PLANT RESPONSES TO INSECT HERBIVORY: The Emerging Molecular Analysis
Top Cited Papers
- 1 June 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Plant Biology
- Vol. 53 (1), 299-328
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.arplant.53.100301.135207
Abstract
▪ Abstract Plants respond to herbivore attack with a bewildering array of responses, broadly categorized as direct and indirect defenses, and tolerance. Plant-herbivore interactions are played out on spatial scales that include the cellular responses, well-studied in plant-pathogen interactions, as well as responses that function at whole-plant and community levels. The plant's wound response plays a central role but is frequently altered by insect-specific elicitors, giving plants the potential to optimize their defenses. In this review, we emphasize studies that advance the molecular understanding of elicited direct and indirect defenses and include verifications with insect bioassays. Large-scale transcriptional changes accompany insect-induced resistance, which is organized into specific temporal and spatial patterns and points to the existence of herbivore-specific trans-activating elements orchestrating the responses. Such organizational elements could help elucidate the molecular control over the d...Keywords
This publication has 123 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hydroperoxide lyase depletion in transgenic potato plants leads to an increase in aphid performanceProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001
- Programmed cell death, mitochondria and the plant hypersensitive responseNature, 2001
- Molecular Interactions between the Specialist HerbivoreManduca sexta (Lepidoptera, Sphingidae) and Its Natural Host Nicotiana attenuata. III. Fatty Acid-Amino Acid Conjugates in Herbivore Oral Secretions Are Necessary and Sufficient for Herbivore-Specific Plant ResponsesPlant Physiology, 2001
- Molecular Interactions between the Specialist HerbivoreManduca sexta (Lepidoptera, Sphingidae) and Its Natural Host Nicotiana attenuata. II. Accumulation of Plant mRNAs in Response to Insect-Derived CuesPlant Physiology, 2001
- Ecophysiological comparison of direct and indirect defenses in Nicotiana attenuataOecologia, 2000
- Eating the evidence? Manduca sexta larvae can not disrupt specific jasmonate induction in Nicotiana attenuata by rapid consumptionPlanta, 2000
- Competition between gall aphids and natural plant sinks: plant architecture affects resistance to gallingOecologia, 1997
- Only xylem-borne factors can account for systemic wound signalling in the tomato plantPlanta, 1995
- The Dilemma of Plants: To Grow or DefendThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1992
- Low nutritive quality as defense against herbivoresJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1980