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Differential Responses of OsMPKs in IR56 Rice to Two BPH Populations of Different Virulence Levels

The conserved mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades play vital roles in plant defense responses against pathogens and insects. In the current study, the expression profiles of 17 OsMPKs were determined in the TN1 and IR56 rice varieties under the infestation of brown planthopper (BPH), on...

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Autores principales: Nanda, Satyabrata, Wan, Pin-Jun, Yuan, San-Yue, Lai, Feng-Xiang, Wang, Wei-Xia, Fu, Qiang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6320944/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30551584
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms19124030
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author Nanda, Satyabrata
Wan, Pin-Jun
Yuan, San-Yue
Lai, Feng-Xiang
Wang, Wei-Xia
Fu, Qiang
author_facet Nanda, Satyabrata
Wan, Pin-Jun
Yuan, San-Yue
Lai, Feng-Xiang
Wang, Wei-Xia
Fu, Qiang
author_sort Nanda, Satyabrata
collection PubMed
description The conserved mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades play vital roles in plant defense responses against pathogens and insects. In the current study, the expression profiles of 17 OsMPKs were determined in the TN1 and IR56 rice varieties under the infestation of brown planthopper (BPH), one of the most destructive hemimetabolous rice pests. The virulent IR56 BPH population (IR56-BPH) and the avirulent TN1 BPH population (TN-BPH) were used to reveal the roles of OsMPKs in the compatible (IR56-BPH infested on the TN1 and IR56 rice varieties, and TN1-BPH infested on the TN1 rice variety) and the incompatible (TN1-BPH infested on the IR56 rice variety) interaction. The statistical analysis revealed that rice variety, BPH population type, and infestation period have significant effects on the transcription of OsMPKs. Out of these genes, five OsMPKs (OsMPK1, OsMPK3, OsMPK7, OsMPK14, and OsMPK16) were found to exhibit upregulated expression only during incompatible interaction. Six OsMPKs (OsMPK4, OsMPK5, OsMPK8, OsMPK9, OsMPK12, and OsMPK13) were associated with both incompatible and compatible interactions. The transcription analysis of salicylic acid, jasmonic acid, and ethylene phytohormone signaling genes revealed their roles during the rice–BPH interactions. The upregulated expression of OsC4H, OsCHS, and OsCHI in the incompatible interaction implied the potential defense regulatory roles of phenylpropanoids. In both varieties, the elevated transcript accumulations of OsGST and OsSOD, and the increased enzyme activities of POD, SOD, and GST at 1 day post-infestation (dpi), but not at 3 dpi, indicated that reactive oxygen species (ROS) signaling might be an early event in rice–BPH interactions. Furthermore, upregulated transcription of OsLecRK3 and OsLecRK4 was found only during an incompatible interaction, suggesting their involvement in the BPH resistance response in the IR56 rice variety. Lastly, based on the findings of this study, we have proposed a model of interactions of IR56 rice with TN1-BPH and IR56-BPH that depicts the resistance and susceptibility reactions, respectively.
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spelling pubmed-63209442019-01-07 Differential Responses of OsMPKs in IR56 Rice to Two BPH Populations of Different Virulence Levels Nanda, Satyabrata Wan, Pin-Jun Yuan, San-Yue Lai, Feng-Xiang Wang, Wei-Xia Fu, Qiang Int J Mol Sci Article The conserved mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades play vital roles in plant defense responses against pathogens and insects. In the current study, the expression profiles of 17 OsMPKs were determined in the TN1 and IR56 rice varieties under the infestation of brown planthopper (BPH), one of the most destructive hemimetabolous rice pests. The virulent IR56 BPH population (IR56-BPH) and the avirulent TN1 BPH population (TN-BPH) were used to reveal the roles of OsMPKs in the compatible (IR56-BPH infested on the TN1 and IR56 rice varieties, and TN1-BPH infested on the TN1 rice variety) and the incompatible (TN1-BPH infested on the IR56 rice variety) interaction. The statistical analysis revealed that rice variety, BPH population type, and infestation period have significant effects on the transcription of OsMPKs. Out of these genes, five OsMPKs (OsMPK1, OsMPK3, OsMPK7, OsMPK14, and OsMPK16) were found to exhibit upregulated expression only during incompatible interaction. Six OsMPKs (OsMPK4, OsMPK5, OsMPK8, OsMPK9, OsMPK12, and OsMPK13) were associated with both incompatible and compatible interactions. The transcription analysis of salicylic acid, jasmonic acid, and ethylene phytohormone signaling genes revealed their roles during the rice–BPH interactions. The upregulated expression of OsC4H, OsCHS, and OsCHI in the incompatible interaction implied the potential defense regulatory roles of phenylpropanoids. In both varieties, the elevated transcript accumulations of OsGST and OsSOD, and the increased enzyme activities of POD, SOD, and GST at 1 day post-infestation (dpi), but not at 3 dpi, indicated that reactive oxygen species (ROS) signaling might be an early event in rice–BPH interactions. Furthermore, upregulated transcription of OsLecRK3 and OsLecRK4 was found only during an incompatible interaction, suggesting their involvement in the BPH resistance response in the IR56 rice variety. Lastly, based on the findings of this study, we have proposed a model of interactions of IR56 rice with TN1-BPH and IR56-BPH that depicts the resistance and susceptibility reactions, respectively. MDPI 2018-12-13 /pmc/articles/PMC6320944/ /pubmed/30551584 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms19124030 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Nanda, Satyabrata
Wan, Pin-Jun
Yuan, San-Yue
Lai, Feng-Xiang
Wang, Wei-Xia
Fu, Qiang
Differential Responses of OsMPKs in IR56 Rice to Two BPH Populations of Different Virulence Levels
title Differential Responses of OsMPKs in IR56 Rice to Two BPH Populations of Different Virulence Levels
title_full Differential Responses of OsMPKs in IR56 Rice to Two BPH Populations of Different Virulence Levels
title_fullStr Differential Responses of OsMPKs in IR56 Rice to Two BPH Populations of Different Virulence Levels
title_full_unstemmed Differential Responses of OsMPKs in IR56 Rice to Two BPH Populations of Different Virulence Levels
title_short Differential Responses of OsMPKs in IR56 Rice to Two BPH Populations of Different Virulence Levels
title_sort differential responses of osmpks in ir56 rice to two bph populations of different virulence levels
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6320944/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30551584
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms19124030
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