Immunity priming uncouples the growth–defense trade-off in tomato

Author:

Leibman-Markus Meirav1ORCID,Schneider Anat12,Gupta Rupali1ORCID,Marash Iftah13,Rav-David Dalia1,Carmeli-Weissberg Mira4,Elad Yigal1,Bar Maya1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Agricultural Research Organization, Volcani Institute 1 Department of Plant Pathology and Weed Research , , Bet Dagan 50250 , Israel

2. Hebrew University of Jerusalem 2 Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology , , Rehovot 7610001 , Israel

3. School of Plant Science and Food Security, Tel-Aviv University 3 , Tel-Aviv 69978 , Israel

4. Institute of Plant Sciences, Agricultural Research Organization, Volcani Institute 4 , Bet Dagan 50250 , Israel

Abstract

ABSTRACT Plants have developed an array of mechanisms to protect themselves against pathogen invasion. The deployment of defense mechanisms is imperative for plant survival, but can come at the expense of plant growth, leading to the ‘growth–defense trade-off’ phenomenon. Following pathogen exposure, plants can develop resistance to further attack. This is known as induced resistance, or priming. Here, we investigated the growth–defense trade-off, examining how defense priming via systemic acquired resistance (SAR), or induced systemic resistance (ISR), affects tomato development and growth. We found that defense priming can promote, rather than inhibit, plant development, and that defense priming and growth trade-offs can be uncoupled. Cytokinin response was activated during induced resistance, and found to be required for the observed growth and disease resistance resulting from ISR activation. ISR was found to have a stronger effect than SAR on plant development. Our results suggest that growth promotion and induced resistance can be co-dependent, and that, in certain cases, defense priming can drive developmental processes and promote plant yield.

Funder

Israel Science Foundation

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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