Costs and benefits of priming for defense in Arabidopsis
Top Cited Papers
- 4 April 2006
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 103 (14), 5602-5607
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0510213103
Abstract
Induced resistance protects plants against a wide spectrum of diseases; however, it can also entail costs due to the allocation of resources or toxicity of defensive products. The cellular defense responses involved in induced resistance are either activated directly or primed for augmented expression upon pathogen attack. Priming for defense may combine the advantages of enhanced disease protection and low costs. In this study, we have compared the costs and benefits of priming to those of induced direct defense in Arabidopsis. In the absence of pathogen infection, chemical priming by low doses of beta-aminobutyric acid caused minor reductions in relative growth rate and had no effect on seed production, whereas induction of direct defense by high doses of beta-aminobutyric acid or benzothiadiazole strongly affected both fitness parameters. These costs were defense-related, because the salicylic acid-insensitive defense mutant npr1-1 remained unaffected by these treatments. Furthermore, the constitutive priming mutant edr1-1 displayed only slightly lower levels of fitness than wild-type plants and performed considerably better than the constitutively activated defense mutant cpr1-1. Hence, priming involves less fitness costs than induced direct defense. Upon infection by Pseudomonas syringae or Hyaloperonospora parasitica, priming conferred levels of disease protection that almost equaled the protection in benzothiadiazole-treated wild-type plants and cpr1 plants. Under these conditions, primed plants displayed significantly higher levels of fitness than noninduced plants and plants expressing chemically or cpr1-induced direct defense. Collectively, our results indicate that the benefits of priming-mediated resistance outweigh the costs in environments in which disease occurs.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regulation of Plant Disease Resistance, Stress Responses, Cell Death, and Ethylene Signaling in Arabidopsis by the EDR1 Protein KinasePlant Physiology, 2005
- β‐amino‐butyric acid‐induced resistance against necrotrophic pathogens is based on ABA‐dependent priming for calloseThe Plant Journal, 2004
- Priming in plant–pathogen interactionsTrends in Plant Science, 2002
- Does competition magnify the fitness costs of induced responses in Arabidopsis thaliana? A manipulative approachOecologia, 2002
- β-Aminobutyric Acid-Induced Resistance Against Plant PathogensPlant Disease, 2002
- β-Aminobutyric Acid-Induced Protection of Arabidopsis against the Necrotrophic Fungus Botrytis cinereaPlant Physiology, 2001
- Competition mediates costs of jasmonate‐induced defences, nitrogen acquisition and transgenerational plasticity inNicotiana attenuataFunctional Ecology, 2001
- Costs of Induced Responses and Tolerance to Herbivory in Male and Female Fitness Components of Wild RadishEvolution, 1999
- SYSTEMIC RESISTANCE INDUCED BY RHIZOSPHERE BACTERIAAnnual Review of Phytopathology, 1998
- Dichloroisonicotinic and salicylic acid, inducers of systemic acquired resistance, enhance fungal elicitor responses in parsley cellsThe Plant Journal, 1992