Literature DB >> 24506415

Signaling by small metabolites in systemic acquired resistance.

Jyoti Shah1, Ratnesh Chaturvedi, Zulkarnain Chowdhury, Barney Venables, Robby A Petros.   

Abstract

Plants can retain the memory of a prior encounter with a pest. This memory confers upon a plant the ability to subsequently activate defenses more robustly when challenged by a pest. In plants that have retained the memory of a prior, localized, foliar infection by a pathogen, the pathogen-free distal organs develop immunity against subsequent infections by a broad-spectrum of pathogens. The long-term immunity conferred by this mechanism, which is termed systemic acquired resistance (SAR), is inheritable over a few generations. Signaling mediated by the phenolic metabolite salicylic acid (SA) is critical for the manifestation of SAR. Recent studies have described the involvement of additional small metabolites in SAR signaling, including methyl salicylate, the abietane diterpenoid dehydroabietinal, the lysine catabolite pipecolic acid, a glycerol-3-phosphate-dependent factor and the dicarboxylic acid azelaic acid. Many of these metabolites can be systemically transported through the plant and probably facilitate communication by the primary infected tissue with the distal tissues, which is essential for the activation of SAR. Some of these metabolites have been implicated in the SAR-associated rapid activation of defenses in response to subsequent exposure to the pathogen, a mechanism termed priming. Here, we summarize the role of these signaling metabolites in SAR, and the relationship between them and SA signaling in SAR.
© 2014 The Authors The Plant Journal © 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  DEFECTIVE IN INDUCED RESISTANCE1; azelaic acid; dehydroabietinal; glycerol-3-phosphate; methyl salicylate; pipecolic acid

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24506415     DOI: 10.1111/tpj.12464

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant J        ISSN: 0960-7412            Impact factor:   6.417


  35 in total

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Review 8.  The roles of ROS and ABA in systemic acquired acclimation.

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10.  Comparative Proteomics Analysis of Phloem Exudates Collected during the Induction of Systemic Acquired Resistance.

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