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Identification of a tomato UDP-arabinosyltransferase for airborne volatile reception

Authors :
Koichi Sugimoto
Eiichiro Ono
Tamaki Inaba
Takehiko Tsukahara
Kenji Matsui
Manabu Horikawa
Hiromi Toyonaga
Kohki Fujikawa
Tsukiho Osawa
Shunichi Homma
Yoshikazu Kiriiwa
Ippei Ohmura
Atsushi Miyagawa
Hatsuo Yamamura
Mikio Fujii
Rika Ozawa
Bunta Watanabe
Kenji Miura
Hiroshi Ezura
Toshiyuki Ohnishi
Junji Takabayashi
Source :
Nature Communications. 14
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Volatiles from herbivore-infested plants function as a chemical warning of future herbivory for neighboring plants. (Z)-3-Hexenol emitted from tomato plants infested by common cutworms is taken up by uninfested plants and converted to (Z)-3-hexenyl β-vicianoside (HexVic). Here we show that a wild tomato species (Solanum pennellii) shows limited HexVic accumulation compared to a domesticated tomato species (Solanum lycopersicum) after (Z)-3-hexenol exposure. Common cutworms grow better on an introgression line containing an S. pennellii chromosome 11 segment that impairs HexVic accumulation, suggesting that (Z)-3-hexenol diglycosylation is involved in the defense of tomato against herbivory. We finally reveal that HexVic accumulation is genetically associated with a uridine diphosphate-glycosyltransferase (UGT) gene cluster that harbors UGT91R1 on chromosome 11. Biochemical and transgenic analyses of UGT91R1 show that it preferentially catalyzes (Z)-3-hexenyl β-D-glucopyranoside arabinosylation to produce HexVic in planta.<br />植物間コミュニケーションの仕組みを解明 --受容した香りを防御物質に変える遺伝子発見--. 京都大学プレスリリース. 2023-02-28.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b4ccce324c5bde48d6a905859846dea
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-36381-8