4.8 Article

O-Acyl Sugars Protect a Wild Tobacco from Both Native Fungal Pathogens and a Specialist Herbivore

Journal

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 174, Issue 1, Pages 370-386

Publisher

AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.1104/pp.16.01904

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Funding

  1. Max Planck Society
  2. European Research Council [293926]
  3. Deutsch Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research) [SFB 1127, FZT 118]

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O-Acyl sugars (O-AS) are abundant trichome-specific metabolites that function as indirect defenses against herbivores of the wild tobacco Nicotiana attenuata; whether they also function as generalized direct defenses against herbivores and pathogens remains unknown. We characterized natural variation in O-AS among 26 accessions and examined their influence on two native fungal pathogens, Fusarium brachygibbosum U4 and Alternaria sp. U10, and the specialist herbivore Manduca sexta. At least 15 different O-AS structures belonging to three classes were found in N. attenuata leaves. A 3-fold quantitative variation in total leaf O-AS was found among the natural accessions. Experiments with natural accessions and crosses between high- and low-O-AS accessions revealed that total O-AS levels were associated with resistance against herbivores and pathogens. Removing O-AS from the leaf surface increased M. sexta growth rate and plant fungal susceptibility. O-AS supplementation in artificial diets and germination medium reduced M. sexta growth and fungal spore germination, respectively. Finally, silencing the expression of a putative branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase E1 beta-subunit-encoding gene (NaBCKDE1B) in the trichomes reduced total leaf O-AS by 20% to 30% and increased susceptibility to Fusarium pathogens. We conclude that O-AS function as direct defenses to protect plants from attack by both native pathogenic fungi and a specialist herbivore and infer that their diversification is likely shaped by the functional interactions among these biotic stresses.

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