-67114 Limburgerhof, Germany (H.K.)

The strobilurin class of fungicides comprises a variety of synthetic plant-protecting compounds with broad-spectrum antifungal activity. In the present study, we demonstrate that a strobilurin fungicide, F 500 (Pyraclostrobin), enhances the resistance of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv Xanthi nc) against infection by either tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) or the wildfire pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv tabaci. F 500 was also active at enhancing TMV resistance in NahG transgenic tobacco plants unable to accumulate significant amounts of the endogenous inducer of enhanced disease resistance, salicylic acid (SA). This finding suggests that F 500 enhances TMV resistance in tobacco either by acting downstream of SA in the SA signaling mechanism or by functioning independently of SA. The latter assumption is the more likely because in infiltrated leaves, F 500 did not cause the accumulation of SA-inducible pathogenesis-related (PR)-1 proteins that often are used as conventional molecular markers for SA-induced disease resistance. However, accumulation of PR-1 proteins and the associated activation of the PR-1 genes were elicited upon TMV infection of tobacco leaves and both these responses were induced more rapidly in F 500-pretreated plants than in the water-pretreated controls. Taken together, our results suggest that F 500, in addition to exerting direct antifungal activity, may also protect plants by priming them for potentiated activation of subsequently pathogen-induced cellular defense responses.


1 This work was supported by BASF Inc. (grant to U.C.).

2 Present address: Invitrogen Inc., 10 Emmy-Noether Strasse, D-76131 Karlsruhe, Germany.

* Corresponding author; e-mail conrath{at}rhrk.uni-kl.de; fax 49-631-2052600.

© 2002 American Society of Plant Physiologists






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