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From the HORIZON Solutions Site, www.solutions-site.org Agriculture
Scientists have finally identified a key component in the disease-fighting process in plants that activates plant-wide defenses after a pathogen attack. It has long been known that plants often develop a state of heightened resistance, called systemic acquired resistance, following pathogen infection; this phenomenon requires the movement of a signal from the infected leaf to uninfected parts of the plant. Until now, however, no one knew what that signal was. Researchers at the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research (BTI) have identified methyl salicylate (
"Now that we have identified a signal that activates defenses throughout the plant, as well as the enzymes that regulate the level of this signal, we may be able to use genetic engineering to optimize a plant's ability to turn on those defenses," said Daniel F. Klessig of BTI, who heads the research team. "This approach could boost crop production and reduce the use of pesticides, which are potentially harmful to people and/or the environment." Previous studies conducted by the BTI researchers and others had revealed that after a plant is attacked by a pathogen, it produces a disease-fighting hormone called salicylic acid (SA) at the infection site. Some of this SA activates defenses locally, and some of this SA is converted to The BTI researchers' most recent study builds on their previous studies by showing that the The BTI team's conclusions are based on analyses of plants in which SABP2 function was normal, silenced or mutated in different parts/tissues of the plant. These analyses identified the following steps, which also are shown in the figure, for the development of systemic acquired resistance: · After a plant is infected with a pathogen, SA is produced at the infection site. Some of this SA is converted into · Accumulated · In addition to improving our understanding of systemic acquired resistance, "this research provides insights into how a hormone like SA can actively regulate its own structure--and thereby determine its own activity--by controlling the responsible enzyme," noted Michael Mishkind, an NSF program director, says that "the discovery that
Co-Investigators The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent federal agency that supports fundamental research and education across all fields of science and engineering
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