Gabriela C Sinclair, Renaud Travadon, Paula J Eschen, Christopher Wallis, Kendra Baumgartner, Chloé E L Delmas, Joshua F Hnizdor, Megan K Bartlett
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Eutypa lata is a fungal pathogen of grapevine that causes widespread economic damage and threatens vineyard longevity worldwide. This study was initiated to further understanding of how grapevines resist E. lata infections, using an integrated approach combining inoculation assays in the greenhouse with physiological and biochemical measurements. Resistant 'Zinfandel' and susceptible 'Syrah' grapevines were subjected to control and inoculation treatments and assessed for gas exchange, water status, photosynthetic biochemistry, hydraulic conductivity, wood chemistry, and fungal spread (lesion length). Infection reduced leaf photochemical function and gas exchange in Zinfandel and increased these variables in Syrah (p<0.05). Infection produced shorter lesions in Zinfandel (p<0.05), suggesting that downregulating gas exchange limited pathogen spread by reducing the carbon supply to the pathogen or fungal movement in the transpiration stream. Neither cultivar upregulated wood defense compounds in response to infection, but proanthocyanidin and catechin levels were constitutively higher in Zinfandel and stilbenoid and flavonoid contents were constitutively higher in Syrah (p<0.05). Altogether, this study is the first to show that, counterintuitively, downregulating physiological function in response to infection improves long-term resistance to E. lata. Screening responses in photochemical function or gas exchange could provide a high-throughput alternative to measuring lesion lengths in assessing resistance.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Experimental Botany publishes high-quality primary research and review papers in the plant sciences. These papers cover a range of disciplines from molecular and cellular physiology and biochemistry through whole plant physiology to community physiology.
Full-length primary papers should contribute to our understanding of how plants develop and function, and should provide new insights into biological processes. The journal will not publish purely descriptive papers or papers that report a well-known process in a species in which the process has not been identified previously. Articles should be concise and generally limited to 10 printed pages.