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Background  

Plants trigger and tailor defense responses after perception of the oral secretions (OS) of attacking specialist lepidopteran larvae. Fatty acid-amino acid conjugates (FACs) in the OS of the Manduca sexta larvae are necessary and sufficient to elicit the herbivory-specific responses in Nicotiana attenuata, an annual wild tobacco species. How FACs are perceived and activate signal transduction mechanisms is unknown.  相似文献   

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In plants, herbivore attack elicits the rapid accumulation of jasmonic acid (JA) which results from the activation of constitutively expressed biosynthetic enzymes. The molecular mechanisms controlling the activation of JA biosynthesis remain largely unknown however new research has elucidated some of the early regulatory components involved in this process. Nicotiana attenuata plants, a wild tobacco species, responds to fatty acid amino acid conjuguates (FAC) elicitors in the oral secretion of its natural herbivore, Manduca sexta, by triggering specific defense and tolerance responses against it; all of the defense responses known to date require the amplification of the wound-induced JA increase. We recently demonstrated that this FAC-elicited JA burst requires an increased flux of free linolenic acid (18:3) likely originating from the activation of a plastidial glycerolipase (GLA1) which is activated by an abundant FAC found in insect oral secretions, N-linolenoyl-glutamate (18:3-Glu). The lack of accumulation of free 18:3 after elicitation suggests a tight physical association between GLA1 and LOX3 in N. attenuata leaves. In addition, the salicylate-induced protein kinase (SIPK) and the nonexpressor of PR-1 (NPR1) participate in this activation mechanism that controls the supply of 18:3. In contrast, the wound-induced protein kinase (WIPK) does not but instead regulates the conversion of 13(S)-hydroperoxy-18:3 into 12-oxo-phytodienoic acid (OPDA). These results open new perspectives on the complex network of signals and regulatory components inducing the JA biosynthetic pathway.Key words: jasmonic acid, lipase, lipoxygenase, wounding, plant-insect interactions, FAC  相似文献   

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Salicylic acid (SA), jasmonic acid (JA), ethylene (ET), and their interactions mediate plant responses to pathogen and herbivore attack. JA-SA and JA-ET cross-signaling are well studied, but little is known about SA-ET cross-signaling in plant-herbivore interactions. When the specialist herbivore tobacco hornworm (Manduca sexta) attacks Nicotiana attenuata, rapid and transient JA and ET bursts are elicited without significantly altering wound-induced SA levels. In contrast, attack from the generalist beet armyworm (Spodoptera exigua) results in comparatively lower JA and ET bursts, but amplified SA bursts. These phytohormone responses are mimicked when the species' larval oral secretions (OSSe and OSMs) are added to puncture wounds. Fatty acid-amino acid conjugates elicit the JA and ET bursts, but not the SA burst. OSSe had enhanced glucose oxidase activity (but not β-glucosidase activity), which was sufficient to elicit the SA burst and attenuate the JA and ET levels. It is known that SA antagonizes JA; glucose oxidase activity and associated hydrogen peroxide also antagonizes the ET burst. We examined the OSMs-elicited SA burst in plants impaired in their ability to elicit JA (antisense [as]-lox3) and ET (inverted repeat [ir]-aco) bursts and perceive ET (35s-etr1b) after fatty acid-amino acid conjugate elicitation, which revealed that both ET and JA bursts antagonize the SA burst. Treating wild-type plants with ethephone and 1-methylcyclopropane confirmed these results and demonstrated the central role of the ET burst in suppressing the OSMs-elicited SA burst. By suppressing the SA burst, the ET burst likely facilitates unfettered JA-mediated defense activation in response to herbivores that otherwise would elicit SA.  相似文献   

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Fatty acid-amino acid conjugates (FACs) have been identified in Lepidopteran larvae as elicitors of plant defenses. Plant responses include the production of primary defense compounds and induction of secondary defense strategies including attraction of parasitoid wasps. These elicitors are present despite fitness costs, suggesting that they are important for the larvae’s survival. In order to exploit FAC-mediated plant defense responses in agricultural settings, an understanding of FAC purpose and metabolism is crucial. To clarify their role, enzymes involved in this metabolism are being investigated. In this work a previously undiscovered FAC hydrolase was purified from Heliothis virescens frass by liquid chromatography and PAGE techniques and was identified as an aminoacylase-like protein (L-ACY-1) using MALDI-ToF/ToF and Edman sequencing. The full length gene was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli and a polyclonal antibody against L-ACY-1 was made. L-ACY-1 was confirmed to be responsible for FAC hydrolysis activity through inhibition of N-linolenoyl-l-glutamine hydrolysis by titration with the polyclonal anti-L-ACY-1 antibody. L-ACY-1 activity is dependent on a divalent cation. This is the first time an aminoacylase has been described from an insect. L-ACY-1 appears to play a vastly different role in insects than ACYs do in mammals and may be involved in maintaining glutamine supplies for gut tissue metabolism. Identification of L-ACY-1, a FAC hydrolase, clarifies a previously uncharacterized portion of FAC metabolism.  相似文献   

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This study investigated the biological effects of various dietary essential fatty acids levels to sea scallop larvae, Placopecten magellanicus. Scallop larvae were fed three diets from D-veliger to settlement. Diet A consisted of Isochrysis sp. and Pavlova lutheri, diet B was a mix of Isochrysis sp. and Chaetoceros muelleri and diet C consisted of the same two species, but C. muelleri was grown under silicate deprivation to alter the fatty acid composition. Pediveligers (28 days old) were sampled prior to settlement for fatty acid analysis, growth measurement and survival assessment. Survival and settlement success were measured at the end of the experiment (day 40). Our results show that feeding regime greatly influenced larval size, settlement and fatty acid composition. Diet A was severely deficient in arachidonic acid (20:4n-6, AA), leading to the poorest larval growth, survival and lipid content. Nevertheless, larvae fed diet A selectively accumulate AA by a factor three compared to the dietary amount. Shell size of 28-day-old larvae was positively correlated with AA content and negatively correlated with eicosapentaenoic acid (20:5n-3, EPA)-AA ratio, thus suggesting that these two variables are of major interest for the optimisation of larval growth in sea scallops. Finally, larvae fed diet C displayed 20% higher shell size at day 28 than larvae fed diet A and B, likely in relation to the dietary amount of saturated fatty acid (SFA). However, the moderate survival and settlement success of these groups of larvae might be associated with a relative deficiency in docosahexaenoic acid (22:6n-3, DHA). This study underlines that the overall balance between polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) needs to be considered to adequately fed sea scallop larvae.  相似文献   

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When attacked by herbivores, plants produce toxic secondary metabolites that function as direct defenses, as well as indirect defenses that attract and reward predators of the offending herbivores. These indirect defenses include both nutritive rewards such as extra floral nectar, as well as informational rewards, such as the production and release of volatile compounds that betray the location of feeding herbivores to predators. Herbivory of Nicotiana attenuata by the tobacco hornworm (Manduca larvae) alters the volatile profiles of both the plant and larval headspace. Herbivory-elicited specific changes in the volatile profiles are detected by arthropod predators of Manduca larvae. The known predators that perceive volatile cues induced by Manduca herbivory of N. attenuata are insects that target Manduca at early developmental stages, when the larvae are still small; large, late-instar larvae may have outgrown these predation risks. However, here we offer evidence that branched chain aliphatic acids derived from the digestion of plant O-acyl sugars from trichomes may betray Manduca larvae to lizard predators during late developmental stages as well.  相似文献   

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Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) establish symbiotic associations with a majority of terrestrial plants to form underground common mycorrhizal networks (CMNs) that connect neighbouring plants. Because Nicotiana attenuata plants do not respond to herbivory‐elicited volatiles from neighbours, we used this ecological model system to evaluate if CMNs function in interplant transmission of herbivory‐elicited responses. A mesocosm system was designed to establish and remove CMNs linking N. attenuata plants to examine the herbivory‐elicited metabolic and hormone responses in CMNs‐connected “receiver” plants after the elicitation of “donor” plants by wounding (W) treated with Manduca sexta larval oral secretions (OS). AMF colonization increased constitutive jasmonate (JA and JA‐Ile) levels in N. attenuata roots but did not affect well‐characterized JAs‐regulated defensive metabolites in systemic leaves. Interestingly, larger JAs bursts, and higher levels of several amino acids and particular sectors of hydroxygeranyllinalool diterpene glycoside metabolism were elevated in the leaves of W + OS‐elicited “receivers” with CMN connections with “donors” that had been W + OS‐elicited 6 hr previously. Our results demonstrate that AMF colonization alone does not enhance systemic defence responses but that sectors of systemic responses in leaves can be primed by CMNs, suggesting that CMNs can transmit and even filter defence signalling among connected plants.  相似文献   

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Wounding and herbivore attack elicit the rapid (within minutes) accumulation of jasmonic acid (JA) that results from the activation of previously synthesized biosynthetic enzymes. Recently, several regulatory factors that affect JA production have been identified; however, how these regulators affect JA biosynthesis remains at present unknown. Here we demonstrate that Nicotiana attenuata salicylate-induced protein kinase (SIPK), wound-induced protein kinase (WIPK), nonexpressor of PR-1 (NPR1), and the insect elicitor N-linolenoyl-glucose (18:3-Glu) participate in mechanisms affecting early enzymatic steps of the JA biosynthesis pathway. Plants silenced in the expression of SIPK and NPR1 were affected in the initial accumulation of 13-hydroperoxy-linolenic acid (13-OOH-18:3) after wounding and 18:3-Glu elicitation by mechanisms independent of changes in 13-lipoxygenase activity. Moreover, 18:3-Glu elicited an enhanced and rapid accumulation of 13-OOH-18:3 that depended partially on SIPK and NPR1 but was independent of increased 13-lipoxygenase activity. Together, the results suggested that substrate supply for JA production was altered by 18:3-Glu elicitation and SIPK- and NPR1-mediated mechanisms. Consistent with a regulation at the level of substrate supply, we demonstrated by virus-induced gene silencing that a wound-repressed plastidial glycerolipase (NaGLA1) plays an essential role in the induction of de novo JA biosynthesis. In contrast to SIPK and NPR1, mechanisms mediated by WIPK did not affect the production of 13-OOH-18:3 but were critical to control the conversion of this precursor into 12-oxo-phytodienoic acid. These differences could be partially accounted for by reduced allene oxide synthase activity in WIPK-silenced plants.Jasmonic acid (JA) and some of its precursors and derivatives are signal molecules that function as essential mediators of the plant''s wound, antiherbivore, and antipathogen responses, as well as in growth and development (Farmer, 1994; Creelman and Mullet, 1997; Turner et al., 2002). In unelicited mature leaves, JA is maintained at very low levels, however, upon specific stimulations, its biosynthesis is induced within a few minutes (Glauser et al., 2008). This rapid biosynthetic response must result from the activation of constitutively expressed JA biosynthesis enzymes in unelicited tissue by substrate availability and/or posttranslational modifications. At present, little is known about the molecular mechanisms that activate JA biosynthetic enzymes.According to the canonical mechanism for JA biosynthesis (Vick and Zimmerman, 1983), free α-linolenic acid (18:3Δ9,12,15, 18:3) forms 13(S)-hydroperoxyoctadecatrienoic acid [13S-(OOH)-18:3] by the action of 13-lipoxygenase (13-LOX) in plastids. 13S-(OOH)-18:3 is converted by allene oxide synthase (AOS) into a highly unstable allene oxide intermediate that is processed by allene oxide cyclase (AOC) to yield (9S,13S)-12-oxo-phytodienoic acid (OPDA). OPDA is transported from the plastid into the peroxisome where it is reduced by the action of OPDA reductase 3 (OPR3) and after three cycles of β-oxidation, (3R,7S)-JA is formed. Due to the large number of enzymes and different cellular compartments involved in JA biosynthesis, it is expected that the pathway is regulated at multiple steps. Resolution of the structures of the tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) OPR3 and Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) AOC2 and ACX1 has provided insights into potential regulatory mechanisms for these enzymes (e.g. oligomerization and phosphorylation; Pedersen and Henriksen, 2005; Breithaupt et al., 2006; Hofmann et al., 2006).The identification of two Arabidopsis plastidial glycerolipases, DAD1 and DGL (Ishiguro et al., 2001; Hyun et al., 2008), has provided genetic evidence for the importance of the release of trienoic fatty acids (FAs) from plastidial lipids in the activation of JA biosynthesis. Recently, some oxylipins have been found esterified to galactolipids in Arabidopsis leaves and hence it is possible that in this species preformed precursors could also supply the JA biosynthesis pathway after their release from lipids (Stelmach et al., 2001; Hisamatsu et al., 2003; Buseman et al., 2006). However, lipid-bound oxylipins are not formed in the leaves of all plant families (Böttcher and Weiler, 2007).In Nicotiana attenuata, wound-induced JA production is amplified by the application of lepidopteran larvae (e.g. Manduca sexta) oral secretions (OS) to mechanical wounds. Major elicitors of the OS-mediated response are FA-amino acid conjugates (FACs) that are sufficient to enhance JA production in leaves of this plant species (Halitschke et al., 2001). Recently, several regulatory factors with a potential function upstream of JA biosynthesis have been identified (Ludwig et al., 2005; Takabatake et al., 2006; Schweighofer et al., 2007; Takahashi et al., 2007); however, how these regulators affect JA biosynthesis is at present unknown. For example, wounding and herbivory in Nicotina spp. and tomato activate the mitogen-activated protein kinases salicylate-induced protein kinase (SIPK) and wound-induced protein kinase (WIPK; Seo et al., 1999; Kandoth et al., 2007; Wu et al., 2007). When SIPK and WIPK expression is silenced in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), the plants accumulate 60% to 70% less JA than wild type after wounding or OS elicitation (Seo et al., 2007; Wu et al., 2007). Another regulatory component that affects JA production in N. attenuata is Nonexpressor of PR-1 (NPR1), an essential component of the salicylic acid (SA) signal transduction pathway first identified in Arabidopsis (Cao et al., 1994). N. attenuata NPR1-silenced plants accumulate 60% to 70% lower JA levels after elicitation than wild type (Rayapuram and Baldwin, 2007). NPR1 interacts with the JA and ethylene signaling cascades, and a cytosolic role for this factor in the regulation of JA-dependent responses/biosynthesis has been proposed (Spoel et al., 2003).In contrast to the mechanisms acting upstream of JA biosynthesis, the mechanisms mediating downstream JA responses are better characterized (Kazan and Manners, 2008; Browse, 2009). Among the best-characterized regulators of these responses is CORONATIVE INSENSITIVE1 (COI1), a gene that participates in jasmonate perception (Xie et al., 1998) and regulates gene expression through its interaction with the JASMONATE ZIM-DOMAIN repressors (Chini et al., 2007; Thines et al., 2007).To understand the early processes regulating the activation of JA biosynthesis by wounding and FAC elicitation in N. attenuata leaves, we quantified the initial rates of accumulation of plastid-derived JA precursors after these stimuli in wild type and four JA-deficient genotypes previously described: ir-sipk, ir-wipk, ir-npr1, and ir-coi1 (Rayapuram and Baldwin, 2007; Paschold et al., 2008; Meldau et al., 2009). We show that SIPK, WIPK, NPR1, and FACs contribute to the activation of de novo JA biosynthesis by affecting diverse early enzymatic steps in this pathway. The identification of a plastidial glycerolipase A1 type I family protein (GLA1) essential for JA biosynthesis pointed to this enzyme as one potential target of some of these activating mechanisms.  相似文献   

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《Journal of Asia》2006,9(1):43-48
Fatty acid synthesis produces long-chain fatty acids that are principal forms of stored energy and essential constituents of cellular membrane lipids. In animals fatty acid synthesis is catalyzed by fatty acid synthase (FAS) from acetyl-coenyzyme A (CoA) and malonyl-CoA. Cerulenin and C75, potent FAS inhibitors, can inhibit feeding in mammals.Using these inhibitors we examined the effect of feeding inhibition during H. zea larval stage. Growth of larvae injected (30 μg/g body weight) with C75 or cerulenin was significantly delayed during the first 8 hrs after injection, but recovered to normal levels within 20 hrs. During the first 8 hr period, the amount of consumed diet in the inhibitor treated larvae was significantly less than the control group. The retardation of larval development could be caused from the reduction of food intake after injection of the inhibitor. The result indicates that C75 or cerulenin inhibits fatty acid synthesis, resulting in feeding suppression in the larval moth as demonstrated in vertebrates.Pheromone production was significantly decreased in the isolated pheromone gland of H. zea females treated with FAS inhibitors. Pheromone production was inhibited by blocking fatty acid synthesis, even though PBAN stimulated pheromone biosynthesis. After topical application of D3-16: Acid to pheromone glands the relative labeled pheromone amount was increased when the gland was incubated with C75. This result indicates that a part of the pheromone amount could be synthesized from 16: Acid directly when fatty acid synthesis was blocked. These results indicate that the inhibitors have a potential possibility to control insect feeding activity and inhibit pheromone biosynthesis in moths.  相似文献   

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Image-based non-destructive methods were used to quantify root growth reactions happening within hours following simulated leaf herbivore attack.1 The induction of wound reactions in leaves of seedlings of Nicotiana attenuata led to transiently decreased root growth rates: Upon application of the oral secretions and regurgitants of the specialist herbivore Manduca sexta, a transient decrease in root growth was observed that was more pronounced than if a mere mechanical wounding was imposed. Root growth reduction was more severe than leaf growth reduction and the timing of the transient growth reduction coincided with endogenous bursts of jasmonate (JA) and ethylene emissions reported in literature. The reaction of root growth was superimposed by a strong diel variation of root growth, which was caused by the fluctuating temperature to which the plants were exposed. Apart from the observed root growth reaction, other defense-related traits such as increased nicotine concentration, trichome length and density were activated within 72 h after wounding. Further experiments indicated that the response was elicited by fatty acid-amino acid conjugates that are contained in the oral secretions and that JA signalling is crucial for root-shoot communication here.Key words: image analysis, plant-insect interactions, Manduca sextaPlants constantly need to acclimate to a suite of fluctuating biotic and abiotic factors. Within the framework of their genetically determined response options, they react towards stress situations by maximizing protection against stress while minimizing deviations from optimal growth and development. Feeding of the larvae of the specialist lepidopteran herbivore Manduca sexta on N. attenuata has become a model case scenario for studying biotic stress.2 It has been shown in great detail there, that a diverse set of plant hormones like JA, methyl jasmonate and ethylene are rapidly induced immediately following wounding or herbivore attack.3,4,5 Acclimation occurs both on the biochemical and morphological level, e.g., by increasing defence compounds,6 by synthesizing defence related proteins, by emitting volatiles to attract predators and parasites of herbivores7 and by altering plant morphology via increased formation of trichomes, thorns or scleromorphy.8,9 Many studies demonstrated resource based trade-offs between growth and defence on a large time scale (e.g. refs. 10 and 11). Yet, it is unclear how fast a trade-off-linked reorganization of plant metabolism, diverting resources away from growth or development towards defence, can occur.Recently, development of growth imaging methods has allowed to study short-term growth responses of above-and belowground sink organs towards fluctuations of environmental factors, such as alterations of light climate12 or responses towards gravitropic stimuli.1315 Clear responses are often seen best in young seedlings as they grow fast and as they can be cultivated in agar-filled, translucent Petri dishes allowing live imaging. Hence, it was the aim of our study to monitor defence reactions in the N. attenuata seedling system while at the same time assessing the dynamics of root growth reaction following such an attack.Herbivory-induced wound reactions were simulated by applying different substances on the mechanically wounded primary leaf of the seedling plant 16 d after germination.1 Investigated substances were: (i) oral secretions and regurgitants of M. sexta larvae (OS), (ii) methyl jasmonate, (iii) fatty acid-amino acid conjugates, (iv) control solutions for the different test substances (water, buffer, lanolin). All wounding treatments were performed at the same time of the day to make sure that the reaction was not masked by fluctuating responses of the plant to temperature changes (plants were grown in a 14 h/10 h light/ dark regime with temperatures of 26°C and 22°C at day and night, respectively).Root growth was affected strongly by temperature (Fig. 1A) and increased linearly with temperature in the analyzed range. Root growth decreased markedly, if OS was added to the wounds. OS-treated and wounded control plants differed in growth reduction from about 2 h after wounding onwards. To uncouple this reduction from temperature-induced growth reductions, the experiment was repeated under continuous light and temperature, leading to a comparable result (Fig. 1B). When OS was added to wounds, nicotine concentration and trichome length and density increased within 72 h after the wounding reaction. Root growth reaction was comparable between OS-treatment and treatments, in which methyl jasmonate or fatty-acid amino acid conjugates were supplied to the wounds. The strongest difference concerning the distribution of relative elemental growth rate along the root growth zone between control and OS treatment was observed about 1 mm behind the root tip in the beginning of the central elongation zone. Leaf growth was monitored in an additional set of experiments. There, a transient decrease of growth was seen as well, but it was not as pronounced as for root growth.Open in a separate windowFigure 1Root growth in Nicotiana attenuata, grown on agar-filled Petri dishes. (A) Velocity of the root tip (VTip) versus temperature of the agar medium. (B) Velocity of the root tip of control plants and of plants with leaves that were wounded at t=0 and treated with oral secretions and regurgitants (OS) of Manduca sexta. Plants were grown in continuous light at T = 26°C (n = 3, mean values and SE).The kinetics of the root growth depression point on a superposition of two physiological effects: During the first hour after wounding, root growth decreases similarly in control and OS-treated plants, indicating a mere hydraulic response due to the loss of water and turgor pressure.12 Thereafter, a specific response towards OS is observed, which coincides with the time frame of about 2–3 h that was reported for the systemic increase of JA transported from shoot to root. Baldwin et al16 reported that JA pools in roots are increased systemically (3.5-fold) within 180 minutes following mechanical wounding. Hence, JA might mediate the reduction in root growth and induce the defense machinery, which diverts resources from growth to defense.  相似文献   

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Eicosapentaenoic and arachidonic acids in extracts of Phytophthora infestans mycelium were identified as the most active elicitors of sesquiterpenoid phytoalexin accumulation in potato tuber slices. These fatty acids were found free or esterified in all fractions with elicitor activity including cell wall preparations. Yeast lipase released a major portion of eicosapentaenoic and arachidonic acids from lyophilized mycelium. Concentration response curves comparing the elicitor activity of the polyunsaturated fatty acids to a cell-free sonicate of P. infestans mycelium indicated that the elicitor activity of the sonicated mycelium exceeded that which would be obtained by the amount of eicosapentaenoic and arachidonic acids (free and esterified) present in the mycelium. Upon acid hydrolysis of lyophilized mycelium, elicitor activity was obtained only from the fatty acid fraction. However, the fatty acids accounted for only 21% of the activity of the unhydrolyzed mycelium and the residue did not enhance their activity. Centrifugation of the hydrolysate, obtained from lyophilized mycelium treated with 2n NaOH, 1 molarity NaBH4 at 100°C, yielded a supernatant fraction with little or no elicitor activity. Addition of this material to the fatty acids restored the activity to that which was present in the unhydrolyzed mycelium. The results indicate that the elicitor activity of the unsaturated fatty acids is enhanced by heat and base-stable factors in the mycelium.  相似文献   

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