Author:
Mora-Romero Guadalupe A.,Gonzalez-Ortiz Maria A.,Quiroz-Figueroa Francisco,Calderon-Vazquez Carlos L.,Medina-Godoy Sergio,Maldonado-Mendoza Ignacio,Arroyo-Becerra Analilia,Perez-Torres Anahí,Alatorre-Cobos Fulgencio,Sanchez Federico,Lopez-Meyer Melina
Abstract
The arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis is an intimate association between specific soil-borne fungi and the roots of most land plants. AM colonisation elicits an enhanced defence resistance against pathogens, known as mycorrhizal-induced resistance (MIR). This mechanism locally and systemically sensitises plant tissues to boost their basal defence response. Although a role for oxylipins in MIR has been proposed, it has not yet been experimentally confirmed. In this study, when the common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) lipoxygenase PvLOX2 was silenced in roots of composite plants, leaves of silenced plants lost their capacity to exhibit MIR against the foliar pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, even though they were colonised normally. PvLOX6, a LOX gene family member, is involved in JA biosynthesis in the common bean. Downregulation of PvLOX2 and PvLOX6 in leaves of PvLOX2 root-silenced plants coincides with the loss of MIR, suggesting that these genes could be involved in the onset and spreading of the mycorrhiza-induced defence response.
Subject
Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science
Cited by
14 articles.
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