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Wound-induced deposition of polyphenols in transgenic plants overexpressing peroxidase

L. M. Lagrimini
- 01 Jun 1991 - 
- Vol. 96, Iss: 2, pp 577-583
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TLDR
Lignin deposition in wounded pith tissue from control plants closely followed the induction of peroxidase activity, however, wound-induced lignification occurred 24 to 48 hours sooner in plants overexpressing the anionic per oxidase.
Abstract
Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants transformed with a chimeric tobacco anionic peroxidase gene have previously been shown to synthesize high levels of peroxidase in all tissues throughout the plant. One of several distinguishable phenotypes of transformed plants is the rapid browning of pith tissue upon wounding. Pith tissue from plants expressing high levels of peroxidase browned within 24 hours of wounding, while tissue from control plants did not brown as late as 7 days after wounding. A correlation between peroxidase activity and wound-induced browning was observed, whereas no relationship between polyphenol oxidase activity and browning was found. The purified tobacco anionic peroxidase was subjected to kinetic analysis with substrates which resemble the precursors of lignin or polyphenolic acid. The purified enzyme was found to readily polymerize phenolic acids in the presence of H2O2 via a modified ping-pong mechanism. The percentage of lignin and lignin-related polymers in cell walls was nearly twofold greater in pith tissue isolated from peroxidase-overproducer plants compared to control plants. Lignin deposition in wounded pith tissue from control plants closely followed the induction of peroxidase activity. However, wound-induced lignification occurred 24 to 48 hours sooner in plants overexpressing the anionic peroxidase. This suggests that the availability of peroxidase rather than substrate may delay polyphenol deposition in wounded tissue.

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Citations
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Expression of a pathogenesis-related peroxidase of Stylosanthes humilis in transgenic tobacco and canola and its effect on disease development

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Toxicity of sulfadiazine and copper and their interaction to wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) seedlings

TL;DR: The joint toxicity data showed that the toxicity of SDZ to wheat seedlings was generally alleviated by the presence of Cu, whereas the combined toxicity ofSDZ and Cu was larger than equivalent Cu alone.
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Secondary and sucrose metabolism regulated by different light quality combinations involved in melon tolerance to powdery mildew.

TL;DR: It is concluded that blue light increases melon resistance to powdery mildew, which is dependent on the induction of secondary metabolism that may be related to H2O2 accumulation before infection.
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Arbutin oxidation by pear (Pyrus communis L.) peroxidases

TL;DR: The oxidation of arbutin by soluble and ionically bound to cell wall peroxidases from pear is described for the first time and the stoichiometry of the oxidized product formation versus hydrogen peroxide was nearly 2:1 suggesting that ar butin oxidation is a one-electron process.
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Consequences of antisense down-regulation of a lignification-specific peroxidase on leaf and vascular tissue in tobacco lines demonstrating enhanced enzymic saccharification.

TL;DR: Tobacco plants expressing an antisense construct for a cationic peroxidase, which down-regulated lignin content at the presumed level of polymerisation, have been further analysed, indicating that lignification patterns can be manipulated considerably through targeting polymerisation without serious deleterious effects.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular cloning of complementary DNA encoding the lignin-forming peroxidase from tobacco: molecular analysis and tissue-specific expression

TL;DR: The purification of the anionic peroxidase isozymes from tobacco and their partial amino acid sequence is reported and the messenger for the tobacco isozyme was found to be abundant in stem tissue while expressed at very low levels in leaf and root tissue.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immunocytochemical localization and time course of appearance of an anionic peroxidase associated with suberization in wound-healing potato tuber tissue.

TL;DR: The present results support the hypothesis that this anionic peroxidase is involved in the deposition of the aromatic polymeric domain of suberin.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tissue Specificity of Tobacco Peroxidase Isozymes and Their Induction by Wounding and Tobacco Mosaic Virus Infection

TL;DR: To determine which peroxidase isozymes from Nicotiana tabacum are involved in cell wall biosynthesis or other normal cellular functions and which respond to stress, plants were subjected to either wounding or infection with tobacco mosaic virus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immunocytolocalization of extensin in developing soybean seed coats by immunogold-silver staining and by tissue printing on nitrocellulose paper.

TL;DR: In soybean seed coats the accumulation of the hydroxyproline-rich glycoprotein extensin is regulated in a developmental and tissue- specific manner and is primarily localized in the seed coat, hilum, and vascular elements of the seed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Preparation and microbial decomposition of synthetic [14C]ligins.

TL;DR: A definitive assay for microbiological and biochemical research on the biodegradation of lignin was developed using radioactive synthetic lignins specifically labeled in the side chains, aromatic rings or in the methoxyl groups.
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