Subscriber access provided by Caltech Library
Article
Watery saliva secreted by the grain aphid Sitobion avenae stimulates aphid resistance in wheat Yong Zhang, Jia Fan, Frederic Francis, and Julian Chen J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.7b03141 • Publication Date (Web): 15 Sep 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on September 17, 2017
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 37
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Watery saliva secreted by the grain aphid Sitobion avenae stimulates aphid resistance in wheat *
*
Yong Zhang1,2, Jia Fan1, Frédéric Francis2 , Julian Chen1
1 State Key Laboratory of Plant Diseases and Insect Pests, Institute of Plant Protection, Chinese Academy of
Agricultural Sciences, Beijing, 100193, PR China
2 Functional and Evolutionary Entomology, Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech, University of Liège, Gembloux, B-5030,
Belgium
1
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
1
ABSTRACT
2
Infestation with Sitobion avenae induces localized defense responses in wheat; in this
3
study, the role of S. avenae watery saliva in resistance induction was examined by
4
infiltrating aphid saliva into wheat leaves. After feeding S. avenae on an artificial diet
5
for 48 h, we first collected watery saliva from them and then separated the salivary
6
proteins using one-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Gene expression studies showed
7
that infiltration of S. avenae watery saliva in wheat leaves induced strong salicylic
8
acid-responsive defense but moderate jasmonic acid-dependent defense. Feeding on
9
wheat leaves infiltrated with aphid saliva, compared with untreated leaves,
10
significantly decreased the number of nymphs produced per day and the intrinsic rate
11
of increase of the population of S. avenae. In a choice test against untreated wheat,
12
saliva-infiltrated wheat had repellent effects on aphids. Additionally, electrical
13
penetration graph results showed that the feeding behavior of S. avenae on
14
saliva-treated wheat was negatively affected compared with untreated wheat. These
15
findings provided direct evidence that salivary components of S.avenae are involved
16
in the induction of wheat resistance against aphids and further demonstrated the
17
important roles of watery saliva in aphid-plant interactions.
18
KEYWORDS: Sitobion avenae, saliva infiltration, defense responses, aphid
19
performance, choice preference, feeding behavior
20
21 22
2
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 37
Page 3 of 37
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
23
INTRODUCTION
24
During the long course of their co-evolution with insects, plants have evolved a
25
range of defense mechanisms induced by herbivore attacks, including direct defenses
26
and indirect defenses. Direct defenses include herbivore-induced toxic secondary
27
metabolites and proteinase inhibitors (PIs) that have negative effects on insect
28
development, while indirect defenses consist of volatile emissions that repel
29
herbivores or attract their natural enemies and are released by plants in response to
30
herbivore feeding 1, 2.
31
Jasmonic acid (JA) and salicylic acid (SA) function as two important signaling
32
molecules in the induction of plant defense responses 3. Current theory posits that
33
plants respond to necrotrophic pathogen infestations and leaf-chewing herbivores by
34
activating the JA-mediated defense pathway and that SA-dependent defenses are
35
mainly triggered by biotrophic pathogens and phloem feeders 4.
36
As one of the largest groups of phloem-feeding insects, aphids (Hemiptera:
37
Aphidoidea) are economically important pests that cause heavy losses in agriculture
38
and horticulture worldwide 5. The induction of a SA-dependent defense pathway by
39
aphid feeding has been demonstrated in many aphid-plant interactions, for example,
40
green peach aphid (Myzus persicae) in tomato, tobacco and Arabidopsis
41
Russian wheat aphid (Diuraphis noxia) in wheat 9. However, several genes involved
42
in the jasmonic acid signaling pathway, such as lipoxygenase (LOX) and PIs, were
43
also found to be induced by the feeding of the potato aphid (Macrosiphum euphorbiae)
44
on tomato in compatible and incompatible interactions 3
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
10
6-8
and
, the greenbug aphid
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
45
(Schizaphis graminum) feeding on sorghum
46
Arabidopsis 12.
Page 4 of 37
11
, and M. persicae feeding on
47
Plants have the ability to perceive herbivore-derived chemical cues in saliva,
48
such as herbivore-associated elicitors or herbivore-associated molecular patterns
49
(HAMPs), to activate specific defense responses at a minimal fitness cost
50
salivary elicitors or HAMPs have been identified in chewing insects, including fatty
51
acid-amino acid conjugates, glucose oxidase, inceptins in lepidopterans, and
52
disulfooxy fatty acids in the American grasshopper (Schistocerca americana), all of
53
which can induce the activation of SA-, JA-, ethylene (ET)- and reactive oxygen
54
species (ROS) defense responses in plants 14-18.
13
. Many
55
During the process of probing and feeding, aphids initially secrete gelling saliva
56
that can solidify into a tube-like sheath to protect the stylets from mechanical damage
57
and chemical attacks
58
mixture of enzymes and other defense-eliciting components, into the plant cells and
59
apoplasts 20. It has been proposed that aphid interactions with plant immunity involve
60
a gene-for-gene model in which some eliciting components or elicitors can be
61
recognized by nucleotide binding site-leucine rich repeat (NBS-LRR) resistance (R)
62
protein in plants leading to resistance against aphids
63
specific elicitors have been identified from aphids, the eliciting activity of watery
64
saliva in plant defense has been well demonstrated in M.persicae. Infiltration of M.
65
persicae salivary components in the range of 3-10 kDa into Arabidopsis plants
66
activated resistance against aphids resulting in reduced fecundity, and 52 genes such
19
. Additionally, aphids inject watery saliva, a more complex
8, 21
4
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
. Although, to date, no
Page 5 of 37
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
67
as senescence associated protein 1 and cytochrome P450, involved in stress responses
68
were also induced as being activated after aphid feeding
69
oxidative enzymes, such as pectinases and polyphenol oxidase (PPO), were also
70
detected in aphid saliva, and have been shown to trigger plant defense responses as
71
eliciting agents
72
salivary elicitors of M. persicae, reduced aphid fecundity, while Mp10 induced
73
chlorosis and activated the SA and JA signaling pathways in Nicotiana benthamiana,
74
all of which indicates their important roles in plant defense induction 26, 27.
22, 23
. Several hydrolytic and
20, 24, 25
. The overexpression of Mp10 and Mp42, two candidate
75
The grain aphid, Sitobion avenae, is one of the most dominant and destructive
76
pests of wheat in the world in that it both feeds directly on phloem sap and transmits
77
barley yellow dwarf viruses 28. The feeding of S. avenae increased the enzyme activity
78
of LOX, PPO, phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL) and β-1,3-glucanase (BGL2)
79
related to both the JA and SA pathways in wheat, as well as the mRNA levels of
80
allene oxide synthase (AOS) and PAL, which are involved in JA and SA synthesis,
81
respectively
82
S.avenae 30, little is known about the roles of saliva in aphid-wheat interactions. In our
83
study, the watery saliva of S. avenae was collected and then infiltrated into wheat
84
leaves to investigate the roles of aphid saliva in the induction of wheat defense and
85
the attendant effects on aphid performance by reverse transcription quantitative
86
real-time PCR (RT-qPCR), bioassays and electrical penetration graph (EPG)
87
recording.
88
MATERIALS AND METHODS
29
. Although some proteins have been identified in the watery saliva of
5
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
89
Insects and plants
90
Winter wheat seeds, Triticum aestivum var. Beijing 837, were immersed in 0.5 %
91
sodium hypochlorite (Amresco, OH, USA) for 30 min to sterilize the surface, then
92
washed 3 times in distilled water. These seeds were transferred into sterilized petri
93
dishes and germinated in distilled water for 3-4 days at a temperature of 25±1 °C; the
94
water was changed every day. Healthy seedlings of similar size were carefully
95
transferred into plastic pots with organic soil (peat: vermiculite=3:1) and continued to
96
be reared in the climate chamber until the two-leaf stage for use in further study (L:
97
D=16 h: 8 h; 20±1 °C).
98
A clone of S. avenae was initially established from a single aphid collected from
99
a wheat field in Langfang City, Hebei Province, North China, and has been reared on
100
wheat plants (Beijing 837 variety) for 6 yrs (25-30 generations every year) in an
101
indoor environment with a temperature of 20±1 °C, relative humidity of 40-60 % and
102
a photoperiod of L: D = 16 h: 8 h.
103
Aphid infestation treatments
104
At the two-leaf stage, 20 wingless adults of S. avenae were transferred to the first
105
leaf (the older leaf) of wheat and the movement of aphids was restricted in a plastic
106
ecological cage (2.7×2.7×2.7 cm) to avoid the escape of aphids. The edge of the
107
ecological cage was covered with sponge to avoid causing mechanical wounds to the
108
leaf. This aphid feeding site was designated the “local leaf” group. The other leaf of
109
the same plant was also caged without aphids as the “systemic leaf”. In the control
110
plant, both leaves were caged at corresponding sites with ecological cages containing 6
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 6 of 37
Page 7 of 37
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
111
no aphids. Each pot contained one wheat plant and was kept in a climate incubator
112
with a temperature of 20 ± 1°C and a photoperiod of 16 h: 8 h (L: D). After 30 min,
113
all aphids had begun settling and feeding; this time was recorded as 0 h. After 48 h of
114
feeding, all aphids were removed, and leaf samples were then collected. Three
115
experimental replicates were conducted for each treatment.
116
Aphid saliva collection and 1D gel electrophoresis Chemically defined diets for S. avenae were formulated as previously described
117
118
31
and sterilized with 0.22 µm Millipore membrane filters (Merck Millipore,
119
Germany). Then, 1 mL of artificial diet was sandwiched between two layers of
120
Parafilm membrane (Bemis, WI, USA) stretched across a PVC tube, 27 mm in
121
diameter and 40 mm high, under sterile conditions. The Parafilm was sterilized and
122
exposed to UV light for a minimum of 1 h before use. Approximately 200 S. avenae
123
of different instars were carefully collected from wheat plants and starved for 2 h, then
124
transferred to the PVC tubes to feed on the artificial diet for 48 h in an environmental
125
chamber (20±1°C, L: D=16 h: 8 h); tubes with the same volume of artificial diet but
126
without aphids feeding were used as a control. The secreted saliva was collected from
127
a total of 100 mL of diet (approximately 20,000 aphids) and stored at -70°C until use.
128
The salivary sample was concentrated to a volume of 2 mL using a Vivaspin 20
129
centrifuge concentrator (Sartorius, Gottingen, Germany) with a 3000 Da molecular
130
weight cut-off PES membrane at 4 °C, 15000 g for at least 1 h. Ten microliters of
131
concentrated saliva sample or 5 µL of protein ladder (PageRulerTM Unstained Protein
132
Ladder, Thermo Scientific, USA) mixed with an equal volume of loading buffer was 7
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
133
heated in boiling water for 5-10 minutes then loaded into the wells of the gel. Proteins
134
were separated by one-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with 5%
135
stacking and 12 % separating gel. Silver nitrate staining was conducted as previously
136
described to detect aphid salivary protein bands 32.
137
Saliva infiltration
138
Twenty microliters of concentrated saliva or control sample was diluted to a
139
volume of 200 µL with distilled water and then infiltrated into the first leaf of a wheat
140
plant at the two-leaf stage using a 1 mL syringe without the needle. Leaves infiltrated
141
with same volume of control sample were used as control groups. The plants were
142
then reared in the same environment as described above for further study. The
143
infiltrated leaves of the plants were collected after 6 h and 24 h of infiltration.
144
Total RNA isolation and cDNA synthesis
145
Leaf samples were collected using sterilized scissors and transferred into liquid
146
nitrogen immediately, then stored at -70 °C until use. Total RNA was extracted from
147
leaves using TRIzol® Reagent (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) following the
148
protocols provided by the manufacturer. The quality and quantity of RNA were
149
assessed with NanoDrop™ 2000 Spectrophotometers (Thermo Scientific, CA, USA).
150
A total of 1 µg of RNA was reverse transcribed into cDNA with a Transcript One-Step
151
gDNA Removal and cDNA Synthesis SuperMix kit (TransGen Biotech, Beijing,
152
China) following the manufacturer’s instructions, and cDNA templates were stored at
153
-20°C until they were used for RT-qPCR.
154
RT-qPCR analysis 8
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 8 of 37
Page 9 of 37
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
155
The relative expression of genes involved in the JA and SA defense signaling
156
pathways of wheat after aphid infestation and saliva infiltration were detected using
157
RT-qPCR. Target genes for the JA-responsive pathway included LOX, AOS and Ω-3
158
fatty acid desaturase (FAD) , which are involved in JA biosynthesis
159
tested for the SA-responsive pathway were the SA synthesis enzymes PAL and
160
isochorismate
161
pathogenesis-related protein 1 (PR-1) 34. Actin was used as an internal control and
162
was synthesized according to Liu et al. 33. Primers for RT-qPCR were designed using
163
Primer Premier 5.0. All primer sequences are shown in Table 1.
synthase
(ICS)
and
the
induced
SA
33
. The genes
marker
protein
164
RT-qPCR was performed on an ABI 7500 Real-Time PCR System (Applied
165
Biosystems, Carlsbad, CA, USA). cDNA was diluted 10-fold and then used as
166
templates to detect the relative expression of the target genes in a 20 µL reaction
167
system containing 2 µL of cDNA, 0.5 µL each of 10 µmol L-1 forward primer and
168
reverse primer, 10 µL of 2× SYBR premix Ex TaqTM (Tli RNaseH Plus, Takara,
169
Dalian, China) and 0.4 µL of 50× ROX Reference Dye II (Tli RNaseH Plus, Takara,
170
Dalian, China) under the following conditions: 30 s at 95 °C followed by 40 cycles of
171
30 s at 95 °C and 40 s at 60 °C. In RT-qPCR, there were 3 biological replicates for
172
each treatment, and each replicate consisted of 3 technical replicates.
173
Aphid bioassay
174
Choice test
175
After 24 h of saliva infiltration, wheat plants were placed horizontally on the flat
176
table, and the same length of leaves (5 cm) with two different treatments were 9
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 10 of 37
177
carefully inserted into a transparent plastic column (24 cm in width, 5 cm in height)
178
from holes in opposite sides (Figure 1). Thirty winged S. avenae were collected in a
179
2.0 mL centrifuge tube and then released from the middle of plastic column device.
180
The number of aphids on each leaf was recorded at 6, 24 and 48 h. There were 15
181
replicates for each test, and all of them were conducted in environmentally controlled
182
room with a temperature of 20±1°C, relative humidity of 40-60 % and a photoperiod
183
of L:D=16 h:8 h.
184
Intrinsic rate of increase of aphid population
185
At the two-leaf stage, the first wheat leaves were infiltrated with aphid saliva as
186
described above. After 24 h, one newborn aphid was transferred onto the
187
saliva-treated wheat leaf and the movement of aphids was restricted on the leaf in a
188
plastic ecological cage (2.7×2.7×2.7 cm). The edge of the ecological cage was
189
covered with sponge to avoid causing mechanical wounds to the leaf. The instar of the
190
aphid was checked every 12 h to record the time when it produced the first nymphs.
191
Then, the number of newborn nymphs was recorded every day, and the nymphs were
192
removed after each count to avoid crowding. The period from the birth of the aphid to
193
its first reproduction was defined as development days (Td). The number of newborn
194
nymphs during the Td was expressed as Md. The intrinsic rate of increase (rm) for
195
each aphid was calculated by the following equation: rm=0.738 × (lnMd) / Td
196
Fifteen replicates were conducted in each group. The wheat seedlings were replaced
197
every 3 days with new seedlings receiving the same treatment.
198
Mean relative growth rate of aphid 10
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
35
.
Page 11 of 37
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
199
Fifteen newborn aphid nymphs were collected into 0.2 mL microcentrifuge tubes
200
and weighed, and then all aphids were fed on saliva-treated or control wheat leaves as
201
described above. After 7 days, all 15 aphids were collected and weighed again. The
202
wheat seedlings were replaced every 3 days with new seedlings receiving the same
203
treatment. Each pot contained one wheat plant and was kept in a climate incubator
204
with a temperature of 20±1°C and a photoperiod of 16 h: 8 h (L:D). A total of 18
205
replicates were performed for each treatment. The mean relative growth rate (MRGR)
206
of S. avenae was calculated as described previously: MRGR=(ln 7-day weight - ln
207
birth weight)/7 36.
208
Detection of aphid feeding behavior by EPG
209
EPG (Giga-8d) was conducted to record the feeding behavior of S. avenae on
210
wheat leaves. Wingless adult S. avenae were gently collected from wheat plants using
211
a brush and starved for 30 min, then 2-3 cm of 18 mm gold wire was attached to the
212
abdomen of each aphid with water-based silver glue. The plant electrode was inserted
213
into the soil in the pot in order to obtain successful electrical access. The complete
214
insect electrode was carefully pinned into the probe input (BNC connector). EPG was
215
performed from 10:00 to 16:00 every day and recorded continuously for 6 h. Each
216
aphid and plant was used only once. All experiments were carried out in a Faraday
217
cage at 20±1°C. The visualization and manual labeling of the various feeding waves
218
were carried out using Stylet+d. Characteristics of the aphid feeding waves were
219
identified as described in a previous study 37, 38.
220
Statistical analysis 11
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
221
All data were analyzed using SPSS 17.0 software (SPSS Inc., Chicago, USA).
222
The percentages of S. avenae that settled on plant leaves in the choice test were
223
arcsine-square-root transformed before analysis, and the differences between groups
224
were examined using Student’s t-test. EPG data were analyzed by a Mann-Whitney U
225
test. For RT-qPCR, each treatment was performed in triplicate, and the differential
226
expression was calculated using 2–∆∆CT method 39. The fold change of the expression
227
of genes involved in the JA and SA signaling defense pathways between the control
228
and treatment conditions was calculated and then analyzed using Student’s t-test. P
229
values less than 0.05 were considered statistically significant.
230
Results
231
Aphid feeding induced local defense responses
232
To determine whether aphid infestation could induce resistance in wheat, two
233
genes involved in JA- and SA-mediated defense responses were identified as
234
differentially expressed after S. avenae feeding (Figure 2A and 2B). The relative
235
expression of the JA-responsive gene FAD had a significant increase in local leaves
236
after infestation by aphids (1.98±0.092-fold, t4=5.745, P=0.005), but in systemic
237
leaves of aphid-infested plants, the mRNA levels of FAD were not significantly
238
different from those in uninfested plants. Similarly, the relative expression of the
239
SA-responsive gene PR-1 was significantly up-regulated in local leaves that had been
240
fed upon by aphids previously (4.04±0.88-fold, t4=4.865, P=0.008), whereas no
241
significant differences were observed in the systemic leaves of the same plants. These
242
results indicated that aphid feeding induced a local defense response in wheat. 12
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 12 of 37
Page 13 of 37
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
243
Collection of S. avenae saliva
244
Aphid salivary protein bands were detected on 12 % separated gel using silver
245
staining. The results in Figure 3 show that the protein bands were obviously stained
246
and were mainly distributed at approximately 15 kDa and between 40 kDa and 85
247
kDa.
248
Expression of defense-related genes after S. avenae saliva infiltration
249
Some key genes involved in the JA and SA defense pathways were found to be
250
differentially expressed in wheat leaves (Figure 4A and 4B). The three JA-responsive
251
genes showed no significant difference between treatment and control conditions after
252
6 h of infiltration, but the SA synthesis enzyme PAL and the SA downstream signaling
253
protein PR-1 were significantly up-regulated, with 2.94±0.76-fold (t2.009=4.441,
254
P=0.047) and 4.17±0.73-fold (t4=4.477, P=0.011) increases, respectively.
255
After 24 h of saliva treatment, the relative expression of the JA defense-related
256
gene AOS increased significantly (1.94±0.42-fold; t4=3.791, P=0.02) compared with
257
the level found in the control, but there was no significant difference in the expression
258
of FAD (t4=1.216, P=0.291). The expression level of LOX was also up-regulated
259
1.57±0.15-fold, showing a significant increase (t4=3.076, P=0.037) between the saliva
260
and control treatments. The mRNA levels of both PAL (5.39±1.59-fold; t4=4.36,
261
P=0.012) and ICS (3.07±0.52-fold; t4=6.251, P=0.003), enzymes involved in the SA
262
synthesis pathway, showed significant up-regulation with saliva treatment, and the
263
expression of the SA signaling marker protein PR-1 was up-regulated 14.17±2.71-fold
264
after saliva treatment and showed significant increases compared with the control 13
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
265
(t2.016=-4.74, P=0.041).
266
Aphid performance
267
The results in Table 2 show that there was no significant difference in the
268
development time or mean relative growth rate of S. avenae between saliva treatment
269
and control. However, the number of nymphs per day produced by S. avenae was
270
reduced significantly when they were fed on wheat leaves with saliva infiltration.
271
Furthermore, the intrinsic rate of increase of the population of S. avenae was also
272
significantly decreased (t28=2.360, P=0.025) after the insects fed on wheat leaves that
273
were infiltrated with aphid saliva compared to the control groups. In the choice test,
274
the percentage of winged aphids that landed on leaves treated with aphid saliva was
275
significantly less than the percentage landing on control groups (t28=6.545, P