Literature DB >> 33848517

Insects-plants-pathogens: toxicity, dependence and defense dynamics.

Ali Noman1, Muhammad Aqeel2, Waqar Islam3, Noreen Khalid4, Noreen Akhtar5, Muhammad Qasim6, Ghulam Yasin7, Mohamed Hashem8, Saad Alamri9, Omar Mahmoud Al-Zoubi10, Muhammad Moazam Jalees11, Abdullah Al-Sadi12.   

Abstract

In a natural ecosystem, the pathogen-plant-insect relationship has diverse implications for each other. The pathogens as well as insect-pests consume plant tissues as their feed that mostly results in damage. In turn, plant species have evolved specialized defense system to not only protect themselves but reduce the damage also. Such tripartite interactions involve toxicity, metabolic modulations, resistance etc. among all participants of interaction. These attributes result in selection pressure among participants. Coevolution of such traits reveals need to focus and unravel multiple hidden aspects of insect-plant-pathogen interactions. The definite modulations during plant responses to biotic stress and the operating defense network against herbivores are vital to research areas. Different types of plant pathogens and herbivores are tackled with various changes in plants, e.g. changes in genes expression, glucosinolate metabolism detoxification, signal transduction, cell wall modifications, Ca2+dependent signaling. It is essential to clarify which chemical in plants can work as a defense signal or weapon in plant-pathogen-herbivore interactions. In spite of increased knowledge regarding signal transduction pathways regulating growth-defense balance, much more is needed to unveil the coordination of growth rate with metabolic modulations in bi-trophic interactions. Here, we addressed plant-pathogen-insect interaction for toxicity as well as dependnce along with plant defense dynamics against pathogens and insects with broad range effects at the physio-biochemical and molecular level. We have reviewed interfaces in plant-pathogen-insect research to show pulsating regulation of plant immunity for attuning survival and ecological equilibrium. An improved understanding of the systematic foundation of growth-defense stability has vital repercussions for enhancing crop yield, including insights into uncoupling of host-parasite tradeoffs for ecological and environmental sustainability.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Innate immunity; Physiological modulations; Plants; Signaling

Year:  2021        PMID: 33848517     DOI: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2021.04.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxicon        ISSN: 0041-0101            Impact factor:   3.033


  1 in total

1.  Increasing the activities of protective enzymes is an important strategy to improve resistance in cucumber to powdery mildew disease and melon aphid under different infection/infestation patterns.

Authors:  Quancheng Zhang; Menghan Zhou; Jungang Wang
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-08-17       Impact factor: 6.627

  1 in total

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