Glucose, and not sucrose, is transported from wheat to wheat powdery mildew

被引:0
|
作者
P. N. Sutton
M. J. Henry
J. L. Hall
机构
[1] School of Biological Sciences,
[2] University of Southampton,undefined
[3] Southampton,undefined
[4] SO16 7PX,undefined
[5] UK,undefined
[6] Dow Agrosciences LLC,undefined
[7] Venture Park R & D Center,undefined
[8] Indianapolis,undefined
[9] 46268-1054,undefined
[10] USA,undefined
来源
Planta | 1999年 / 208卷
关键词
Key words:Erysiphe (carbon source); Glucose transport; Powdery mildew; Sugar transport; Triticum;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The main host carbon energy source transferred from wheat leaves (Triticum aestivum L.) to wheat powdery mildew (Erysiphe graminis f.sp. tritici) has been investigated in three ways. When the uptake of sugars by isolated mycelial suspensions was examined, the uptake rate for glucose was considerably higher than that for a range of other solutes. Analysis by high-performance liquid chromatography of leaf and mycelial extracts following uptake of sugars into infected leaf pieces confirmed that sucrose was rapidly hydrolyzed in the leaf; no sucrose or fructose could be detected in mycelial extracts. Furthermore, studies of the uptake of asymmetrically labelled sucrose indicated that this sugar is cleaved prior to uptake by the pathogen. Thus several lines of evidence show that glucose, and not sucrose, is the major carbon energy source transferred from host to fungal mycelium.
引用
收藏
页码:426 / 430
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Development of powdery mildew and leaf rust epidemics in winter wheat cultivars
    Vechet, L
    PLANT SOIL AND ENVIRONMENT, 2003, 49 (10) : 439 - 442
  • [32] Genetic basis of resistance against powdery mildew in the wheat cultivar "Tabasco"
    Wu, Jizhong
    Jia, Haiyan
    Qiao, Linyi
    Fu, Bisheng
    Brown-Guedira, Gina
    Nagarajan, Ragupathi
    Yan, Liuling
    MOLECULAR BREEDING, 2023, 43 (07)
  • [33] Physiological characteristics of wheat leaves in cultivars resistant and susceptible to powdery mildew
    Yurina, TP
    Yurina, EV
    Karavaev, VA
    Solntsev, MK
    Kukushkina, MA
    Ekobena, FAP
    RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1996, 43 (01) : 64 - 69
  • [34] Wheat gene TaS3 contributes to powdery mildew susceptibility
    Li, Shaohui
    Ji, Rui
    Dudler, Robert
    Yong, Mingli
    Deng, Qide
    Wang, Zhengyi
    Hu, Dongwei
    PLANT CELL REPORTS, 2013, 32 (12) : 1891 - 1901
  • [35] Impact of powdery mildew on the yield of soft white spring wheat cultivars
    Conner, RL
    Kuzyk, AD
    Su, H
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PLANT SCIENCE, 2003, 83 (04) : 725 - 728
  • [36] Genetic characterization of powdery mildew resistance in US hard winter wheat
    Chen, Yihua
    Hunger, Robert M.
    Carver, Brett F.
    Zhang, Hailin
    Yan, Liuling
    MOLECULAR BREEDING, 2009, 24 (02) : 141 - 152
  • [37] Quantitative proteomics reveals the central changes of wheat in response to powdery mildew
    Fu, Ying
    Zhang, Hong
    Mandal, Siddikun Nabi
    Wang, Changyou
    Chen, Chunhuan
    Ji, Wanquan
    JOURNAL OF PROTEOMICS, 2016, 130 : 108 - 119
  • [38] Genetic dissection of quantitative powdery mildew resistance loci in tetraploid wheat
    Ben-David, Roi
    Peleg, Zvi
    Dinoor, Amos
    Saranga, Yehoshua
    Korol, Abraham B.
    Fahima, Tzion
    MOLECULAR BREEDING, 2014, 34 (04) : 1647 - 1658
  • [39] Genetic dissection of quantitative powdery mildew resistance loci in tetraploid wheat
    Roi Ben-David
    Zvi Peleg
    Amos Dinoor
    Yehoshua Saranga
    Abraham B. Korol
    Tzion Fahima
    Molecular Breeding, 2014, 34 : 1647 - 1658
  • [40] Adult-plant resistance to powdery mildew in knox 62 wheat
    Johnson, JW
    Ge, YF
    Roberts, JJ
    Raymer, P
    Seo, Y
    CEREAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2003, 31 (3-4) : 281 - 288