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. 1991 Jun;96(2):537-44.
doi: 10.1104/pp.96.2.537.

Implication of Gibberellins in Head Smut (Sporisorium reilianum) of Sorghum bicolor

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Implication of Gibberellins in Head Smut (Sporisorium reilianum) of Sorghum bicolor

A M Matheussen et al. Plant Physiol. 1991 Jun.

Abstract

The head smut fungus, Sporisorium reilianum ([Kuhn] Landon and Fullerton), was shown to reduce plant height in infected Sorghum bicolor ([L.] Moench) plants. The major reductions occurred in the internodes nearest the panicle and were more severe in naturally infected than in inoculated plants. Less affected plants developed reproductively sterile panicles, and eventually smutted panicles developed phyllodied growths which progressed into leafy shoots. Extracts of smutted, sterile, and healthy (control) panicles of field-grown plants exhibited gibberellin (GA)-like activity in the dwarf rice bioassay. When extracts were purified and assayed with deuterium-labeled GA standards by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry-selected ion monitoring (GC-MS-SIM), GA(1), GA(3), GA(19), GA(20), and GA(53) were detected based on coelution with the standards, identical Kovats retention index values, and matching ion masses and relative abundances for three major ions. In addition, based on published Kovats retention index values, ion masses, and relative abundance values, GA(4), GA(7), GA(8), GA(14), GA(29), and GA(44) were tentatively identified. Quantitative analysis revealed that panicles of healthy control plants contained from 60 to 100% higher total concentrations of GAs than panicles of smutted plants. These comparisons were most striking for the early 13-hydroxylation pathway precursors GA(53), GA(44), and GA(19) but not for GA(20). Extracts of S. reilianum sporidia and culture medium exhibited GA-like bioactivity, and GA(1) and GA(3) were detected based on GC-MS-SIM assay with (2)H-labeled internal standards. Quantitative analysis of these GAs showed increasing concentrations from 4 to 7 to 10 days of culture and a decline at 20 days. This is the first GC-MS-SIM detection of GAs in a non-Ascomycete fungus, and the disease symptoms and quantitative data suggested that fungal infection may interfere with biosynthesis of GAs by the host plant.

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