THE PHYSIOLOGY OF HOST–PARASITE RELATIONS: VIII. EFFECTS OF RUST INFECTION ON ASCORBIC ACID ANDGLUTATHIONE IN WHEAT LEAVES

1961 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 1327-1336 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. I. Sahai ◽  
Michael Shaw

First seedling leaves of Little Club (susceptible), Khapli I (moderately susceptible), and Khapli (resistant) wheats were inoculated with Puccinia graminis tritici Erikss. and Henn. (Race 15B). Ascorbic (AA) and dehydroascorbic (DHA) acids and glutathione (GSH) were measured at 1–2 day intervals after inoculation until after sporulation. After infection, AA and DHA increased in Little Club and decreased in Khapli. In Khapli the DHA/AA ratio rose sharply 6–8 days after inoculation; in Little Club a similar rise occurred 15–16 days after inoculation. In Khapli I and Little Club, but not in Khapli, GSH increased sharply when sporulation occurred. AA was not detected in uredospores, but DHA was. Oxidized glutathione was not detected in healthy or infected leaves but was present in uredospores. The results are discussed briefly in relation to the changes in auxin content and redox potentials caused by rust infection.

1968 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. K. Bhattacharya ◽  
Michael Shaw ◽  
J. M. Naylor

Cytophotometric measurements of DNA (Feulgen) and protein-bound lysine and arginine (fluorodinitrobenzene-Sakaguchi) were made on nuclei in mesophyll cells of infected and uninfected leaves of Little Club wheat at intervals of 2 to 4 days up to 13 days after inoculation with uredospores of race 15B of the stem rust fungus (Puccinia graminis tritici Erikss. and Henn.). No change in host DNA was found within 6 days after inoculation, but there were marked decreases in protein-bound lysine and arginine as early as 2 days after inoculation. The DNA/lysine and DNA/arginine ratios were higher in rust-affected host nuclei, but infection did not alter the ratio of protein-bound lysine to arginine. In another series of measurements it was shown that rust infection caused striking increases in the volume and the RNA and protein contents of host nucleoli. These changes persisted even in advanced infections.All the results are consistent with our earlier observations and indicate that profound changes in nuclear metabolism are induced by infection with the rust fungus.


1964 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 139-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Shaw ◽  
B. I. Sahai Srivastava

The purines were precipitated from alcohol extracts of Little Club wheat with copper oxide or absorbed from perchloric acid extracts with Norit A. Guanine, adenine, and an unidentified purine were isolated from seedlings germinated in darkness and from the tops of young plants grown in the greenhouse. Adenine and the unidentified purine were present in much larger amounts than guanine. The concentrations of adenine and the unidentified purine in the first seedling leaves were increased approximately four- and five-fold by infection with Puccinia graminis tritici Erikss. and Henn. No evidence was obtained for the presence of any purine or purine-like substance in uninfected or infected leaves which would delay senescence in detached leaves as do kinetin, benzimidazole, and purine-like substances present in coconut endosperm.


1967 ◽  
Vol 45 (5) ◽  
pp. 555-563 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. K. Bhattacharya ◽  
Michael Shaw

Wheat leaves were detached 6 days after inoculation with the stem rust fungus (Puccinia graminis var. tritici Erikss. and Henn.) and fed with tritiated leucine, cytidine, uridine, or thymidine. Mesophyll cells in infected zones incorporated more leucine into protein and more cytidine and uridine into RNA than did cells in adjacent uninfected tissue. Leucine, cytidine, and uridine were also heavily incorporated by fungal mycelium and developing uredospores. Grain counts over host nuclei in the infected zone were two to three-fold of those over nuclei in adjacent uninfected zones. There was no detectable incorporation of thymidinemethyl-3H into either the fungus or the host cells. The results are discussed.


1962 ◽  
Vol 40 (7) ◽  
pp. 975-985 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. L. Mukherjee1 ◽  
Michael Shaw

Inorganic, organic, and various organic phosphate fractions were determined in uninfected and infected first seedling leaves of Little Club wheat at various stages between 6 to 18 days after incubation with Puccinia graminis tritici Erikss. and Henn. (Race 15B). Inorganic (Pi), organic (Po), and total P per unit fresh weight increased as uninfected leaves aged and the levels of Pi were much more readily altered by changes in nutritional status and environmental conditions than the levels of Po. Infection increased total P and the highest concentrations occurred at the loci of rust pustules. Since the concentration of P was lower in uninfected portions of infected leaves than in comparable parts of uninfected leaves or in rust pustules, it appeared that P was transported into the pustules from uninfected parts of the leaf. Both Pi and Po were increased by infection, but the Pi/Po ratio was lowered. Acid-soluble bound P, easily hydrolyzable P, lipid P, RNA-P, and residual organic P were all increased by infection.When leaf pieces were infiltrated with and then floated on 10−4 M 2,4-dinitrophenol for 24 hours, the levels of all organic phosphate fractions were lowered and Pi was increased, both in uninfected and infected leaves. Dinitrophenol raised the Pi/Po ratio about 30% in uninfected and about 100% in infected leaves.The results militate against the view that the increase in respiration rate caused by infection is due to the uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation.


1964 ◽  
Vol 42 (11) ◽  
pp. 1531-1540 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. A. Quick ◽  
Michael Shaw

The increase in respiration in rust-infected leaves of Little Club wheat was followed and paralleled by an increase in RNA per gram dry weight. The massive increase in dry weight of infected leaves in the later stages of rust development (9–12 days after inoculation) sometimes obscured the increase in RNA when RNA was expressed on a dry weight but not when it was expressed on a fresh weight basis. There was no increase in RNA in rust-infected Khapli. Rust infection had no effect on DNA per gram dry weight in Little Club or Khapli, but DNA per gram fresh weight increased slightly (15%) in Little Club, indicating the synthesis of fungal DNA. Infection had little effect on the protein content of Little Club but markedly lowered that of Khapli. The results are discussed in relation to earlier cytochemical determinations of DNA and RNA in infected tissue.


1966 ◽  
Vol 44 (6) ◽  
pp. 777-788 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. A. Quick ◽  
Michael Shaw

Acid-soluble nucleotides in senescing wheat leaves tended to decrease with time in a manner similar to the decline in RNA.2 Little change was apparent in the free nucleotide: RNA nucleotide ratio. Treatment with kinetin reduced, but did not prevent the loss of soluble nucleotides. The greatest losses occurred in the nucleoside diphosphates. Rust infection increased each of the soluble nucleotides even more rapidly than it increased RNA content. Rust uredospores, themselves, appeared to possess a large soluble nucleotide pool. Uridine and adenosine derivatives were the only nucleotides consistently found. Uredospores and rust-infected leaves differed from uninfected leaves in possessing a large amount of a UDP-N-acetylglucosamine complex. The results are discussed in relation to previous measurements of RNA in senescing and rust-infected leaves.


1961 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 1393-1407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Shaw

Wang (Can. J. Botany, 38, 635–642 (1960)) concluded that the accumulation of radioactivity observed on radioautographs at infection sites on rusted leaves fed with C14-labelled substances was 'apparent' rather than real. The ‘accumulation ratio’ is defined as the ratio of the specific activities (c.p.m./mg dry weight of intact tissue) of rust-infected to uninfected areas of infected leaves. Theoretical considerations relating to the radioautography of leaves labelled with C14 and to the measurement of ‘accumulation ratios’ by extraction of C14-labelled substances from rusted and uninfected segments of infected leaves, as well as experimental data, show that Wang's conclusion is not generally applicable.Experimentally, it was shown using polymethacrylate C14 sources that differences in distance between sources and X-ray film of the order of 100 μ had no effect on the intensity of autoradiographs. Rust-infected leaves, fed with radioactive glucose, were radiographed between X-ray plates. Localization of radioactivity at infection sites was observed on both ‘dorsal’ and ‘ventral’ radiographs, indicating a real accumulation per unit area. Ventral were more radioactive than dorsal surfaces. The main development of the fungus occurred on the former. Radioautography revealed that C14 from glucose-1-C14, glucose-6-C14, and uniformly labelled glucose fed to excised wheat leaves became localized at 10-day-old rust infections in 2 hours. ‘Accumulation ratios’ calculated from the specific activity of leaf segments remained close to 1.0 for at least 6 hours after introduction of the tracer, but increased to more than 2 after 24 hours. When ‘accumulation ratios’ were calculated from the specific activities of individual pustules (excised with a punch 1 mm in diameter) and interpustular disks, values greater than 1 were observed in 2 hours, thus confirming the results of autoradiography. Differences between the ‘accumulation ratios’ observed with glucose-6-C14 and glucose-1-C14 were consistent with an increased role of the pentose phosphate pathway at infection sites. Incorporation of C14 from uniformly labelled glucose into the alcohol-insoluble fraction of rusted leaf segments was 2.5-fold that in uninfected segments in 6 hours and 3.65-fold in 24 hours. The humin formed during hydrochloric acid hydrolysis accounted for approximately 50% of the activity of the alcohol-insoluble material. The ‘accumulation ratio’ for the alcohol-soluble material was only 1.56 after 24 hours.All the results support the view (Shaw and Samborski, Can. J. Botany, 34, 389–405 (1956)) that there is a quantitative, metabolically dependent accumulation of C14 from radioactive glucose at vigorous rust infections. The relative roles of fungus and host in this process are discussed briefly.


Nature ◽  
1958 ◽  
Vol 182 (4650) ◽  
pp. 1686-1687 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. I. POZSÁR ◽  
Z. KIRÁLY

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