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Threat at One End of the Plant: What Travels to Inform the Other Parts?

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22063152

Keywords

systemic signaling; calcium; reactive oxygen species; priming; salicylic acid; jasmonic acid; azelaic acid; glycerol-3-phosphate; dehydroabietinal; pipecolic acid; small RNA; miRNA; siRNA; vascular tissue; phloem transport; volatiles

Funding

  1. [CRC 1127]

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In order to adapt and respond to environmental changes, plants rely on the dynamic and fast distribution of information through fast-traveling metabolites, hormones, proteins, and other signaling molecules within the plant body. Communication between different parts of the plant is facilitated by electric and hydraulic waves, while volatiles play a key role in activating defense responses and maintaining signal propagation. This long-distance signaling process involves amplification mechanisms, feedback loops, and cross-talk among different signaling molecules, as well as a short-term memory system to refresh the propagation process.
Adaptation and response to environmental changes require dynamic and fast information distribution within the plant body. If one part of a plant is exposed to stress, attacked by other organisms or exposed to any other kind of threat, the information travels to neighboring organs and even neighboring plants and activates appropriate responses. The information flow is mediated by fast-traveling small metabolites, hormones, proteins/peptides, RNAs or volatiles. Electric and hydraulic waves also participate in signal propagation. The signaling molecules move from one cell to the neighboring cell, via the plasmodesmata, through the apoplast, within the vascular tissue or-as volatiles-through the air. A threat-specific response in a systemic tissue probably requires a combination of different traveling compounds. The propagating signals must travel over long distances and multiple barriers, and the signal intensity declines with increasing distance. This requires permanent amplification processes, feedback loops and cross-talks among the different traveling molecules and probably a short-term memory, to refresh the propagation process. Recent studies show that volatiles activate defense responses in systemic tissues but also play important roles in the maintenance of the propagation of traveling signals within the plant. The distal organs can respond immediately to the systemic signals or memorize the threat information and respond faster and stronger when they are exposed again to the same or even another threat. Transmission and storage of information is accompanied by loss of specificity about the threat that activated the process. I summarize our knowledge about the proposed long-distance traveling compounds and discuss their possible connections.

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