jasmonic-acid and Body-Weight

jasmonic-acid has been researched along with Body-Weight* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for jasmonic-acid and Body-Weight

ArticleYear
Rhizobacteria activates (+)-δ-cadinene synthase genes and induces systemic resistance in cotton against beet armyworm (Spodoptera exigua).
    Plant, cell & environment, 2016, Volume: 39, Issue:4

    Gossypol is an important allelochemical produced by the subepidermal glands of some cotton varieties and important for their ability to respond to changing biotic stress by exhibiting antibiosis against some cotton pests. Plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) are root-colonizing bacteria that increase plant growth and often elicit defence against plant pathogens and insect pests. Little is known about the effect of PGPR on cotton plant-insect interactions and the potential biochemical and molecular mechanisms by which PGPR enhance cotton plant defence. Here, we report that PGPR (Bacillus spp.) treated cotton plants showed significantly higher levels of gossypol compared with untreated plants. Similarly, the transcript levels of the genes (i.e. (+)-δ-cadinene synthase gene family) involved in the biosynthesis of gossypol were higher in PGPR-treated plants than in untreated plants. Furthermore, the levels of jasmonic acid, an octadecanoid-derived defence-related phytohormone and the transcript level of jasmonic acid responsive genes were higher in PGPR-treated plants than in untreated plants. Most intriguingly, Spodoptera exigua showed reduced larval feeding and development on PGPR-treated plants. These findings demonstrate that treatment of plants with rhizobacteria may induce significant biochemical and molecular changes with potential ramifications for plant-insect interactions.

    Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Cyclopentanes; Disease Resistance; Gene Expression Regulation, Plant; Genes, Plant; Gossypium; Gossypol; Isomerases; Larva; Oxylipins; Plant Diseases; Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction; Rhizobium; Spodoptera

2016
Inverse relationship between systemic resistance of plants to microorganisms and to insect herbivory.
    Current biology : CB, 1999, Mar-25, Volume: 9, Issue:6

    Pre-inoculation of plants with a pathogen that induces necrosis leads to the development of systemic acquired resistance (SAR) to subsequent pathogen attack [1]. The phenylpropanoid-derived compound salicylic acid (SA) is necessary for the full expression of both local resistance and SAR [2] [3]. A separate signaling pathway involving jasmonic acid (JA) is involved in systemic responses to wounding and insect herbivory [4] [5]. There is evidence both supporting and opposing the idea of cross-protection against microbial pathogens and insect herbivores [6] [7]. This is a controversial area because pharmacological experiments point to negative cross-talk between responses to systemic pathogens and responses to wounding [8] [9] [10], although this has not been demonstrated functionally in vivo. Here, we report that reducing phenylpropanoid biosynthesis by silencing the expression of phenylalanine ammonialyase (PAL) reduces SAR to tobacco mosaic virus (TMV), whereas overexpression of PAL enhances SAR. Tobacco plants with reduced SAR exhibited more effective grazing-induced systemic resistance to larvae of Heliothis virescens, but larval resistance was reduced in plants with elevated phenylpropanoid levels. Furthermore, genetic modification of components involved in phenylpropanoid synthesis revealed an inverse relationship between SA and JA levels. These results demonstrate phenylpropanoid-mediated cross-talk in vivo between microbially induced and herbivore-induced pathways of systemic resistance.

    Topics: Adaptation, Physiological; Animals; Body Weight; Cyclopentanes; Feeding Behavior; Immunity, Innate; Insecta; Larva; Moths; Nicotiana; Oxylipins; Phenylalanine Ammonia-Lyase; Plant Diseases; Plant Leaves; Plant Physiological Phenomena; Plant Proteins; Plants, Toxic; Salicylic Acid; Tobacco Mosaic Virus; Wound Healing

1999