4.7 Article

Plant neighbour-modulated susceptibility to pathogens in intraspecific mixtures

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 72, Issue 18, Pages 6570-6580

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erab277

Keywords

Disease; immunity; intraspecific mixture; neighbour; Oryza sativa; plant-plant interactions; rice; Triticum turgidum; wheat

Categories

Funding

  1. Montpellier Universite d'excellence (I-Site MUSE)
  2. Institut Agro
  3. European Research Council (ERC) Starting Grant Project 'Ecophysiological and biophysical constraints on domestication in crop plants' [ERCStG-2014-639706-CONSTRAINTS]

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The study found that the presence of conspecific neighbors can modify the susceptibility to pathogens and immunity of rice and wheat, termed as 'neighbour-modulated susceptibility' (NMS). This discovery suggests that the mechanisms responsible for reducing disease in varietal mixtures in the field need to be re-examined.
As part of a trend towards diversifying cultivated areas, varietal mixtures are subject to renewed interest as a means to manage diseases. Besides the epidemiological effects of varietal mixtures on pathogen propagation, little is known about the effect of intraspecific plant-plant interactions and their impact on responses to disease. In this study, genotypes of rice (Oryza sativa) or durum wheat (Triticum turgidum) were grown with different conspecific neighbours and manually inoculated under conditions preventing pathogen propagation. Disease susceptibility was measured together with the expression of basal immunity genes as part of the response to intra-specific neighbours. The results showed that in many cases for both rice and wheat susceptibility to pathogens and immunity was modified by the presence of intraspecific neighbours. This phenomenon, which we term 'neighbour-modulated susceptibility' (NMS), could be caused by the production of below-ground signals and does not require the neighbours to be infected. Our results suggest that the mechanisms responsible for reducing disease in varietal mixtures in the field need to be re-examined.

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