Publication | Closed Access
P<scp>HYTOALEXINS</scp>: What Have We Learned After 60 Years?
536
Citations
98
References
1999
Year
PhytoalexinEngineeringMedicinePhysiologyPathogenesisInduced ResistancePlant PathologyPhytoalexin BiosynthesisMicrobiologyPathogen VirulencePharmacologyAntimicrobial ResistancePlant PhysiologyInfection SiteDrug Resistance
One of the best and longest-studied defense response of plants to infection is the induced accumulation of antimicrobial, low-molecular-weight secondary metabolites known as phytoalexins. Since the phytoalexin hypothesis was first proposed in 1940, a role for these compounds in defense has been revealed through several experimental approaches. Support has come, for example, through studies on the rate of phytoalexins in relation to cessation of pathogen development, quantification of phytoalexins at the infection site, and relationship of pathogen virulence to the phytoalexin tolerance. Evidence in support of phytoalexins in resistance as well some recent advances in phytoalexin biosynthesis are reviewed. Criteria for evaluating a role for phytoalexins in disease resistance are also discussed.
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