1. Effect of Plant Sterols and Tannins on Phytophthora ramorum Growth and Sporulation.
- Author
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Stong, Rachel, Kolodny, Eli, Kelsey, Rick, González-Hernández, M., Vivanco, Jorge, and Manter, Daniel
- Subjects
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PHYTOPHTHORA ramorum , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of sterols , *TANNIN plants , *BACTERIAL sporulation , *BACTERIAL growth , *PROTEIN binding , *ELICITINS - Abstract
Elicitin-mediated acquisition of plant sterols is required for growth and sporulation of Phytophthora spp. This study examined the interactions between elicitins, sterols, and tannins. Ground leaf tissue, sterols, and tannin-enriched extracts were obtained from three different plant species (California bay laurel, California black oak, and Oregon white oak) in order to evaluate the effect of differing sterol/tannin contents on Phytophthora ramorum growth. For all three species, high levels of foliage inhibited P. ramorum growth and sporulation, with a steeper concentration dependence for the two oak samples. Phytophthora ramorum growth and sporulation were inhibited by either phytosterols or tannin-enriched extracts. High levels of sterols diminished elicitin gene expression in P. ramorum; whereas the tannin-enriched extract decreased the amount of 'functional' or ELISA-detectable elicitin, but not gene expression. Across all treatment combinations, P. ramorum growth and sporulation correlated strongly with the amount of ELISA-detectable elicitin ( R = 0.791 and 0.961, respectively). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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