James Anderson, E Patrick Fuerst, Trisa Tedrow, Brent Hulke and Ann Kennedy
Abstract: Incubation of dormant wild oat (Avena fatua L., isoline M73) caryopses for 1−3 days with Fusarium avenaceum seed-decay isolate F.a.1 induced activity of the plant defense enzyme polyphenol oxidase (PPO). Both extracts and leachates obtained from F.a.1-treated caryopses had decreased abundance of an ∼57 kDa antigenic PPO and increased abundance of antigenic PPOs ranging from ∼52 to 14 kDa, as compared to extracts and leachates from untreated caryopsis. Leachates from caryopsis incubated for 2 days with F.a.1 also had 5.1- and 7.5-fold more total PPO activity/g fwt and specific activity, respectively. Fractionation of leachate proteins by ion-exchange chromatography associated the majority of PPO activity with an ∼36 kDa protein from untreated caryopses and ∼36, 25, and 24 kDa proteins from F.a.1-treated caryopses. Predicted peptide sequences obtained from high-performance liquid chromatography−tandem mass spectrometry analyses indicated that the ∼57 and 36 kDa wild oat proteins had a strong similarity to wheat PPO. However, the 25 and 24 kDa proteins were most similar to a Chitinase and oxalate oxidase, respectively. Our results indicate that F.a.1-induced activation of latent PPO in wild oat caryopsis likely involves a cleavage mechanism allowing activated PPOs to be readily mobilized into their surrounding environment.
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