4.7 Article

Fusarium Head Blight Infection Induced Responses of Six Winter Wheat Varieties in Ascorbate-Glutathione Pathway, Photosynthetic Efficiency and Stress Hormones

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants12213720

Keywords

FHB; abscisic acid; salicylic acid; AsA-GSH cycle; photosynthetic efficiency; wheat

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This study investigates the physiological and biochemical responses of wheat to Fusarium head blight (FHB) stress and finds that the activity of AsA-GSH metabolism increases in resistant varieties, while carotenoid levels decrease. These findings contribute to the understanding of FHB resistance mechanisms and provide insights for breeding resistant varieties.
Fusarium head blight (FHB) is one of the most studied fungal diseases of wheat, causing massive grain yield and quality losses. This study aimed to extend previous studies on the physiological and biochemical responses of winter wheat to FHB stress in a controlled environment by focusing on the ascorbate-glutathione pathway (AsA-GSH), photosynthetic efficiency, and stress hormone levels, thus providing insight into the possible interactions of different defense mechanisms during infection. The activity of AsA-GSH metabolism was increased in FHB resistant varieties, maintaining the redox state of spikes, and consequently preserving functional photosystem II. Furthermore, carotenoids (Car) were shown to be the major pigments in the photosystem assembly, as they decreased in FHB-stressed spikes of resistant and moderately resistant varieties, compared to controls. Car are also the substrate for the synthesis of abscisic acid (ABA), which acts as a fungal effector and its elevated content leads to increased FHB susceptibility in inoculated spikes. The results of this study contributed to the knowledge of FHB resistance mechanisms and can be used to improve the breeding of FHB resistant varieties, which is considered to be the most effective control measure.

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