4.5 Article

In the tripartite combination Botrytis cinerea-Arabidopsis-Eurydema oleracea, the fungal pathogen alters the plant-insect interaction via jasmonic acid signalling activation and inducible plant-emitted volatiles

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT RESEARCH
Volume 134, Issue 3, Pages 523-533

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10265-021-01273-9

Keywords

Arabidopsis; Botrytis cinerea; Eurydema oleracea; Jasmonate signalling pathways; Plant‐ emitted volatiles

Categories

Funding

  1. Universita degli Studi di Perugia within the CRUI-CARE Agreement

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Plants face challenges from multiple stress factors in ecosystems, with fungal pathogens influencing their defense responses against invasive pests. Different types of fungal pathogens trigger different hormonal pathways in plants, affecting their susceptibility to herbivores. The modulation of host volatile emission by necrotrophic fungi plays a role in plant defense against subsequent insect attacks, highlighting the intricate interactions between plants, microbes, and insects in nature.
In ecosystems, plants are continuously challenged by combined stress conditions more than by a single biotic or abiotic factor. Consequently, in recent years studies on plant relationships with multiple stresses have aroused increasing interest. Here, the impact of inoculation with fungal pathogens with different lifestyles on Arabidopsis plants response to the following infestation with the invasive crop pest Eurydema oleracea was investigated. In particular, as fungal pathogens the necrotroph Botrytis cinerea and the biotroph Golovinomyces orontii were used. Plants exposed to B. cinerea, but not to G. orontii, showed reduced herbivore feeding damage. This difference was associated to different hormonal pathways triggered by the pathogens: G. orontii only induced the salicylate-mediated pathway, while B. cinerea stimulated also the jasmonate-dependent signalling, which persisted for a long time providing a long-term defence to further herbivore attack. In particular, the lower susceptibility of B. cinerea-infected Arabidopsis plants to E. oleracea was related to the stimulation of the JA-induced pathway on the production of plant volatile compounds, since treatment with VOCs emitted by B. cinerea inoculated plants inhibited both insect plant choice and feeding damage. These results indicate that necrotrophic plant pathogenic fungi modulate host volatile emission, thus affecting plant response to subsequent insect, thereby increasing the knowledge on tripartite plant-microbe-insect interactions in nature.

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