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JA but not JA‐Ile is the cell‐nonautonomous signal activating JA mediated systemic defenses to herbivory in Nicotiana attenuata
Author(s) -
Bozorov Tohir A.,
Dinh Son Truong,
Baldwin Ian T.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of integrative plant biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.734
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1744-7909
pISSN - 1672-9072
DOI - 10.1111/jipb.12545
Subject(s) - manduca sexta , biology , arabidopsis , jasmonate , plant defense against herbivory , signal transduction , microbiology and biotechnology , jasmonic acid , solanaceae , metabolite , botany , biochemistry , gene , insect , mutant
The whole‐plant activation of defense responses to wounding and herbivory requires systemic signaling in which jasmonates (JAs) play a pivotal role. To examine the nature of the slower cell‐nonautonomous as compared to the rapid cell‐autonomous signal in mediating systemic defenses in Nicotiana attenuata , reciprocal stem grafting‐experiments were used with plants silenced for the JA biosynthetic gene ALLENE OXIDE CYCLASE (ir AOC ) or plants transformed to create JA sinks by ectopically expressing Arabidopsis JA‐O‐methyltransferase (ov JMT ). JA‐impaired ir AOC plants were defective in the cell‐nonautonomous signaling pathway but not in JA transport. Conversely, ov JMT plants abrogated the production of a graft‐transmissible JA signal. Both genotypes displayed unaltered cell‐autonomous signaling. Defense responses (17‐hydroxygeranyllinalool diterpene glycosides, nicotine, and proteinase inhibitors) and metabolite profiles were differently induced in ir AOC and ov JMT scions in response to graft‐transmissible signals from elicited wild type stocks. The performance of Manduca sexta larvae on the scions of different graft combinations was consistent with the patterns of systemic defense metabolite elicitations. Taken together, we conclude that JA and possibly MeJA, but not JA‐Ile, either directly functions as a long‐distance transmissible signal or indirectly interacts with long distance signal(s) to activate systemic defense responses.