| Literature DB >> 27628025 |
Joëlle Sasse1, Markus Schlegel1, Lorenzo Borghi1, Friederike Ullrich2, Miyoung Lee1, Guo-Wei Liu1, José-Luis Giner3, Oliver Kayser2, Laurent Bigler4, Enrico Martinoia1, Tobias Kretzschmar1,5.
Abstract
As a first line of defense against insect herbivores many plants store high concentrations of toxic and deterrent secondary metabolites in glandular trichomes. Plant Pleiotropic Drug Resistance (PDR)-type ABC transporters are known secondary metabolite transporters, and several have been implicated in pathogen or herbivore defense. Here, we report on Petunia hybrida PhPDR2 as a major contributor to trichome-related chemical defense. PhPDR2 was found to localize to the plasma membrane and be predominantly expressed in multicellular glandular trichomes of leaves and stems. Down-regulation of PhPDR2 via RNA interference (pdr2) resulted in a markedly higher susceptibility of the transgenic plants to the generalist foliage feeder Spodoptera littoralis. Untargeted screening of pdr2 trichome metabolite contents showed a significant decrease in petuniasterone and petuniolide content, compounds, which had previously been shown to act as potent toxins against various insects. Our findings suggest that PhPDR2 plays a leading role in controlling petuniasterone levels in leaves and trichomes of petunia, thus contributing to herbivory resistance.Entities:
Keywords: ABC transporter; Petunia; glandular trichome; herbivory; metabolomics; secondary metabolism
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27628025 DOI: 10.1111/pce.12828
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell Environ ISSN: 0140-7791 Impact factor: 7.228