Nitrogen forms and metabolism affect plant defence to foliar and root pathogens in tomato
Shuting Ding, Xiangqi Shao, Jianxin Li, Golam Jalal Ahammed, Yanlai Yao, Jian Ding, Zhangjian Hu, Jingquan Yu, Kai Shi
Abstract
Abstract Nitrogen (N) influences a myriad of physiological processes while its effects on plant defences and the underlying mechanisms are largely unknown. Here, the interaction between tomato and pathogens was examined under four N regimes (sole NO 3 − or mixed NO 3 − /NH 4 + of total 1 and 7 mM N, denoting low and high N regimes, respectively) followed by inoculation with two bacterial pathogens, Pseudomonas syringae and Ralstonia solanacearum . Tomato immunity against both pathogens was generally higher under low N as well as NO 3 − as the sole N source. The disease susceptibility was reduced by silencing N metabolism genes such as NR , NiR and Fd‐GOGAT , while increased in NiR1 ‐overexpressed plants. Further studies demonstrated that the N‐modulated defence was dependent on the salicylic acid (SA) defence pathway. Low N as well as the silencing of N metabolism genes increased the SA levels and transcripts of its maker genes, and low N‐enhanced defence was blocked in NahG transgenic tomato plants that do not accumulate SA, while exogenous SA application attenuated the susceptibility of OE‐ NiR1 . The study provides insights into the mechanisms of how nitrogen fertilization and metabolism affect plant immunity in tomato, which might be useful for designing effective agronomic strategies for the management of N supply.