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Airborne host-plant manipulation by whiteflies via an inducible blend of plant volatiles.


ABSTRACT: The whitefly Bemisia tabaci is one of the world's most important invasive crop pests, possibly because it manipulates plant defense signaling. Upon infestation by whiteflies, plants mobilize salicylic acid (SA)-dependent defenses, which mainly target pathogens. In contrast, jasmonic acid (JA)-dependent defenses are gradually suppressed in whitefly-infested plants. The down-regulation of JA defenses make plants more susceptible to insects, including whiteflies. Here, we report that this host-plant manipulation extends to neighboring plants via airborne signals. Plants respond to insect attack with the release of a blend of inducible volatiles. Perception of these volatiles by neighboring plants usually primes them to prepare for an imminent attack. Here, however, we show that whitefly-induced tomato plant volatiles prime SA-dependent defenses and suppress JA-dependent defenses, thus rendering neighboring tomato plants more susceptible to whiteflies. Experiments with volatiles from caterpillar-damaged and pathogen-infected plants, as well as with synthetic volatiles, confirm that whiteflies modify the quality of neighboring plants for their offspring via whitefly-inducible plant volatiles.

SUBMITTER: Zhang PJ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6462071 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Airborne host-plant manipulation by whiteflies via an inducible blend of plant volatiles.

Zhang Peng-Jun PJ   Wei Jia-Ning JN   Zhao Chan C   Zhang Ya-Fen YF   Li Chuan-You CY   Liu Shu-Sheng SS   Dicke Marcel M   Yu Xiao-Ping XP   Turlings Ted C J TCJ  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20190325 15


The whitefly <i>Bemisia tabaci</i> is one of the world's most important invasive crop pests, possibly because it manipulates plant defense signaling. Upon infestation by whiteflies, plants mobilize salicylic acid (SA)-dependent defenses, which mainly target pathogens. In contrast, jasmonic acid (JA)-dependent defenses are gradually suppressed in whitefly-infested plants. The down-regulation of JA defenses make plants more susceptible to insects, including whiteflies. Here, we report that this ho  ...[more]

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