4.5 Article

PeaT1-induced systemic acquired resistance in tobacco follows salicylic acid-dependent pathway

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY REPORTS
Volume 38, Issue 4, Pages 2549-2556

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11033-010-0393-7

Keywords

Elicitor; Systemic acquired resistance; Signal transduction pathway; PR genes; Real-time quantitative PCR

Funding

  1. Special Fund for Agro-scientific Research in the Public Interest [200903052]
  2. State Key laboratory for Biology of Plant Disease and Insect [SKL2010OP05]

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Systemic acquired resistance (SAR) is an inducible defense mechanism which plays a central role in protecting plants from pathogen attack. A new elicitor, PeaT1 from Alternaria tenuissima, was expressed in Escherichia coli and characterized with systemic acquired resistance to tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). PeaT1-treated plants exhibited enhanced systemic resistance with a significant reduction in number and size of TMV lesions on wild tobacco leaves as compared with control. The quantitative analysis of TMV CP gene expression with real-time quantitative PCR showed there was reduction in TMV virus concentration after PeaT1 treatment. Similarly, peroxidase (POD) activity and lignin increased significantly after PeaT1 treatment. The real-time quantitative PCR revealed that PeaT1 also induced the systemic accumulation of pathogenesis-related gene, PR-1a and PR-1b which are the markers of systemic acquired resistance (SAR), NPR1 gene for salicylic acid (SA) signal transduction pathway and PAL gene for SA synthesis. The accumulation of SA and the failure in development of similar level of resistance as in wild type tobacco plants in PeaT1 treated nahG transgenic tobacco plants indicated that PeaT1-induced resistance depended on SA accumulation. The present work suggested that the molecular mechanism of PeaT1 inducing disease resistance in tobacco was likely through the systemic acquired resistance pathway mediated by salicylic acid and the NPR1 gene.

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