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Reciprocal Responses in the Interaction between Arabidopsis and the Cell-Content-Feeding Chelicerate Herbivore Spider Mite

2014, Zhurov, Vladimir, Navarro, Marie, Vermeirssen, Vanessa, Rubio-Somoza, Ignacio, Krishna, Priti, Diaz, Isabel, Schmid, Markus, Gomez-Cadenas, Aurelio, Van de Peer, Yves, Grbic, Miodrag, Clark, Richard M, Van Leeuwen, Thomas, Bruinsma, Kristie A, Grbic, Vojislava, Arbona, Vicent, Santamaria, M Estrella, Cazaux, Marc, Wybouw, Nicky, Osborne, Edward J, Ens, Cherise, Rioja, Cristina

Most molecular-genetic studies of plant defense responses to arthropod herbivores have focused on insects. However, plant-feeding mites are also pests of diverse plants, and mites induce different patterns of damage to plant tissues than do well-studied insects (e.g. lepidopteran larvae or aphids). The two-spotted spider mite ('Tetranychus urticae') is among the most significant mite pests in agriculture, feeding on a staggering number of plant hosts. To understand the interactions between spider mite and a plant at the molecular level, we examined reciprocal genome-wide responses of mites and its host Arabidopsis ('Arabidopsis thaliana'). Despite differences in feeding guilds, we found that transcriptional responses of Arabidopsis to mite herbivory resembled those observed for lepidopteran herbivores. Mutant analysis of induced plant defense pathways showed functionally that only a subset of induced programs, including jasmonic acid signaling and biosynthesis of indole glucosinolates, are central to Arabidopsis's defense to mite herbivory. On the herbivore side, indole glucosinolates dramatically increased mite mortality and development times. We identified an indole glucosinolate dose-dependent increase in the number of differentially expressed mite genes belonging to pathways associated with detoxification of xenobiotics. This demonstrates that spider mite is sensitive to Arabidopsis defenses that have also been associated with the deterrence of insect herbivores that are very distantly related to chelicerates. Our findings provide molecular insights into the nature of, and response to, herbivory for a representative of a major class of arthropod herbivores.

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Overexpression of the brassinosteroid biosynthetic gene 'DWF4' in 'Brassica napus' simultaneously increases seed yield and stress tolerance

2016, Sahni, Sangita, Prasad, Bishun D, Liu, Qing, Grbic, Vojislava, Sharpe, Andrew, Singh, Surinder P, Krishna, Priti

As a resource allocation strategy, plant growth and defense responses are generally mutually antagonistic. Brassinosteroid (BR) regulates many aspects of plant development and stress responses, however, genetic evidence of its integrated effects on plant growth and stress tolerance is lacking. We overexpressed the 'Arabidopsis' BR biosynthetic gene 'AtDWF4' in the oilseed plant 'Brassica napus' and scored growth and stress response phenotypes. The transgenic 'B. napus' plants, in comparison to wild type, displayed increased seed yield leading to increased overall oil content per plant, higher root biomass and root length, significantly better tolerance to dehydration and heat stress, and enhanced resistance to necrotrophic fungal pathogens 'Leptosphaeria maculans' and 'Sclerotinia sclerotiorum'. Transcriptome analysis supported the integrated effects of BR on growth and stress responses; in addition to BR responses associated with growth, a predominant plant defense signature, likely mediated by BES1/BZR1, was evident in the transgenic plants. These results establish that BR can interactively and simultaneously enhance abiotic and biotic stress tolerance and plant productivity. The ability to confer pleiotropic beneficial effects that are associated with different agronomic traits suggests that BR-related genes may be important targets for simultaneously increasing plant productivity and performance under stress conditions.