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A maize landrace that emits defense volatiles in response to herbivore eggs possesses a strongly inducible terpene synthase gene

Maize (Zea mays) emits volatile terpenes in response to insect feeding and egg deposition to defend itself against harmful pests. However, maize cultivars differ strongly in their ability to produce the defense signal. To further understand the agroecological role and underlying genetic mechanisms f...

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Autores principales: Tamiru, Amanuel, Bruce, Toby J. A., Richter, Annett, Woodcock, Christine M., Midega, Charles A. O., Degenhardt, Jörg, Kelemu, Segenet, Pickett, John A., Khan, Zeyaur R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5395458/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28428873
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2893
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author Tamiru, Amanuel
Bruce, Toby J. A.
Richter, Annett
Woodcock, Christine M.
Midega, Charles A. O.
Degenhardt, Jörg
Kelemu, Segenet
Pickett, John A.
Khan, Zeyaur R.
author_facet Tamiru, Amanuel
Bruce, Toby J. A.
Richter, Annett
Woodcock, Christine M.
Midega, Charles A. O.
Degenhardt, Jörg
Kelemu, Segenet
Pickett, John A.
Khan, Zeyaur R.
author_sort Tamiru, Amanuel
collection PubMed
description Maize (Zea mays) emits volatile terpenes in response to insect feeding and egg deposition to defend itself against harmful pests. However, maize cultivars differ strongly in their ability to produce the defense signal. To further understand the agroecological role and underlying genetic mechanisms for variation in terpene emission among maize cultivars, we studied the production of an important signaling component (E)‐caryophyllene in a South American maize landrace Braz1006 possessing stemborer Chilo partellus egg inducible defense trait, in comparison with the European maize line Delprim and North American inbred line B73. The (E) ‐caryophyllene production level and transcript abundance of TPS23, terpene synthase responsible for (E) ‐caryophyllene formation, were compared between Braz1006, Delprim, and B73 after mimicked herbivory. Braz1006–TPS23 was heterologously expressed in E. coli, and amino acid sequences were determined. Furthermore, electrophysiological and behavioral responses of a key parasitic wasp Cotesia sesamiae to C. partellus egg‐induced Braz1006 volatiles were determined using coupled gas chromatography electroantennography and olfactometer bioassay studies. After elicitor treatment, Braz1006 released eightfold higher (E)‐caryophyllene than Delprim, whereas no (E)‐caryophyllene was detected in B73. The superior (E)‐caryophyllene production by Braz1006 was positively correlated with high transcript levels of TPS23 in the landrace compared to Delprim. TPS23 alleles from Braz1006 showed dissimilarities at different sequence positions with Delprim and B73 and encodes an active enzyme. Cotesia sesamiae was attracted to egg‐induced volatiles from Braz1006 and synthetic (E)‐caryophyllene. The variation in (E)‐caryophyllene emission between Braz1006 and Delprim is positively correlated with induced levels of TPS23 transcripts. The enhanced TPS23 activity and corresponding (E)‐caryophyllene production by the maize landrace could be attributed to the differences in amino acid sequence with the other maize lines. This study suggested that the same analogous genes could have contrasting expression patterns in different maize genetic backgrounds. The current findings provide valuable insight not only into genetic mechanisms underlying variation in defense signal production but also the prospect of introgressing the novel defense traits into elite maize varieties for effective and ecologically sound protection of crops against damaging insect pests.
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spelling pubmed-53954582017-04-20 A maize landrace that emits defense volatiles in response to herbivore eggs possesses a strongly inducible terpene synthase gene Tamiru, Amanuel Bruce, Toby J. A. Richter, Annett Woodcock, Christine M. Midega, Charles A. O. Degenhardt, Jörg Kelemu, Segenet Pickett, John A. Khan, Zeyaur R. Ecol Evol Original Research Maize (Zea mays) emits volatile terpenes in response to insect feeding and egg deposition to defend itself against harmful pests. However, maize cultivars differ strongly in their ability to produce the defense signal. To further understand the agroecological role and underlying genetic mechanisms for variation in terpene emission among maize cultivars, we studied the production of an important signaling component (E)‐caryophyllene in a South American maize landrace Braz1006 possessing stemborer Chilo partellus egg inducible defense trait, in comparison with the European maize line Delprim and North American inbred line B73. The (E) ‐caryophyllene production level and transcript abundance of TPS23, terpene synthase responsible for (E) ‐caryophyllene formation, were compared between Braz1006, Delprim, and B73 after mimicked herbivory. Braz1006–TPS23 was heterologously expressed in E. coli, and amino acid sequences were determined. Furthermore, electrophysiological and behavioral responses of a key parasitic wasp Cotesia sesamiae to C. partellus egg‐induced Braz1006 volatiles were determined using coupled gas chromatography electroantennography and olfactometer bioassay studies. After elicitor treatment, Braz1006 released eightfold higher (E)‐caryophyllene than Delprim, whereas no (E)‐caryophyllene was detected in B73. The superior (E)‐caryophyllene production by Braz1006 was positively correlated with high transcript levels of TPS23 in the landrace compared to Delprim. TPS23 alleles from Braz1006 showed dissimilarities at different sequence positions with Delprim and B73 and encodes an active enzyme. Cotesia sesamiae was attracted to egg‐induced volatiles from Braz1006 and synthetic (E)‐caryophyllene. The variation in (E)‐caryophyllene emission between Braz1006 and Delprim is positively correlated with induced levels of TPS23 transcripts. The enhanced TPS23 activity and corresponding (E)‐caryophyllene production by the maize landrace could be attributed to the differences in amino acid sequence with the other maize lines. This study suggested that the same analogous genes could have contrasting expression patterns in different maize genetic backgrounds. The current findings provide valuable insight not only into genetic mechanisms underlying variation in defense signal production but also the prospect of introgressing the novel defense traits into elite maize varieties for effective and ecologically sound protection of crops against damaging insect pests. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017-03-21 /pmc/articles/PMC5395458/ /pubmed/28428873 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2893 Text en © 2017 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Tamiru, Amanuel
Bruce, Toby J. A.
Richter, Annett
Woodcock, Christine M.
Midega, Charles A. O.
Degenhardt, Jörg
Kelemu, Segenet
Pickett, John A.
Khan, Zeyaur R.
A maize landrace that emits defense volatiles in response to herbivore eggs possesses a strongly inducible terpene synthase gene
title A maize landrace that emits defense volatiles in response to herbivore eggs possesses a strongly inducible terpene synthase gene
title_full A maize landrace that emits defense volatiles in response to herbivore eggs possesses a strongly inducible terpene synthase gene
title_fullStr A maize landrace that emits defense volatiles in response to herbivore eggs possesses a strongly inducible terpene synthase gene
title_full_unstemmed A maize landrace that emits defense volatiles in response to herbivore eggs possesses a strongly inducible terpene synthase gene
title_short A maize landrace that emits defense volatiles in response to herbivore eggs possesses a strongly inducible terpene synthase gene
title_sort maize landrace that emits defense volatiles in response to herbivore eggs possesses a strongly inducible terpene synthase gene
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5395458/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28428873
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2893
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