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Journal ArticleDOI

Phytoalexin induction as a new dynamic approach to the study of systematic relationships among higher plants

John L. Ingham, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1976 - 
- Vol. 260, Iss: 5548, pp 241-243
TLDR
The first successful application of phytoalexin induction as a tool in taxonomic studies to the problems of classification at the generic and species level in the Leguminosae is reported.
Abstract
IT is well established that many higher plants respond to microbial invasion by the de novo production of organic substances called phytoalexins1,2. These compounds are absent from healthy plants and are induced by the attacking microorganisms. Although the role of phytoalexins in disease resistance is not yet entirely clear, considerable evidence suggests that they are of importance in the protection of higher plants from fungal colonisation. Although few surveys have been attempted, there is clearly a taxonomic element in phytoalexin biosynthesis, in that different plant families accumulate chemically different types of compounds3. Thus, the Leguminosae in general produce isoflavonoids, the Solanaceae diterpenes, the Compositae polyacetylenes and so on2; anomalies are rare, for example, the furanoacetylene, wyerone acid, from Vicia faba (Leguminosae)4. As lesser variations also occur within these families, there is the clear possibility of using phytoalexin induction as a tool in taxonomic studies. We report here the first successful application of this technique to the problems of classification at the generic and species level in the Leguminosae.

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Citations
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Secondary compounds as protective agents

TL;DR: Insect Chemoreceptors, Insect-deterrent Properties of Secondary Compounds, and the Complexity of Allelopathy.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new class of phytoalexins from grapevines.

TL;DR: A novel phytoalexins isolated from grapevine leaves are oligomeric forms of the trihydroxy stilbene resveratrol, which co-occurs with these compounds, and their characterization as a resver atrol dimer is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biochemical Mechanisms of Disease Resistance

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analysis of the literature on induced resistance and its applications to state-of-the-art materials science and discusses the role of nanofiltration in the evolution of resistance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Host-pathogen interactions in plants. Plants, when exposed to oligosaccharides of fungal origin, defend themselves by accumulating antibiotics.

TL;DR: The authors are attempting to identify a bacterial elicitor, known that the soybean pathogen Phytophthora magasperma is an oligosaccharide composed only of glucose, of general biological interest since it shows that oligOSaccharides can act as regulatory molecules.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plant--fungal interactions: the search for phytoalexins and other antifungal compounds from higher plants.

TL;DR: The possible role of phytoalexins in the resistance of rice plants against the fungus Pyricularia oryzae (= Magnaporthe grisea) is discussed, and the future prospects ofphy toalexin research are outlined.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Phytoalexins and other natural products as factors in plant disease resistance

TL;DR: The detection and characterisation of phytoalexins and other related natural products, the elucidation of their biosynthetic pathways and where appropriate their antifungal mechanisms, and the development of these substances or synthetic analogues for use in crop protection provides a new and exciting field of plant pathology which without doubt will be greatly expanded in the years that lie ahead.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identification and activity of wyerone acid as a phytoalexin in broad bean (vicia faba) after infection by botrytis

TL;DR: An antifungal compound from infected broad bean has been identified as wyerone acid (I), and low concentrations which prevented all germination of Botrytis fabae, B. cinerea and B. allii were found.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sativin: an Induced Isoflavan from the Leaves of Medicago sativa L.

TL;DR: In tissues penetrated by non-pathogenic fungi the accumulation of phytoalexins may be responsible for cessation of fungal development, which suggests that these compounds may have a role in disease resistance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spittlebug Polymorphic for Warning Coloration

TL;DR: It is proposed that the phenomenon of escape warning coloration may be an important factor in the colour polymorphism of Philaenus spumarius, the common meadow spittlebug, and may help explain cases of apparently aposematic (warning) coloration in non-mimetic animals which are neither poisonous, distasteful, nor formidably outfitted for defence, but which possess efficient close quarter escape mechanisms.
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