| Literature DB >> 26906266 |
José O Garcia-Abellan1, Irene Albaladejo1, Isabel Egea1, Francisco B Flores1, Carmen Capel2, Juan Capel2, Trinidad Angosto2, Rafael Lozano2, Maria C Bolarin1.
Abstract
The res (restored cell structure by salinity) mutant, recently identified as the first tomato mutant accumulating jasmonate (JA) without stress, exhibited important morphological alterations when plants were grown under control conditions but these disappeared under salt stress. Since the defense responses against stresses are activated in the res mutant as a consequence of the increased expression of genes from the JA biosynthetic and signaling pathways, the mutant may display a tolerance response not only to salt stress but also to multiple stresses. Here, we show that when res mutant plants are grown under the summer natural conditions of the Mediterranean area, with high temperatures and low relative humidity, the characteristic leaf chlorosis exhibited by the mutant disappears and leaves become dark green over time, with a similar aspect to WT leaves. Moreover, the mutant plants are able to achieve chlorophyll and fluorescence levels similar to those of WT. These results hint that research on res tomato mutant may allow very significant advances in the knowledge of defense responses activated by JA against multiple stresses.Entities:
Keywords: Growth-defense tradeoff; Solanum lycopersicum; multiple stresses; phenotyping; semi-arid conditions
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26906266 PMCID: PMC5703232 DOI: 10.1080/15592324.2016.1146847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Signal Behav ISSN: 1559-2316