High rates of extracellular superoxide production by lichens in the suborder Peltigerineae correlate with indices of high metabolic activity

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Abstract

Rates of extracellular superoxide radical (O2.-) formation were measured in 34 species of lichens from different taxonomic groupings and contrasting habitats before and after desiccation stress. All 21 species from the suborder Peltigerineae produce O2.- extracellularly at high rates, even when they are not stressed. In addition, some species show a burst of O2.- production during rehydration following desiccation. Extracellular production of O 2.- is almost absent in the species from other lichen groups. In general, production of high levels of O2.- and the existence of an inducible oxidative burst are best developed in species growing in wet microhabitats. Rates of O2.- production are also positively correlated to previously published indices of lichen metabolic activity. Preliminary studies on the identity of the O 2.- producing enzymes suggest that they do not possess the classical characteristics of those suggested to produce reactive oxygen species in higher plants. Patterns of O2.- production are discussed in terms of the strategies used by different lichens groups in their defence against pathogenic fungi and bacteria.

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Beckett, R. P., Minibayeva, F. V., Vylegzhanina, N. N., & Tolpysheva, T. (2003). High rates of extracellular superoxide production by lichens in the suborder Peltigerineae correlate with indices of high metabolic activity. Plant, Cell and Environment, 26(11), 1827–1837. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-3040.2003.01099.x

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