| Literature DB >> 25239066 |
Hui-Min Guo1, Hai-Chao Li1, Shi-Rong Zhou2, Hong-Wei Xue3, Xue-Xia Miao4.
Abstract
The brown planthopper (BPH, Nilaparvata lugens) is a destructive, monophagous, piercing-sucking insect pest of rice. Previous studies indicated that jasmonic acid (JA) positively regulates rice defense against chewing insect pests but negatively regulates it against the piercing-sucking insect of BPH. We here demonstrated that overexpression of allene oxide cyclase (AOC) but not OPR3 (cis-12-oxo-phytodienoic acid (OPDA) reductase 3, an enzyme adjacent to AOC in the JA synthetic pathway) significantly increased rice resistance to BPH, mainly by reducing the feeding activity and survival rate. Further analysis revealed that plant response to BPH under AOC overexpression was independent of the JA pathway and that significantly higher OPDA levels stimulated rice resistance to BPH. Microarray analysis identified multiple candidate resistance-related genes under AOC overexpression. OPDA treatment stimulated the resistance of radish seedlings to green peach aphid Myzus persicae, another piercing-sucking insect. These results imply that rice resistance to chewing insects and to sucking insects can be enhanced simultaneously through AOC-mediated increases of JA and OPDA and provide direct evidence of the potential application of OPDA in stimulating plant defense responses to piercing-sucking insect pests in agriculture.Entities:
Keywords: OPDA reductase 3; allene oxide cyclase; brown planthopper; cis-12-oxo-phytodienoic acid; jasmonic acid.
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25239066 DOI: 10.1093/mp/ssu098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Plant ISSN: 1674-2052 Impact factor: 13.164