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Spider mites suppress tomato defenses downstream of jasmonate and salicylate independently of hormonal crosstalk

Plants respond to herbivory by mounting a defense. Some plant-eating spider mites (Tetranychus spp.) have adapted to plant defenses to maintain a high reproductive performance. From natural populations we selected three spider mite strains from two species, Tetranychus urticae and Tetranychus evansi...

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Autores principales: Alba, Juan M, Schimmel, Bernardus C J, Glas, Joris J, Ataide, Livia M S, Pappas, Maria L, Villarroel, Carlos A, Schuurink, Robert C, Sabelis, Maurice W, Kant, Merijn R
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4301184/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25297722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.13075
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author Alba, Juan M
Schimmel, Bernardus C J
Glas, Joris J
Ataide, Livia M S
Pappas, Maria L
Villarroel, Carlos A
Schuurink, Robert C
Sabelis, Maurice W
Kant, Merijn R
author_facet Alba, Juan M
Schimmel, Bernardus C J
Glas, Joris J
Ataide, Livia M S
Pappas, Maria L
Villarroel, Carlos A
Schuurink, Robert C
Sabelis, Maurice W
Kant, Merijn R
author_sort Alba, Juan M
collection PubMed
description Plants respond to herbivory by mounting a defense. Some plant-eating spider mites (Tetranychus spp.) have adapted to plant defenses to maintain a high reproductive performance. From natural populations we selected three spider mite strains from two species, Tetranychus urticae and Tetranychus evansi, that can suppress plant defenses, using a fourth defense-inducing strain as a benchmark, to assess to which extent these strains suppress defenses differently. . We characterized timing and magnitude of phytohormone accumulation and defense-gene expression, and determined if mites that cannot suppress defenses benefit from sharing a leaf with suppressors. . The nonsuppressor strain induced a mixture of jasmonate- (JA) and salicylate (SA)-dependent defenses. Induced defense genes separated into three groups: ‘early’ (expression peak at 1 d postinfestation (dpi)); ‘intermediate’ (4 dpi); and ‘late’, whose expression increased until the leaf died. The T. evansi strains suppressed genes from all three groups, but the T. urticae strain only suppressed the late ones. Suppression occurred downstream of JA and SA accumulation, independently of the JA–SA antagonism, and was powerful enough to boost the reproductive performance of nonsuppressors up to 45%. . Our results show that suppressing defenses not only brings benefits but, within herbivore communities, can also generate a considerable ecological cost when promoting the population growth of a competitor. ;
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spelling pubmed-43011842015-01-28 Spider mites suppress tomato defenses downstream of jasmonate and salicylate independently of hormonal crosstalk Alba, Juan M Schimmel, Bernardus C J Glas, Joris J Ataide, Livia M S Pappas, Maria L Villarroel, Carlos A Schuurink, Robert C Sabelis, Maurice W Kant, Merijn R New Phytol Research Plants respond to herbivory by mounting a defense. Some plant-eating spider mites (Tetranychus spp.) have adapted to plant defenses to maintain a high reproductive performance. From natural populations we selected three spider mite strains from two species, Tetranychus urticae and Tetranychus evansi, that can suppress plant defenses, using a fourth defense-inducing strain as a benchmark, to assess to which extent these strains suppress defenses differently. . We characterized timing and magnitude of phytohormone accumulation and defense-gene expression, and determined if mites that cannot suppress defenses benefit from sharing a leaf with suppressors. . The nonsuppressor strain induced a mixture of jasmonate- (JA) and salicylate (SA)-dependent defenses. Induced defense genes separated into three groups: ‘early’ (expression peak at 1 d postinfestation (dpi)); ‘intermediate’ (4 dpi); and ‘late’, whose expression increased until the leaf died. The T. evansi strains suppressed genes from all three groups, but the T. urticae strain only suppressed the late ones. Suppression occurred downstream of JA and SA accumulation, independently of the JA–SA antagonism, and was powerful enough to boost the reproductive performance of nonsuppressors up to 45%. . Our results show that suppressing defenses not only brings benefits but, within herbivore communities, can also generate a considerable ecological cost when promoting the population growth of a competitor. ; BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2015-01 2014-10-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4301184/ /pubmed/25297722 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.13075 Text en © 2014 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2014 New Phytologist Trust http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Alba, Juan M
Schimmel, Bernardus C J
Glas, Joris J
Ataide, Livia M S
Pappas, Maria L
Villarroel, Carlos A
Schuurink, Robert C
Sabelis, Maurice W
Kant, Merijn R
Spider mites suppress tomato defenses downstream of jasmonate and salicylate independently of hormonal crosstalk
title Spider mites suppress tomato defenses downstream of jasmonate and salicylate independently of hormonal crosstalk
title_full Spider mites suppress tomato defenses downstream of jasmonate and salicylate independently of hormonal crosstalk
title_fullStr Spider mites suppress tomato defenses downstream of jasmonate and salicylate independently of hormonal crosstalk
title_full_unstemmed Spider mites suppress tomato defenses downstream of jasmonate and salicylate independently of hormonal crosstalk
title_short Spider mites suppress tomato defenses downstream of jasmonate and salicylate independently of hormonal crosstalk
title_sort spider mites suppress tomato defenses downstream of jasmonate and salicylate independently of hormonal crosstalk
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4301184/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25297722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.13075
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