Differential impact of crown rust (Puccinia coronata) infection on photosynthesis and volatile emissions in the primary host Avena sativa and the alternate host Rhamnus frangula

Author:

Sulaiman Hassan Y1ORCID,Runno-Paurson Eve1ORCID,Kaurilind Eve1ORCID,Niinemets Ülo12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Chair of Crop Science and Plant Biology, Estonian University of Life Sciences , Kreutzwaldi 5, 51006 Tartu , Estonia

2. Estonian Academy of Sciences , Kohtu 6, 10130 Tallinn , Estonia

Abstract

Abstract Rust infection results in decreases in photosynthesis and stress volatile emissions, but how these changes vary among host species has not been studied. We demonstrated that the impact of the obligate biotrophic fungus, Puccinia coronata f. sp. avenae, on foliage physiological processes is stronger in the primary host, Avena sativa (cultivated oat), than in the alternate host, Rhamnus frangula (alder buckthorn). Photosynthesis decreased with increasing percentage of damaged leaf area (DA) in both species, but reductions were greater in A. sativa. In A. sativa, photosynthetic reductions resulted from reductions in stomatal conductance and photosynthetic capacity; in R. frangula, reductions were due to reduced capacity. Infection reduced photosynthetic biomass and key nutrients in A. sativa, but not in R. frangula. In A. sativa, stress-elicited emissions (methyl jasmonate, green leaf volatiles, long-chain saturated aldehydes, mono- and sesquiterpenes, benzenoids, and carotenoid breakdown products) increased with increasing DA from 0% to 40%, but decreased with further increases in DA. In R. frangula, volatile emissions were slightly elicited but, surprisingly, constitutive isoprene emissions were enhanced. Different hosts had characteristic volatile fingerprints, indicating differential activation of biochemical pathways. Fungal-elicited reductions in photosynthesis scale uniformly with stress severity. In the sensitive host, biphasic scaling of volatiles indicates that heavy spread of chlorosis/necrosis leads to an overall cessation of physiological functioning.

Funder

European Research Council

Centre of Excellence EcolChange

Estonian University of Life Sciences

European Union Regional Development Fund

‘Plant Biology Infrastructure-TAIM’

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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