AI Article Synopsis

  • Changing temperatures impact plant-microbe interactions and affect plant disease resistance, especially through Ca/calmodulin-mediated signaling.
  • At elevated temperatures (30 °C), plants show weaker and slower calcium influx in response to pathogens, leading to increased disease susceptibility due to compromised stomatal closure.
  • The Ca receptor AtSR1 plays a crucial role in this process by regulating salicylic acid-related genes, demonstrating a connection between temperature, calcium signaling, and plant immune responses against pathogens.

Article Abstract

Changing temperatures are known to affect plant-microbe interactions; however, the molecular mechanism involved in plant disease resistance is not well understood. Here, we report the effects of a moderate change in temperature on plant immune response through Ca/calmodulin-mediated signaling. At 30 °C, DC3000 triggered significantly weak and relatively slow Ca influx in plant cells, as compared to that at 18 °C. Increased temperature contributed to an enhanced disease susceptibility in plants; the enhanced disease susceptibility is the result of the compromised stomatal closure induced by pathogens at high temperature. A Ca receptor, AtSR1, contributes to the decreased plant immunity at high temperatures and the calmodulin-binding domain (CaMBD) is required for its function. Furthermore, both salicylic acid biosynthesis (ICS) and salicylic acid receptor (NPR1) are involved in this process. In addition to stomatal control, AtSR1 is involved in high temperature-compromised apoplastic immune response through the salicylic acid signaling pathway. The qRT-PCR data revealed that AtSR1 contributed to increased temperatures-mediated susceptible immune response by regulating SA-related genes in , such as , , , as well as . Our results indicate that Ca signaling has broad effects on the molecular interplay between changing temperatures as well as plant defense during plant-pathogen interactions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8880272PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23042175DOI Listing

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