Indonesian
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Plant Physiology 2019-Aug

Methyl Salicylate Glucosylation Regulates Plant Defense Signaling and Systemic Acquired Resistance.

Hanya pengguna terdaftar yang dapat menerjemahkan artikel
Masuk daftar
Tautan disimpan ke clipboard
Lu Chen
Wen-Shuai Wang
Ting Wang
Xia-Fei Meng
Ting-Ting Chen
Xu-Xu Huang
Yan-Jie Li
Bing-Kai Hou

Kata kunci

Abstrak

Plant systemic acquired resistance (SAR) provides an efficient broad-spectrum immune response to pathogens. SAR involves mobile signal molecules that are generated by infected tissues and transported to systemic tissues. Methyl salicylate (MeSA), a molecule that can be converted to salicylic acid (SA), is an essential signal for establishing SAR, particularly under a short period of exposure to light after pathogen infection. Thus, the control of MeSA homeostasis is important for an optimal SAR response. Here, we characterized a uridine diphosphate-glycosyltransferase, UGT71C3, in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), which was induced mainly in leaf tissue by pathogens including Pst DC3000/avrRpt2 (Pseudomonas syringae pv tomato strain DC3000 expressing avrRpt2). Biochemical analysis indicated that UGT71C3 exhibited strong enzymatic activity toward MeSA to form MeSA glucosides in vitro and in vivo. After primary pathogen infection by Pst DC3000/avrRpt2, ugt71c3 knockout mutants exhibited more powerful systemic resistance to secondary pathogen infection than that of wild-type plants, whereas systemic resistance in UGT71C3 overexpression lines was compromised. In agreement, after primary infection of local leaves, ugt71c3 knockout mutants accumulated significantly more systemic MeSA and SA than that in wild-type plants. whereas UGT71C3 overexpression lines accumulated less. Our results suggest that MeSA glucosylation by UGT71C3 facilitates negative regulation of the SAR response by modulating homeostasis of MeSA and SA. This study unveils further SAR regulation mechanisms and highlights the role of glucosylation of MeSA and potentially other systemic signals in negatively modulating plant systemic defense.

Bergabunglah dengan
halaman facebook kami

Database tanaman obat terlengkap yang didukung oleh sains

  • Bekerja dalam 55 bahasa
  • Pengobatan herbal didukung oleh sains
  • Pengenalan herbal melalui gambar
  • Peta GPS interaktif - beri tag herba di lokasi (segera hadir)
  • Baca publikasi ilmiah yang terkait dengan pencarian Anda
  • Cari tanaman obat berdasarkan efeknya
  • Atur minat Anda dan ikuti perkembangan berita, uji klinis, dan paten

Ketikkan gejala atau penyakit dan baca tentang jamu yang mungkin membantu, ketik jamu dan lihat penyakit dan gejala yang digunakan untuk melawannya.
* Semua informasi didasarkan pada penelitian ilmiah yang dipublikasikan

Google Play badgeApp Store badge