Frontiers in Plant Science (Jul 2016)

Partial activation of SA- and JA-defensive pathways in strawberry upon Colletotrichum acutatum interaction

  • FRANCISCO AMIL-RUIZ,
  • José Garrido-Gala,
  • José Gadea,
  • Rosario Blanco-Portales,
  • Antonio Muñoz-Mérida,
  • Oswaldo Trelles,
  • Berta de los Santos,
  • Francisco Teodoro Arroyo,
  • Ana Aguado-Puig,
  • Fernando Romero,
  • José A Mercado,
  • Fernando Pliego-Alfaro,
  • Juan Muñoz-Blanco,
  • José L Caballero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2016.01036
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Understanding the nature of pathogen host interaction may help improve strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa) cultivars. Plant resistance to pathogenic agents usually operates through a complex network of defense mechanisms mediated by a diverse array of signaling molecules. In strawberry, resistance to a variety of pathogens has been reported to be mostly polygenic and quantitatively inherited, making it difficult to associate molecular markers with disease resistance genes. Colletotrichum acutatum spp. is a major strawberry pathogen, and completely resistant cultivars have not been reported. Moreover, strawberry defense network components and mechanisms remain largely unknown and poorly understood. Assessment of the strawberry response to C. acutatum included a global transcript analysis, and acidic hormones SA and JA measurements were analyzed after challenge with the pathogen. Induction of transcripts corresponding to the SA and JA signaling pathways and key genes controlling major steps within these defense pathways was detected. Accordingly, SA and JA accumulated in strawberry after infection. Contrastingly, induction of several important SA, JA, and oxidative stress-responsive defense genes, including FaPR1-1, FaLOX2, FaJAR1, FaPDF1, and FaGST1, was not detected, which suggests that specific branches in these defense pathways (those leading to FaPR1-2, FaPR2-1, FaPR2-2, FaAOS, FaPR5 and FaPR10) were activated. Our results reveal that specific aspects in SA and JA dependent signaling pathways are activated in strawberry upon interaction with C. acutatum. Certain described defense-associated transcripts related to these two known signaling pathways do not increase in abundance following infection. This finding suggests new insight into a specific putative molecular strategy for defense against this pathogen.

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