Nitrate mediated resistance against <i>Fusarium</i> infection in cucumber plants acts via photorespiration
Yuming Sun, Yingrui Li, Yong Li, Min Wang, Luis A. J. Mur, Qirong Shen, Shiwei Guo
Abstract
Abstract Fusarium wilt is one of the major biotic factors limiting cucumber ( Cucumis sativus L.) growth and yield. The outcomes of cucumber‐ Fusarium interactions can be influenced by the form of nitrogen nutrition (nitrate [NO 3 − ] or ammonium [NH 4 + ]); however, the physiological mechanisms of N‐regulated cucumber disease resistance are still largely unclear. Here, we investigated the relationship between nitrogen forms and cucumber resistance to Fusarium infection. Our results showed that on Fusarium infection, NO 3 − feeding decreased the levels of the fungal toxin, fusaric acid, leaf membrane oxidative, organelle damage and disease‐associated loss in photosynthesis. Metabolomic analysis and gas‐exchange measurements linked NO 3 − mediated plant defence with enhanced leaf photorespiration rates. Cucumber plants sprayed with the photorespiration inhibitor isoniazid were more susceptible to Fusarium and there was a negative correlation between photorespiration rate and leaf membrane injury. However, there were positive correlations between photorespiration rate, NO 3 − assimilation and the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. This provides a potential electron sink or the peroxisomal H 2 O 2 catalysed by glycolate oxidase. We suggest that the NO 3 − nutrition enhanced cucumber resistance against Fusarium infection was associated with photorespiration. Our findings provide a novel insight into a mechanism involving the interaction of photorespiration with nitrogen forms to drive wider defence.