| Literature DB >> 24776843 |
Melkamu G Woldemariam1, Ivan Gális1, Ian T Baldwin1.
Abstract
The jasmonate signaling pathway is essential for plant development, reproduction, and defense against herbivores and pathogens. When attacked by herbivores, plants elicit defense responses through the rapid accumulation of jasmonates. Although the transduction of the jasmonate burst into downstream responses has been largely resolved in the past decade, how the jasmonate burst is switched off remained unknown. Recently, two mechanisms that involve cytochrome p450-mediated hydroxylation/carboxylation and NaJIH1-mediated hydrolysis of JA-Ile were identified as major termination mechanisms of JA signaling. Due to a lack of hydrolysis, N. attenuata plants silenced in the expression of the JIH1 gene accumulated significantly more JA-Ile than did wild type plants and became more resistant to herbivore attack. Although less likely, additional functions of JIH1, such as contributing to the pool of free Ile and thereby increasing JA-Ile accumulation, remained untested. Here we show that increased isoleucine availability does not explain the observed phenotype in JIH1-deficient N. attenuata plants.Entities:
Keywords: JA-Ile hydrolase 1; Jasmonate signaling pathway; herbivore defense; jasmonate burst; jasmonic acid; jasmonoyl-L-jsoleucine
Year: 2014 PMID: 24776843 PMCID: PMC4091192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Signal Behav ISSN: 1559-2316