Publications by authors named "Kolomiets M"

Article Synopsis
  • Plants release volatile organic compounds (VOCs) like green leaf volatiles (GLVs) and pentyl leaf volatiles (PLVs) to communicate and respond to stressors, with PLVs being less studied despite their significance.
  • Disrupting the maize-specific lipoxygenase ZmLOX6 reduces the production of PLVs, leading to decreased resistance against fall armyworm and fungal pathogens, as well as altered metabolite profiles.
  • The study highlights a potential competition between the production pathways of PLVs and GLVs, showing that enhancing PLV levels can improve plant resistance to herbivores and specific pathogens while revealing the divergent roles of these compounds in plant defense mechanisms.
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Article Synopsis
  • Jasmonic acid (JA), a plant hormone linked to defense against insect feeding, was found not to influence larval growth, survival, or development speed in western corn rootworm (WCR) when present in low levels in maize.* -
  • A study used a double mutant of maize (opr7opr8) that does not produce JA to directly test JA's role in resistance to WCR and found no significant differences in the insects' growth or damage caused to roots.* -
  • However, there was a notable reduction in shoot growth related to WCR feeding in the JA-deficient mutant, suggesting JA plays a role in aboveground responses to herbivory rather than root resistance.*
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Soil-borne spp. have been extensively studied for their biocontrol activities against pathogens and growth promotion ability in plants. However, the beneficial effect of on inducing resistance against insect herbivores has been underexplored.

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Extensive genome structure variations, such as copy number variations (CNVs) and presence/absence variations, are the basis for the remarkable genetic diversity of maize; however, the effect of CNVs on maize herbivory defense remains largely underexplored. Here, we report that the naturally occurring duplication of the maize 9-lipoxygenase gene leads to increased resistance of maize to herbivory by fall armyworms (FAWs). Previously, we showed that ZmLOX5-derived oxylipins are required for defense against chewing insect herbivores and identified several inbred lines, including Yu796, that contained duplicated CNVs of , referred to as .

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Foliage-feeding fall armyworm (FAW; ) and root-feeding western corn rootworm (WCR; ) are maize ( L.) pests that cause significant yield losses. Jasmonic acid (JA) plays a pivotal defense role against insects.

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13-Lipoxygenases (LOXs) initiate the synthesis of jasmonic acid (JA), the best-understood oxylipin hormone in herbivory defense. However, the roles of 9-LOX-derived oxylipins in insect resistance remain unclear. Here, we report a novel anti-herbivory mechanism mediated by a tonoplast-localized 9-LOX, ZmLOX5, and its linolenic acid-derived product, 9-hydroxy-10-oxo-12(Z),15(Z)-octadecadienoic acid (9,10-KODA).

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Plants produce an array of oxylipins implicated in defense responses against various stresses, with about 600 oxylipins identified in plants to date. Most known oxylipins are the products of lipoxygenase (LOX)-mediated oxygenation of polyunsaturated fatty acids. One of the most well-characterized oxylipins produced by plants is the hormone jasmonic acid (JA); however, the function of the vast majority of oxylipins remains a mystery.

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Food security is an emerging problem that is faced by our civilization. There are millions of people around the world suffering from various kinds of malnutrition. The number of people that starve will only increase considering the continuous growth of the world's population.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the role of the maize OPR2 gene in pathogen resistance, revealing that opr2 mutants are more susceptible to certain pathogens while being more resistant to others.
  • Hormone profiling shows a complex relationship between salicylic acid (SA) and jasmonic acid (JA), with increased JA levels correlating with higher susceptibility to the hemibiotrophic pathogen Colletotrichum graminicola.
  • The research indicates that OPR2 functions as a negative regulator of JA biosynthesis, which is crucial for resistance against some pathogens and contributes differently to plant defense depending on the lifestyle of the pathogen.
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Pentyl leafy volatiles (PLV) are C5 volatiles produced from polyunsaturated fatty acids by plant 13-lipoxygenases (13-LOX) in concert with other lipid metabolizing enzymes. Unlike related C6 volatiles (GLV, green leafy volatiles), little is known about the biosynthesis and physiological function of PLV in plants. Zea mays LOX6 (ZmLOX6) is an unusual plant LOX that lacks lipid oxygenation activity but acts as a hydroperoxide lyase hypothesized to be specifically involved in PLV synthesis.

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Domestication affected the abundances and diversity of maize root volatiles more than northward spread and modern breeding, and herbivore preference for roots was correlated with volatile diversity and herbivore resistance. Studies show that herbivore defenses in crops are mediated by domestication, spread, and breeding, among other human-driven processes. They also show that those processes affected chemical communication between crop plants and herbivores.

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Oomycete and fungal pathogens cause billions of dollars of damage to crops worldwide annually. Therefore, there remains a need for broad-spectrum resistance genes, especially ones that target pathogens but do not interfere with colonization by beneficial microbes. Motivated by evidence suggesting that phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate (PI3P) may be involved in the delivery of some oomycete and fungal virulence effector proteins, we created stable transgenic soybean plants that express and secrete two different PI3P-binding proteins, GmPH1 and VAM7, in an effort to interfere with effector delivery and confer resistance.

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As the gall-inducing smut fungus Ustilago maydis colonizes maize (Zea mays) plants, it secretes a complex effector blend that suppresses host defense responses, including production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and redirects host metabolism to facilitate colonization. We show that the U. maydis effector ROS burst interfering protein 1 (Rip1), which is involved in pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP)-triggered suppression of host immunity, is functionally conserved in several other monocot-infecting smut fungi.

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Ralstonia solanacearum causes bacterial wilt disease, leading to severe crop losses. Xylem sap from R. solanacearum-infected tomato is enriched in the disaccharide trehalose.

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Gibberella stalk rot caused by is one of the devastating diseases of maize that causes significant yield losses worldwide. The molecular mechanisms regulating defense against this pathogen remain poorly understood. According to recent studies, a major oxylipin hormone produced by 13-lipoxygenases (LOX) namely jasmonic acid (JA) has been associated with maize susceptibility to GSR.

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Article Synopsis
  • Volatiles are key chemical signals in plants that help them adapt to environmental stress, with lipoxygenases (LOXs) producing both non-volatile and volatile compounds, including green leaf volatiles (GLVs) and pentyl leaf volatiles (PLVs).
  • This research focused on PLV-deficient mutant plants to explore how PLVs are synthesized and their biological functions, particularly their response to tissue disruption methods like wounding and freeze-thawing, which affected the metabolism of GLVs and PLVs differently.
  • The findings indicate that PLVs play a distinct role in plant defense, specifically enhancing maize resistance to pathogens through the early production of specific oxylipins, while also establishing a comprehensive pathway for PLV synthesis.
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With domestication, northward spread, and breeding, maize defence against root-herbivores relied on induced defences, decreasing levels of phytohormones involved in resistance, and increasing levels of a phytohormone involved in tolerance. We addressed whether a suite of maize (Zea mays mays) phytohormones and metabolites involved in herbivore defence were mediated by three successive processes: domestication, spread to North America, and modern breeding. With those processes, and following theoretical predictions, we expected to find: a change in defence strategy from reliance on induced defences to reliance on constitutive defences; decreasing levels of phytohormones involved in herbivore resistance, and; increasing levels of a phytohormone involved in herbivore tolerance.

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Stalk rot caused by is a disease of worldwide importance. Stalk rot is difficult to detect at the early stages of infection because the fungus colonizes the tissues inside the maize stem. Current diagnostic methods are time-consuming, laborious, and destructive to the stem tissue.

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is a well-known mycoparasitic fungal symbiont that is valued for its biocontrol capabilities. initiates a symbiotic relationship with a plant host through the colonization of its roots. To achieve colonization, the fungus must communicate with the host and evade its innate defenses.

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Article Synopsis
  • Improving drought tolerance in crops, especially maize, is essential due to climate change, leading to a focus on breeding new, drought-resistant varieties.
  • Researchers aimed to use Raman microscopy to assess drought tolerance in various maize lines by analyzing carotenoid degradation, a response to osmotic stress like drought.
  • The study found that Raman spectroscopy effectively tracks carotenoid degradation in real-time and correlates this degradation with drought tolerance levels, suggesting it could be developed for field assessments of breeding materials with better drought resistance.
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Seed maceration and contamination with mycotoxin fumonisin inflicted by is a major disease concern for maize producers worldwide. Meta-analyses of quantitative trait loci for Fusarium ear rot resistance uncovered several ethylene (ET) biosynthesis and signaling genes within them, implicating ET in maize interactions with . We tested this hypothesis using maize knockout mutants of the 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate (ACC) synthases and .

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Article Synopsis
  • - Gibberella stalk rot (GSR) poses significant threats to maize production globally, and the study focuses on understanding how jasmonates (JAs) influence maize's defense against this pathogen through specific molecular pathways.
  • - The research showed that applying methyl jasmonate (MeJA) improves GSR resistance by activating various genes linked to the JA signaling pathway in maize, and crucial interactions between certain proteins were identified using various experimental techniques.
  • - Using CRISPR-cas9 technology, the study found that certain mutant maize varieties exhibit increased resistance to GSR, suggesting that specific JA components can act as susceptibility factors in maize immunity.
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Throughout infection, plant-parasitic nematodes activate a complex host defense response that will regulate their development and aggressiveness. Oxylipins-lipophilic signaling molecules-are part of this complex, performing a fundamental role in regulating plant development and immunity. At the same time, the sedentary root-knot nematode Meloidogyne spp.

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