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Silicon modulates multi-layered defense against powdery mildew in Arabidopsis

Lili Wang, Min Dong, Qiong Zhang, Ying Wu, Liang Hu, James F. Parson, Edward Eisenstein, Xiangge Du, Shunyuan Xiao

2020Phytopathology Research22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Silicon (Si) has been widely employed in agriculture to enhance resistance against pathogens in many crop plants. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms of Si-mediated resistance remain elusive. In this study, the Arabidopsis-powdery mildew pathosystem was employed to investigate possible defense mechanisms of Si-mediated resistance. Because Arabidopsis lacks efficient Si transporters and thus is a low Si-accumulator, two heterologous Si influx transporters (from barley and muskmelon) were individually expressed in wild-type Arabidopsis Col-0 and a panel of mutants defective in different immune signaling pathways. Results from infection tests showed that while very low leaf Si content slightly induced salicylic acid (SA)-dependent resistance, high Si promoted PAD4-dependent but largely EDS1- and SA-independent resistance against the adapted powdery mildew isolate Golovinomyces cichoracearum UCSC1. Intriguingly, our results also showed that high Si could largely reboot non-host resistance in an immune-compromised eds1/pad4/sid2 triple mutant background against a non-adapted powdery mildew isolate G. cichoracearum UMSG1. Taken together, our results suggest that assimilated Si modulates distinct, multi-layered defense mechanisms to enhance plant resistance against adapted and no-adapted powdery mildew pathogens, possibly via synergistic interaction with defense-induced callose.

Topics & Concepts

Powdery mildewArabidopsisPathosystemCalloseBiologyPlant disease resistanceArabidopsis thalianaSalicylic acidMutantMildewBotanyCell biologyGeneticsHost (biology)GeneCell wallSilicon Effects in AgricultureAluminum toxicity and tolerance in plants and animalsArsenic contamination and mitigation