Herbivore-induced volatiles reduce the susceptibility of neighboring tomato plants to transmission of a whitefly-borne begomovirus

Author:

Yang Fengbo1,Huang Tianyu1,Tong Hong1,Shi Xiaobin2,Zhang Rong13,Gu Weina13,Li Yue1,Han Peng4,Zhang Xiaoming5ORCID,Yang Yuting1,Zhou Zhixiong1,Wu Qingjun3,Zhang Youjun3,Su Qi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs Key Laboratory of Sustainable Crop Production in the Middle Reaches of the Yangtze River (Co-construction by Ministry and Province), Hubei Engineering Technology Center for Pest Forewarning and Management, College of Agriculture, Yangtze University , Jingzhou, Hubei 434025 , China

2. Yuelushan Laboratory , Changsha, Hunan 410125 , China

3. State Key Laboratory of Vegetable Biobreeding, Institute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences , Beijing 100081 , China

4. Yunnan Key Laboratory of Plant Reproductive Adaptation and Evolutionary Ecology, Laboratory of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, School of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Yunnan University , Kunming 650504 , China

5. College of Plant Protection, Yunnan Agricultural University, National Key Laboratory for Conservation and Utilization of Biological Resources in Yunnan , Kunming 650201 , China

Abstract

Abstract Plant viruses exist in a broader ecological community that includes non-vector herbivores that can impact vector abundance, behavior, and virus transmission within shared host plants. However, little is known about the effects of non-vector herbivore infestation on virus transmission by vector insects on neighboring plants through inter-plant airborne chemicals. In this study, we investigated how volatiles emitted from tomato plants infested with the two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae) affect the infection of neighboring plants by tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) transmitted by whitefly (Bemisia tabaci). Exposure of neighboring tomato plants to volatiles released from T. urticae-infested tomato plants reduced subsequent herbivory as well as TYLCV transmission and infection, and the jasmonic acid signaling pathway was essential for generation of the inter-plant defense signals. We also demonstrated that (E)-β-ocimene and methyl salicylic acid were two volatiles induced by T. urticae that synergistically attenuated TYLCV transmission and infection in tomato. Thus, our findings suggest that plant–plant communication via volatiles likely represents a widespread defensive mechanism that substantially contributes to plant fitness. Understanding such phenomena may help us to predict the occurrence and epidemics of multiple herbivores and viruses in agroecosystems, and ultimately to manage pest and virus outbreaks.

Funder

National Key R & D Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Agriculture Research System

Outstanding Youth Science and Technology Innovation Team Project of Colleges and Universities in Hubei Province

Science and Technology Innovation Program of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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