Article Addendum

Root growth is affected differently by mechanical wounding in seedlings of the ecological model species Nicotiana attenuata and the molecular model species Arabidopsis thaliana

Volume 5, Issue 3   March 2010
Pages 290 - 292
http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/psb.5.3.10719
Authors: Lilian Schmidt and Achim Walter

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Abstract:
In the ecological model plant Nicotiana attenuata, leaf wounding or herbivory lead to a reduction of root growth via jasmonic acid (JA) signalling. A single wounding treatment is sufficient to induce this response; multiple wounding does not increase the plant growth reaction. In a recent study, in which JA bursts were elicited in leaves of the molecular model species Arabidopsis thaliana in different ways (1), we tested whether JA induces the same response there. Root growth reduction was neither induced by foliar application of herbivore oral secretions nor by direct application of methyl jasmonate to leaves. Root growth reduction was observed when leaves were infected with the pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato, which persistently induces the JA signaling pathway. Yet, growth analyses of this effect in wild type and JA-signaling mutants showed that it was elicited by the bacterial toxin coronatine which suggests ethylene- but not JA-induced root growth reduction in A. thaliana. Moreover, the growth effects were somewhat masked by a light-induced diurnal decrease of root growth. Overall, we conclude that the reaction of root growth to herbivore-induced JA signaling differs among species, which is related to different ecological defence strategies that have evolved in different species.

Article Addendum to:
L Schmidt, GM Hummel, U Schurr, M Schöttner, A Walter. Jasmonic acid does not mediate root growth responses to wounding in Arabidopsis thaliana. Plant Cell Environ 2010; 33: 104-16
PMID: 19895400 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3040.2009.02062.x

Received: November 20, 2009; Accepted: November 20, 1990

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