Cholic acid, a bile acid elicitor of hypersensitive cell death, pathogenesis-related protein synthesis, and phytoalexin accumulation in rice

Plant Physiol. 2006 Apr;140(4):1475-83. doi: 10.1104/pp.105.070334. Epub 2006 Feb 3.

Abstract

When plants interact with certain pathogens, they protect themselves by generating various defense responses. These defense responses are induced by molecules called elicitors. Since long ago, composts fermented by animal feces have been used as a fertilizer in plant cultivation, and recently, have been known to provide suppression of plant disease. Therefore, we hypothesized that the compounds from animal feces may function as elicitors of plant defense responses. As a result of examination of our hypothesis, an elicitor of rice defense responses was isolated from human feces, and its structure was identified as cholic acid (CA), a primary bile acid in animals. Treatment of rice (Oryza sativa) leaves with CA induced the accumulation of antimicrobial compounds (phytoalexins), hypersensitive cell death, pathogenesis-related (PR) protein synthesis, and increased resistance to subsequent infection by virulent pathogens. CA induced these defense responses more rapidly than did fungal cerebroside, a sphingolipid elicitor isolated from the rice pathogenic fungus Magnaporthe grisea. Furthermore, fungal cerebroside induced both types of rice phytoalexins, phytocassanes and momilactones, whereas CA mainly induced phytocassanes, but not momilactones. In the structure-activity relationship analysis, the hydroxyl groups at C-7 and C-12, and the carboxyl group at C-24 of CA contributed to the elicitor activity. These results indicate that CA is specifically recognized by rice and is a different type of elicitor from fungal cerebroside. This report demonstrated that bile acid induced defense responses in plants.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Bile / chemistry
  • Cell Death
  • Cerebrosides / pharmacology
  • Cholic Acid / chemistry
  • Cholic Acid / isolation & purification
  • Cholic Acid / pharmacology*
  • Feces / chemistry
  • Fungal Proteins / pharmacology
  • Humans
  • Immunity, Innate / drug effects
  • Oryza / drug effects*
  • Oryza / microbiology
  • Phytoalexins
  • Plant Extracts / metabolism*
  • Plant Proteins / biosynthesis*
  • Sesquiterpenes
  • Terpenes

Substances

  • Cerebrosides
  • Fungal Proteins
  • Plant Extracts
  • Plant Proteins
  • Sesquiterpenes
  • Terpenes
  • Cholic Acid
  • Phytoalexins