Function of the oxidative burst in hypersensitive disease resistance

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Abstract

Microbial elicitors or attempted infection with an avirulent pathogen strain causes the rapid production of reactive oxygen intermediates. Recent findings indicate that H2O2 from this oxidative burst plays a central role in the orchestration of the hypersensitive response: (i) as the substrate driving the cross-linking of cell wall structural proteins to slow microbial ingress prior to the deployment of transcription-dependent defenses and to trap pathogens in cells destined to undergo hypersensitive cell death, (ii) as a local threshold trigger of this programmed death in challenged cells, and (iii) as a diffusible signal for the induction in adjacent cells of genes encoding cellular protectants such as glutathione S-transferase and glutathione peroxidase. These findings provide the basis for an integrated model for the orchestration of the localized hypersensitive resistance response to attack by an avirulent pathogen.

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APA

Tenhaken, R., Levine, A., Brisson, L. F., Dixon, R. A., & Lamb, C. (1995). Function of the oxidative burst in hypersensitive disease resistance. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 92(10), 4158–4163. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.92.10.4158

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