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Oxylipins from both pathogen and host antagonize jasmonic acid‐mediated defence via the 9‐lipoxygenase pathway in Fusarium verticillioides infection of maize
Authors:Paola Battilani  Alessandra Lanubile  Valeria Scala  Massimo Reverberi  Rossella Gregori  Claudia Falavigna  Chiara Dall'asta  Yong‐Soon Park  John Bennett  Eli J Borrego  Michael V Kolomiets
Institution:1. Department of Sustainable Crop Production, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy;2. CREA‐DC, Consiglio per la Ricerca in Agricoltura e l'Analisi dell'Economia Agraria, Research Center for Plant Protection and Certification, Italy;3. Department of Environmental Biology, University of Rome “Sapienza”, Italy;4. Department of Organic and Industrial Chemistry, University of Parma, Italy;5. BK21 plus program, College of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology, Chungnam National University, South Korea;6. Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology, Texas A&M University, College Station, USA
Abstract:Oxylipins are a newly emerging group of signals that serve defence roles or promote virulence. To identify specific host and fungal genes and oxylipins governing the interactions between maize and Fusarium verticillioides, maize wild‐type and lipoxygenase3 (lox3) mutant were inoculated with either F. verticillioides wild‐type or linoleate‐diol‐synthase 1‐deleted mutant (ΔFvlds1D). The results showed that lox3 mutants were more resistant to F. verticillioides. The reduced colonization on lox3 was associated with reduced fumonisin production and with a stronger and earlier induction of ZmLOX4, ZmLOX5 and ZmLOX12. In addition to the reported defence function of ZmLOX12, we showed that lox4 and lox5 mutants were more susceptible to F. verticillioides and possessed decreased jasmonate levels during infection, suggesting that these genes are essential for jasmonic acid (JA)‐mediated defence. Oxylipin profiling revealed a dramatic reduction in fungal linoleate diol synthase 1 (LDS1)‐derived oxylipins, especially 8‐HpODE (8‐hydroperoxyoctadecenoic acid), in infected lox3 kernels, indicating the importance of this molecule in virulence. Collectively, we make the following conclusions: (1) LOX3 is a major susceptibility factor induced by fungal LDS1‐derived oxylipins to suppress JA‐stimulating 9‐LOXs; (2) LOX3‐mediated signalling promotes the biosynthesis of virulence‐promoting oxylipins in the fungus; and (3) both fungal LDS1‐ and host LOX3‐produced oxylipins are essential for the normal infection and colonization processes of maize seed by F. verticillioides.
Keywords:Fusarium  jasmonic acid  linoleate diol synthase  maize  oxylipin cross‐talk  susceptibility genes
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