Dual impact of elevated temperature on plant defence and bacterial virulence in Arabidopsis.
Abstract
Environmental conditions profoundly affect plant disease development; however, the
underlying molecular bases are not well understood. Here we show that elevated temperature
significantly increases the susceptibility of Arabidopsis to Pseudomonas syringae
pv. tomato (Pst) DC3000 independently of the phyB/PIF thermosensing pathway. Instead,
elevated temperature promotes translocation of bacterial effector proteins into plant
cells and causes a loss of ICS1-mediated salicylic acid (SA) biosynthesis. Global
transcriptome analysis reveals a major temperature-sensitive node of SA signalling,
impacting ~60% of benzothiadiazole (BTH)-regulated genes, including ICS1 and the canonical
SA marker gene, PR1. Remarkably, BTH can effectively protect Arabidopsis against Pst
DC3000 infection at elevated temperature despite the lack of ICS1 and PR1 expression.
Our results highlight the broad impact of a major climate condition on the enigmatic
molecular interplay between temperature, SA defence and function of a central bacterial
virulence system in the context of a widely studied susceptible plant-pathogen interaction.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Pseudomonas syringaePlants, Genetically Modified
Arabidopsis
Salicylic Acid
Abscisic Acid
Intramolecular Transferases
Bacterial Proteins
Arabidopsis Proteins
Gene Expression Profiling
Climate
Virulence
Signal Transduction
Plant Diseases
Protein Transport
Phytochrome B
Host-Pathogen Interactions
Hot Temperature
Disease Resistance
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21719Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1038/s41467-017-01674-2Publication Info
Huot, Bethany; Castroverde, Christian Danve M; Velásquez, André C; Hubbard, Emily;
Pulman, Jane A; Yao, Jian; ... He, Sheng Yang (2017). Dual impact of elevated temperature on plant defence and bacterial virulence in Arabidopsis.
Nature communications, 8(1). pp. 1808. 10.1038/s41467-017-01674-2. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21719.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Sheng-Yang He
Benjamin E. Powell Distinguished Professor of Biology
Interested in the fascinating world of plants, microbes or inter-organismal communication
and co-evolution? Please contact Prof. Sheng-Yang He (shengyang.he@duke.edu; hes@msu.edu).
Millions of years of co-evolution between plants and microbes have resulted in an
intricate web of attack, counter-attack, decoy, and hijacking mechanisms in biology.
Moreover, co-evolution between plants and microbes is greatly impacted by ongoing
climate

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