Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2836397 Physiological and Molecular Plant Pathology 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The mechanisms of plant response to the infection with Colletotrichum coccodes.•Changes of phenolics induced by fungal inoculation have been studied in pepper fruit.•Content of some phenolic compounds differs in healthy and infected tissue.•Bordering zone around infected tissue resulting in higher total phenolic content.•Breeding strategies can focus on providing plants with high levels of some phenolics.

Qualitative and quantitative changes of individual and total phenolics induced by Colletotrichum coccodes fungal infection have been studied in two susceptible sweet pepper cultivars ‘Soroksari’ and ‘Bagoly’, and the role of soluble phenolic compounds in plant's defence mechanism has been evaluated. Three distinct parts were analysed on pepper fruit: healthy tissue, anthracnose lesion, and bordering tissue, and individual phenolic compounds have been identified with the use of HPLC-MS system. In pepper fruit pericarp 21 phenolic compounds have been determined; the prevalent apigenin, quercetin and luteolin glycosides, chlorogenic acid and one chrysoeriol glucoside. C. coccodes infection increased the accumulation of chlorogenic acid, chrysoeriol glucoside, quercetin and luteolin glycosides in infected bordering tissue of both analysed pepper cultivars compared to healthy pepper tissue or symptomatic spot. Total apigenin derivatives did not show a significant increase in bordering tissue compared to the healthy pepper fruit in contrast to other groups of phenolics. This suggests a lesser role of apigenin glycosides in pepper plant defence against the Colletotrichum fungus. Intense phenolic synthesis was characteristic for the bordering zone between the healthy and infected plant tissue resulting in higher total phenolic content which might hinder the fungus to spread from the infected cells into the healthy tissue.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Plant Science
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