Journal article

Glucosinolates in Brassica juncea and resistance to Australian isolates of Leptosphaeria maculans, the blackleg fungus

AC Sexton, JA Kirkegaard, BJ Howlett

Australasian Plant Pathology | SPRINGER | Published : 1999

Abstract

Volatiles released from glucosinolates (predominantly 2-propenyl glucosinolate) in tissues of Brassica juncea and Wasabi japonica are toxic to the blackleg fungus, Leptosphaeria maculans, in vitro. However, there is no relationship between blackleg resistance (in stems or cotyledons) and the level of 2-propenyl glucosinolate in seed or shoot tissue of B. juncea. A representative isolate from each of two classes of Australian isolates of L. maculans was tested: those which cause stem cankers on both B. napus and B. juncea (e.g. isolate MI), and those which cause stem cankers on B. napus but not on B. juncea (e.g. isolate C13). Even in lines of B. juncea in which levels of 2-propenyl glucosino..

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University of Melbourne Researchers