“…The development of different organs and tissue types is governed by the selective expression of distinct fractions of the genome, resulting in the physiologically incompatible differences between the pepper fruit and pepper leaf ( Ma et al, 2005 ). Plant organs that are known to form boundary layers in response to necrotrophic pathogen infections are chili pepper fruit ( Kim et al, 2004 , 2008 ), ginseng root ( Jeon and Kim, 2008 ; Kim et al, 2009 ), cactus stem ( Kim and Kim, 2002 ), and peach bark ( Biggs, 1989 ), all of which are secondarily grown organs in which meristematic cells are regenerated to produce the secondary state of tissues (e.g., periderm) related to the boundary layers (e.g., wound periderm) ( Biggs, 1986 ; Esau, 1977 ). All of these observations suggest that the nonhost defense response of the chili pepper fruit is dynamic and utilizes physiological events in situ that are governed during organ development by the enhanced expression of genes, probably for pathogenesis-related proteins that are required for PCD ( Kim and Hwang, 2015 ) and key enzymes in cell wall-building processes, including lignin formation ( Taheri and Tarighi, 2011 , 2012 ).…”