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The maize lipoxygenase,ZmLOX10, mediates green leaf volatile,jasmonate and herbivore‐induced plant volatile production for defense against insect attack
Authors:Shawn A. Christensen  Andriy Nemchenko  Eli Borrego  Ian Murray  Islam S. Sobhy  Liz Bosak  Stacy DeBlasio  Matthias Erb  Christelle A.M. Robert  Kathy A. Vaughn  Cornelia Herrfurth  Jim Tumlinson  Ivo Feussner  David Jackson  Ted C.J. Turlings  Jurgen Engelberth  Christian Nansen  Robert Meeley  Michael V. Kolomiets
Affiliation:1. Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology, Texas A&M University, , College Station, TX, 77843 USA;2. Department of Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics, Texas A&M University, , College Station Texas, 77843 USA;3. Laboratory of Fundamental and Applied Research in Chemical Ecology, Institute of Biology, University of Neuchatel, , CH‐2009 Neuchatel, Switzerland;4. Center for Chemical Ecology, Penn State University, , University Park, PA, 16802 USA;5. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, , Cold Spring Harbor, NY, 11724 USA;6. Department of Plant Biochemistry, , Justus‐von‐Liebig‐Weg, 11 37077 G?ttingen, Germany;7. Insect Ecology and Management, , The University of Western Australia Crawley, WA, 6009 Australia
Abstract:Fatty acid derivatives are of central importance for plant immunity against insect herbivores; however, major regulatory genes and the signals that modulate these defense metabolites are vastly understudied, especially in important agro‐economic monocot species. Here we show that products and signals derived from a single Zea mays (maize) lipoxygenase (LOX), ZmLOX10, are critical for both direct and indirect defenses to herbivory. We provide genetic evidence that two 13‐LOXs, ZmLOX10 and ZmLOX8, specialize in providing substrate for the green leaf volatile (GLV) and jasmonate (JA) biosynthesis pathways, respectively. Supporting the specialization of these LOX isoforms, LOX8 and LOX10 are localized to two distinct cellular compartments, indicating that the JA and GLV biosynthesis pathways are physically separated in maize. Reduced expression of JA biosynthesis genes and diminished levels of JA in lox10 mutants indicate that LOX10‐derived signaling is required for LOX8‐mediated JA. The possible role of GLVs in JA signaling is supported by their ability to partially restore wound‐induced JA levels in lox10 mutants. The impaired ability of lox10 mutants to produce GLVs and JA led to dramatic reductions in herbivore‐induced plant volatiles (HIPVs) and attractiveness to parasitoid wasps. Because LOX10 is under circadian rhythm regulation, this study provides a mechanistic link to the diurnal regulation of GLVs and HIPVs. GLV‐, JA‐ and HIPV‐deficient lox10 mutants display compromised resistance to insect feeding, both under laboratory and field conditions, which is strong evidence that LOX10‐dependent metabolites confer immunity against insect attack. Hence, this comprehensive gene to agro‐ecosystem study reveals the broad implications of a single LOX isoform in herbivore defense.
Keywords:   Zea mays     lipoxygenase  green leaf volatiles  jasmonic acid  herbivore‐induced plant volatiles  herbivore resistance
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