Multiple Hormones Act Sequentially to Mediate a Susceptible Tomato Pathogen Defense Response
Open Access
- 1 November 2003
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 133 (3) , 1181-1189
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.103.030379
Abstract
Phytohormones regulate plant responses to a wide range of biotic and abiotic stresses. How a limited number of hormones differentially mediate individual stress responses is not understood. We have used one such response, the compatible interaction of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) and Xanthomonas campestris pv vesicatoria (Xcv), to examine the interactions of jasmonic acid (JA), ethylene, and salicylic acid (SA). The role of JA was assessed using an antisense allene oxide cyclase transgenic line and the def1 mutant to suppress Xcv-induced biosynthesis of jasmonates. Xcv growth was limited in these lines as was subsequent disease symptom development. No increase in JA was detected before the onset of terminal necrosis. The lack of a detectable increase in JA may indicate that an oxylipin other than JA regulates basal resistance and symptom proliferation. Alternatively, there may be an increase in sensitivity to JA or related compounds following infection. Hormone measurements showed that the oxylipin signal must precede subsequent increases in ethylene and SA accumulation. Tomato thus actively regulates the Xcv-induced disease response via the sequential action of at least three hormones, promoting expansive cell death of its own tissue. This sequential action of jasmonate, ethylene, and SA in disease symptom development is different from the hormone interactions observed in many other plant-pathogen interactions.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- PMR6, a Pectate Lyase–Like Gene Required for Powdery Mildew Susceptibility in ArabidopsisPlant Cell, 2002
- Reduced Expression of the Tomato Ethylene Receptor Gene LeETR4 Enhances the Hypersensitive Response to Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoriaMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 2001
- Arabidopsis MAP Kinase 4 Negatively Regulates Systemic Acquired ResistanceCell, 2000
- Octadecanoid-Derived Alteration of Gene Expression and the “Oxylipin Signature” in Stressed Barley Leaves. Implications for Different Signaling PathwaysPlant Physiology, 2000
- Interactions and intersections of plant signaling pathwaysJournal of Molecular Biology, 1999
- Isolation of Ethylene-Insensitive Soybean Mutants That Are Altered in Pathogen Susceptibility and Gene-for-Gene Disease Resistance1Plant Physiology, 1999
- The hypersensitive response and the induction of cell death in plantsCell Death & Differentiation, 1997
- The Pseudomonas phytotoxin coronatine mimics octadecanoid signalling molecules of higher plantsFEBS Letters, 1994
- Biological Induction of Systemic Acquired Resistance inArabidopsisMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 1993
- Disease Development in Ethylene-InsensitiveArabidopsis thalianaInfected with Virulent and AvirulentPseudomonasandXanthomonasPathogensMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 1992