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H(2)O(2) production and changes in glutathione, catalase, and peroxidase were followed in whole-leaf extracts from the susceptible (AlgS Algerian/4* (F14) Man.(S); ml-a1 allele) and resistant (AlgR Algerian/4* (F14) Man.(R); Ml-a1 allele) barley (Hordeum vulgare) isolines between 12 and 24 h after inoculation with powdery mildew (Blumeria graminis DC. Speer syn. Erysiphe graminis DC f.sp hordei Marchal). Localized papilla responses and cell death hypersensitive responses were not observed within the same cell. In hypersensitive response sites, H(2)O(2) accumulation first occurred in the mesophyll underlying the attacked epidermal cell. Subsequently, H(2)O(2) disappeared from the mesophyll and accumulated around attacked epidermal cells. In AlgR, transient glutathione oxidation coincided with H(2)O(2) accumulation in the mesophyll. Subsequently, total foliar glutathione and catalase activities transiently increased in AlgR. These changes, absent from AlgS, preceded inoculation-dependent increases in peroxidase activity that were observed in both AlgR and AlgS at 18 h. An early intercellular signal precedes H(2)O(2), and this elicits anti-oxidant responses in leaves prior to events leading to death of attacked cells.
Vanacker et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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