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1.
Plant Physiol ; 174(1): 370-386, 2017 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28275149

ABSTRACT

O-Acyl sugars (O-AS) are abundant trichome-specific metabolites that function as indirect defenses against herbivores of the wild tobacco Nicotiana attenuata; whether they also function as generalized direct defenses against herbivores and pathogens remains unknown. We characterized natural variation in O-AS among 26 accessions and examined their influence on two native fungal pathogens, Fusarium brachygibbosum U4 and Alternaria sp. U10, and the specialist herbivore Manduca sexta At least 15 different O-AS structures belonging to three classes were found in N. attenuata leaves. A 3-fold quantitative variation in total leaf O-AS was found among the natural accessions. Experiments with natural accessions and crosses between high- and low-O-AS accessions revealed that total O-AS levels were associated with resistance against herbivores and pathogens. Removing O-AS from the leaf surface increased M. sexta growth rate and plant fungal susceptibility. O-AS supplementation in artificial diets and germination medium reduced M. sexta growth and fungal spore germination, respectively. Finally, silencing the expression of a putative branched-chain α-ketoacid dehydrogenase E1 ß-subunit-encoding gene (NaBCKDE1B) in the trichomes reduced total leaf O-AS by 20% to 30% and increased susceptibility to Fusarium pathogens. We conclude that O-AS function as direct defenses to protect plants from attack by both native pathogenic fungi and a specialist herbivore and infer that their diversification is likely shaped by the functional interactions among these biotic stresses.


Subject(s)
Disease Resistance , Nicotiana/chemistry , Plant Leaves/chemistry , Sugars/chemistry , 3-Methyl-2-Oxobutanoate Dehydrogenase (Lipoamide)/genetics , 3-Methyl-2-Oxobutanoate Dehydrogenase (Lipoamide)/metabolism , Acylation , Alternaria/physiology , Animals , Fusarium/physiology , Gene Silencing , Herbivory/physiology , Manduca/physiology , Molecular Structure , Plant Diseases/genetics , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Plant Diseases/parasitology , Plant Leaves/microbiology , Plant Leaves/parasitology , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Protein Subunits/genetics , Protein Subunits/metabolism , Nicotiana/microbiology , Nicotiana/parasitology , Trichomes/genetics , Trichomes/microbiology , Trichomes/parasitology
2.
Mol Ecol ; 26(9): 2543-2562, 2017 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28173617

ABSTRACT

Plants recruit microbial communities from the soil in which they germinate. Our understanding of the recruitment process and the factors affecting it is still limited for most microbial taxa. We analysed several factors potentially affecting root microbiome structure - the importance of geographic location of natural populations, the microbiome of native seeds as putative source of colonization and the effect of a plant's response to UVB exposure on root colonization of highly abundant species. The microbiome of Nicotiana attenuata seeds was determined by a culture-dependent and culture-independent approach, and the root microbiome of natural N. attenuata populations from five different locations was analysed using 454-pyrosequencing. To specifically address the influence of UVB light on root colonization by Deinococcus, a genus abundant and consistently present in N. attenuata roots, transgenic lines impaired in UVB perception (irUVR8) and response (irCHAL) were investigated in a microcosm experiment with/without UVB supplementation using a synthetic bacterial community. The seed microbiome analysis indicated that N. attenuata seeds are sterile. Alpha and beta diversities of native root bacterial communities differed significantly between soil and root, while location had only a significant effect on the fungal but not the bacterial root communities. With UVB supplementation, root colonization of Deinococcus increased in wild type, but decreased in irUVR8 and irCHAL plants compared to nontreated plants. Our results suggest that N. attenuata recruits a core root microbiome exclusively from soil, with fungal root colonization being less selective than bacterial colonization. Root colonization by Deinococcus depends on the plant's response to UVB.


Subject(s)
Deinococcus , Microbiota , Nicotiana/microbiology , Nicotiana/radiation effects , Plant Roots/microbiology , Plants, Genetically Modified/microbiology , Plants, Genetically Modified/radiation effects , Soil , Ultraviolet Rays
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(36): E5013-20, 2015 Sep 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26305938

ABSTRACT

Plants maintain microbial associations whose functions remain largely unknown. For the past 15 y, we have planted the annual postfire tobacco Nicotiana attenuata into an experimental field plot in the plant's native habitat, and for the last 8 y the number of plants dying from a sudden wilt disease has increased, leading to crop failure. Inadvertently we had recapitulated the common agricultural dilemma of pathogen buildup associated with continuous cropping for this native plant. Plants suffered sudden tissue collapse and black roots, symptoms similar to a Fusarium-Alternaria disease complex, recently characterized in a nearby native population and developed into an in vitro pathosystem for N. attenuata. With this in vitro disease system, different protection strategies (fungicide and inoculations with native root-associated bacterial and fungal isolates), together with a biochar soil amendment, were tested further in the field. A field trial with more than 900 plants in two field plots revealed that inoculation with a mixture of native bacterial isolates significantly reduced disease incidence and mortality in the infected field plot without influencing growth, herbivore resistance, or 32 defense and signaling metabolites known to mediate resistance against native herbivores. Tests in a subsequent year revealed that a core consortium of five bacteria was essential for disease reduction. This consortium, but not individual members of the root-associated bacteria community which this plant normally recruits during germination from native seed banks, provides enduring resistance against fungal diseases, demonstrating that native plants develop opportunistic mutualisms with prokaryotes that solve context-dependent ecological problems.


Subject(s)
Antibiosis/physiology , Bacteria/growth & development , Fungi/physiology , Nicotiana/microbiology , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Plant Roots/microbiology , Alternaria/classification , Alternaria/genetics , Alternaria/physiology , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal Spacer/chemistry , DNA, Ribosomal Spacer/genetics , Fungi/classification , Fungi/genetics , Fusarium/classification , Fusarium/genetics , Fusarium/physiology , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Microbial Consortia/physiology , Molecular Sequence Data , Plant Roots/growth & development , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Symbiosis , Nicotiana/growth & development
4.
Plant Cell Environ ; 38(3): 572-84, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25053145

ABSTRACT

We recently characterized a highly dynamic fungal disease outbreak in native populations of Nicotiana attenuata in the southwestern United States. Here, we explore how phytohormone signalling contributes to the observed disease dynamics. Single inoculation with three native Fusarium and Alternaria fungal pathogens, isolated from diseased plants growing in native populations, resulted in disease symptoms characteristic for each pathogen species. While Alternaria sp.-infected plants displayed fewer symptoms and recovered, Fusarium spp.-infected plants became chlorotic and frequently spontaneously wilted. Jasmonic acid (JA) and salicylic acid (SA) levels were differentially induced after Fusarium or Alternaria infection. Transgenic N. attenuata lines silenced in JA production or JA conjugation to isoleucine (JA-Ile), but not in JA perception, were highly susceptible to infection by F. brachygibbosum Utah 4, indicating that products derived from the JA-Ile biosynthetic pathway, but not their perception, is associated with increased Fusarium resistance. Infection assays using ov-nahG plants which were silenced in pathogen-induced SA accumulations revealed that SA may increase N. attenuata's resistance to Fusarium infection but not to Alternaria. Taken together, we propose that the dynamics of fungal disease symptoms among plants in native populations may be explained by a complex interplay of phytohormone responses to attack by multiple pathogens.


Subject(s)
Alternaria/physiology , Cyclopentanes/metabolism , Fusarium/physiology , Nicotiana/immunology , Oxylipins/metabolism , Plant Diseases/immunology , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Disease Resistance , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Isoleucine/analogs & derivatives , Isoleucine/metabolism , Salicylic Acid/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Nicotiana/genetics
5.
PLoS One ; 9(7): e102915, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25036191

ABSTRACT

The wild tobacco species Nicotiana attenuata has been intensively used as a model plant to study its interaction with insect herbivores and pollinators in nature, however very little is known about its native pathogen community. We describe a fungal disease outbreak in a native N. attenuata population comprising 873 plants growing in an area of about 1500 m2. The population was divided into 14 subpopulations and disease symptom development in the subpopulations was monitored for 16 days, revealing a waxing and waning of visible disease symptoms with some diseased plants recovering fully. Native fungal N. attenuata pathogens were isolated from diseased plants, characterized genetically, chemotaxonomically and morphologically, revealing several isolates of the ascomycete genera Fusarium and Alternaria, that differed in the type and strength of the disease symptoms they caused in bioassays on either detached leaves or intact soil-grown plants. These isolates and the bioassays will empower the study of N. attenuata-pathogen interactions in a realistic ecological context.


Subject(s)
Fungi/isolation & purification , Nicotiana/microbiology , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Alternaria/genetics , Alternaria/isolation & purification , Biological Assay/methods , Disease Outbreaks , Fungi/genetics , Fusarium/genetics , Fusarium/isolation & purification , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Soil
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