2018
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.13920
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A critical role for Arabidopsis MILDEW RESISTANCE LOCUS O2 in systemic acquired resistance

Abstract: Members of the MILDEW RESISTANCE LOCUS O (MLO) gene family confer susceptibility to powdery mildews in different plant species, and their existence therefore seems to be disadvantageous for the plant. We recognized that expression of the Arabidopsis MLO2 gene is induced after inoculation with the bacterial pathogen Pseudomonas syringae, promoted by salicylic acid (SA) signaling, and systemically enhanced in the foliage of plants exhibiting systemic acquired resistance (SAR). Importantly, distinct mlo2 mutant l… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(43 citation statements)
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References 71 publications
(179 reference statements)
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“…MLO2 is required for biologically induced SAR and proper resistance induction by exogenous SA and Pip, but not for SAR‐related metabolite accumulation or defense gene expression. This indicates that MLO2 functions at a very downstream position of both SA and Pip/NHP signaling during SAR (Gruner et al ., ).…”
Section: Regulation Of the Nhp Biosynthetic Pathway And Downstream Simentioning
confidence: 97%
“…MLO2 is required for biologically induced SAR and proper resistance induction by exogenous SA and Pip, but not for SAR‐related metabolite accumulation or defense gene expression. This indicates that MLO2 functions at a very downstream position of both SA and Pip/NHP signaling during SAR (Gruner et al ., ).…”
Section: Regulation Of the Nhp Biosynthetic Pathway And Downstream Simentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Lower (1°) rosette leaves of a subset of plants were therefore pre-inoculated with Psm to induce SAR, whereas the 1° leaves of other plants were mock-treated for the examination of an appropriate non-induced control. Two days later, all the plants were challenge-infected with a bioluminescent Psm strain (Psm lux, Fan et al, 2008) and resistance to the bacterial infection was assessed by bioluminescence measurements 2.5 days later (Hartmann et al, 2017;Gruner et al, 2018). Inducing inoculations with Psm limited bacterial growth in challenged 2° leaves of the wild type compared to those of mock-control plants by about 16-fold, indicating a strong SAR establishment ( Figure 7B).…”
Section: Sar Is Still Inducible By Ugt76b1mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…would be functionally relevant for immunity against bacterial infection. To determine plant basal resistance to P. syringae, we leaf inoculated the tocopherol biosynthetic mutants and the corresponding wild-type accessions with a compatible Psm strain that expresses the luxCDABE operon from Photorhabdus luminescens (Psm lux) and assessed bacterial growth via the quantification of bioluminescence (Fan et al, 2008;Gruner et al, 2018;. Bacterial growth in the leaves of vte1, VTE3/vte3-3, vte4-2, and tat1-2 was similar to the respective wild type, but the vte2-2 mutant allowed significantly higher bacterial proliferation than the wild-type Col-0 and the other lines under investigation ( Fig.…”
Section: Pathogen-inducible Tocopherol Biosynthesis Requiresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sixty hours later, leaf discs (10 mm in diameter) were punched out from inoculated leaves and bacterial numbers were assessed by determining relative light units of the bioluminescent Psm lux strain with a Sirius luminometer (Berthold Detection Systems). Colony-forming units, which linearly correlate with relative light unit values, were calculated by an experimentally determined calibration line (Gruner et al, 2018).…”
Section: Determination Of Local Resistance To P Syringae and Sar Assaysmentioning
confidence: 99%