Priming as a strategy to enhance stress tolerance in plants with focus on the role of Brassinosteroid related genes

It is of interest to gain knowledge of the mechanisms operating behind priming, an important possible strategy to help plants handle stress. The hypothesis is that priming of Arabidopsis thaliana, as a result of colonization of roots using the beneficial bacteria Bacillus amyloliquefaciens, stimulat...

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Autor principal: Thoudal, Malin
Formato: M2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Plant Biology and Forest Genetics (until 131231) 2012
Materias:
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author Thoudal, Malin
author_browse Thoudal, Malin
author_facet Thoudal, Malin
author_sort Thoudal, Malin
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description It is of interest to gain knowledge of the mechanisms operating behind priming, an important possible strategy to help plants handle stress. The hypothesis is that priming of Arabidopsis thaliana, as a result of colonization of roots using the beneficial bacteria Bacillus amyloliquefaciens, stimulates Brassinosteroid (BR) synthesis in plants leading to plant growth promotion and improved defense responses. The beneficial bacterium B. amyloliquefaciens (strain UCMB5113) was used for priming of wild type Col-0 and different mutant lines of A. thaliana in order to study the gene expression of different BR-related genes using real-time PCR (qPCR). The BR-related genes DET2, BAK1, BRI1 and DWF1 were found to be involved in priming. Gene expression of BAK1, BRI1 and MPK4 was examined during Bacillus mediated priming and the result showed that Bacillus is likely to bind to BAK1 during priming. It was of interest to see whether a surface molecule on Bacillus could be responsible for priming. This was examined using heat killed Bacilli with focus on effects on BAK1 expression, compared with regular priming. The result showed that it is likely that a surface molecule on Bacillus is responsible for activation of BAK1 upon priming. Effects of herbivore and pathogen attack on A. thaliana during priming were also investigated using larvae of Spodoptera littoralis and Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato strain DC3000, respectively. Both treatments indicated that the BR-related gene BAK1 is of great importance in defense responses to pathogen and herbivore attack. It was shown that primed plants were much more tolerant to different kinds of stress than control plants and could protect the plants to a certain degree from herbivory or disease.
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id RepoSLU4809
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2012
publishDateSort 2012
publisher SLU/Dept. of Plant Biology and Forest Genetics (until 131231)
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Plant Biology and Forest Genetics (until 131231)
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spelling RepoSLU48092012-09-28T14:12:58Z Priming as a strategy to enhance stress tolerance in plants with focus on the role of Brassinosteroid related genes Thoudal, Malin Priming Bacillus amyloliquefaciens Arabidopsis thaliana Brassinosteroids It is of interest to gain knowledge of the mechanisms operating behind priming, an important possible strategy to help plants handle stress. The hypothesis is that priming of Arabidopsis thaliana, as a result of colonization of roots using the beneficial bacteria Bacillus amyloliquefaciens, stimulates Brassinosteroid (BR) synthesis in plants leading to plant growth promotion and improved defense responses. The beneficial bacterium B. amyloliquefaciens (strain UCMB5113) was used for priming of wild type Col-0 and different mutant lines of A. thaliana in order to study the gene expression of different BR-related genes using real-time PCR (qPCR). The BR-related genes DET2, BAK1, BRI1 and DWF1 were found to be involved in priming. Gene expression of BAK1, BRI1 and MPK4 was examined during Bacillus mediated priming and the result showed that Bacillus is likely to bind to BAK1 during priming. It was of interest to see whether a surface molecule on Bacillus could be responsible for priming. This was examined using heat killed Bacilli with focus on effects on BAK1 expression, compared with regular priming. The result showed that it is likely that a surface molecule on Bacillus is responsible for activation of BAK1 upon priming. Effects of herbivore and pathogen attack on A. thaliana during priming were also investigated using larvae of Spodoptera littoralis and Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato strain DC3000, respectively. Both treatments indicated that the BR-related gene BAK1 is of great importance in defense responses to pathogen and herbivore attack. It was shown that primed plants were much more tolerant to different kinds of stress than control plants and could protect the plants to a certain degree from herbivory or disease. SLU/Dept. of Plant Biology and Forest Genetics (until 131231) 2012 M2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/4809/
spellingShingle Priming
Bacillus amyloliquefaciens
Arabidopsis thaliana
Brassinosteroids
Thoudal, Malin
Priming as a strategy to enhance stress tolerance in plants with focus on the role of Brassinosteroid related genes
title Priming as a strategy to enhance stress tolerance in plants with focus on the role of Brassinosteroid related genes
title_full Priming as a strategy to enhance stress tolerance in plants with focus on the role of Brassinosteroid related genes
title_fullStr Priming as a strategy to enhance stress tolerance in plants with focus on the role of Brassinosteroid related genes
title_full_unstemmed Priming as a strategy to enhance stress tolerance in plants with focus on the role of Brassinosteroid related genes
title_short Priming as a strategy to enhance stress tolerance in plants with focus on the role of Brassinosteroid related genes
title_sort priming as a strategy to enhance stress tolerance in plants with focus on the role of brassinosteroid related genes
topic Priming
Bacillus amyloliquefaciens
Arabidopsis thaliana
Brassinosteroids