4.8 Article

Dedicated farnesyl diphosphate synthases circumvent isoprenoid-derived growth-defense tradeoffs in Zea mays

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 112, Issue 1, Pages 207-220

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15941

Keywords

fungal; insect; isoprenoid; pathogen; phytoalexin; tradeoff; ubiquinone; Zea mays

Categories

Funding

  1. United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)-Agricultural Research Service [603611210-001-00D]
  2. USDA-National Institute of Food and Agriculture-Specialty Crop Research Initiative grant [2018-51181-28419]
  3. National Science Foundation [MCB-1712608]

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Zea mays produces high levels of zealexins, an important defense compound, without negatively affecting its growth by partitioning the production of farnesyl diphosphate, the precursor for zealexins, between different farnesyl diphosphate synthases. Specifically, FPS3 is responsible for zealexin production, while FPS1 is responsible for the production of the essential respiratory co-factor ubiquinone.
Zea mays (maize) makes phytoalexins such as sesquiterpenoid zealexins, to combat invading pathogens. Zealexins are produced from farnesyl diphosphate in microgram per gram fresh weight quantities. As farnesyl diphosphate is also a precursor for many compounds essential for plant growth, the question arises as to how Z. mays produces high levels of zealexins without negatively affecting vital plant systems. To examine if specific pools of farnesyl diphosphate are made for zealexin synthesis we made CRISPR/Cas9 knockouts of each of the three farnesyl diphosphate synthases (FPS) in Z. mays and examined the resultant impacts on different farnesyl diphosphate-derived metabolites. We found that FPS3 (GRMZM2G098569) produced most of the farnesyl diphosphate for zealexins, while FPS1 (GRMZM2G168681) made most of the farnesyl diphosphate for the vital respiratory co-factor ubiquinone. Indeed, fps1 mutants had strong developmental phenotypes such as reduced stature and development of chlorosis. The replication and evolution of the fps gene family in Z. mays enabled it to produce dedicated FPSs for developmentally related ubiquinone production (FPS1) or defense-related zealexin production (FPS3). This partitioning of farnesyl diphosphate production between growth and defense could contribute to the ability of Z. mays to produce high levels of phytoalexins without negatively impacting its growth.

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