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Plant Physiology 61:38-45 (1978)
© 1978 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Purification and Properties of an Elicitor of Castor Bean Phytoalexin from Culture Filtrates of the Fungus Rhizopus stolonifer 1

Michael Stekoll2 and Charles A. West

Division of Biochemistry, Department of Chemistry, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90024

Evidence has been obtained for the presence in filtrates of 3-day-old cultures of the fungus Rhizopus stolonifer grown on potato-dextrose medium of both high molecular weight and low molecular weight elicitors of the production of the phytoalexin casbene in cell-free extracts of castor bean (Ricinus communis L.) seedlings. The high molecular weight elicitor activity was purified by means of gel filtration chromatography. Both protein and carbohydrate are associated with the most purified fraction containing elicitor activity. The elicitor is inactivated by treatments at 60 C or higher temperatures for 15 minutes. The molecular weight of the purified elicitor was estimated from gel filtration chromatography in 10 mM Na-phosphate (pH 7) to be 30,000 ± 5,000. Treatments of the purified elicitor fraction with either sodium periodate or the nonspecific protease preparation, pronase, substantially reduced its activity as an elicitor of casbene production. On the basis of these properties it is concluded that the elicitor is most likely a protein and may be a glycoprotein. It is estimated that 2 x 10–8 M elicitor gives about a 14-fold increase in casbene synthetase activity in extracts of treated split seedlings in comparison with controls. This corresponds to about 50% of the maximal activity obtainable in this assay system developed to measure elicitor activity.


2 Supported as a Biochemistry Trainee by NIH Training Grant GM-00463. This work was presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Ph.D. degree from the University of California, Los Angeles, 1976. Present address: Institute of Marine Science, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska 99701.

1 This research was supported in part by Grant GM-07065 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health.




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Copyright © 1978 by the American Society of Plant Biologists