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Callose and Salicylic Acid Are Key Determinants of Strigolactone-Mediated Disease Resistance in Arabidopsis. | LitMetric

Research has demonstrated that strigolactones (SLs) mediate plant disease resistance; however, the basal mechanism is unclear. Here, we provide key genetic evidence supporting how SLs mediate plant disease resistance. Exogenous application of the SL analog, -GR24, increased resistance to virulent . SL-biosynthetic mutants and overexpression lines of more axillary growth 1 (, an SL-biosynthetic gene) enhanced and reduced bacterial susceptibility, respectively. In addition, -GR24 promoted bacterial pattern flg22-induced callose deposition and hydrogen peroxide production. SL-biosynthetic mutants displayed reduced callose deposition but not hydrogen peroxide production under flg22 treatment. Moreover, -GR24 did not affect avirulent effector-induced cell death between Col-0 and SL-biosynthetic mutants. Furthermore, -GR24 increased the free salicylic acid (SA) content and significantly promoted the expression of pathogenesis-related gene 1 related to SA signaling. Importantly, -GR24- and -induced bacterial resistance disappeared completely in Arabidopsis plants lacking both callose synthase and SA. Taken together, our data revealed that callose and SA are two important determinants in SL-mediated plant disease resistance, at least in Arabidopsis.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11478789PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants13192766DOI Listing

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