AI Article Synopsis

  • Seaweeds like Laminaria digitata need to effectively respond to environmental stressors and damage to survive and thrive in their habitats.
  • This study investigates how tangle kelp reacts to specific signaling molecules and how it communicates with nearby algae to enhance their defense mechanisms.
  • Findings reveal that exposure to injured conspecifics modifies the kelp's defense responses, indicating that waterborne cues play a crucial role in shaping these protective strategies, similar to mechanisms observed in land plants.

Article Abstract

As marine sessile organisms, seaweeds must respond efficiently to biotic and abiotic challenges in their natural environment to reduce the fitness consequences of wounds and oxidative stress. This study explores the early steps of the defense responses of a large marine brown alga (the tangle kelp Laminaria digitata) and investigates its ability to transmit a warning message to neighboring conspecifics. We compared the early responses to elicitation with oligoguluronates in laboratory-grown and harvested wild individuals of L. digitata. We followed the release of H₂O₂ and the concomitant production of volatile organic compounds. We also monitored the kinetics of expression of defense-related genes following the oxidative burst. Laboratory-grown algae were transplanted in kelp habitats to further evaluate their responses to elicitation after a transient immersion in natural seawater. In addition, a novel conditioning procedure was established to mimic field conditions in the laboratory. Our experiments showed that L. digitata integrates waterborne cues present in the kelp bed and/or released from elicited neighboring plants. Indeed, the exposure to elicited conspecifics changes the patterns of oxidative burst and volatile emissions and potentiates this kelp for faster induction of genes specifically regulated in response to oligoguluronates. Thus, waterborne signals shape the elicitor-induced responses of kelps through a yet unknown mechanism reminiscent of priming in land plants.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3123347PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0021475PLOS

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