Abstract

Striped stem borer (SSB) is one of the most damaging pests in rice production worldwide. Previously, we preliminarily demonstrated that indica rice Jiazhe LM, an OsT5H (encoding tryptamine-5-hydroxylase) knockout mutant deficient in serotonin, had increased resistance to SSB as compared with its wildtype parent Jiazhe B. However, the full scenario of SSB resistance and the underlying mechanism remain unknown. In this study, we first demonstrated that the OsT5H knockout could generally increase rice resistance to SSB and then proved that the OsT5H knockout does not disrupt the innate defense response of rice plants to SSB infestation, that is, OsT5H knockout mutations neither had significant effect on the transcriptional response of defense genes upon SSB infestation, nor the profile of defense related metabolites and plant hormones, such as lignin, salicylic acid, jasmonic acid, and abscisic acid, nor the activity of reactive oxygen species(ROS) scavenging enzymes and the ROS contents. We then demonstrated that supplementation of serotonin promoted SSB growth and performance in artificial diet feeding experiments. We observed that SSB larvae feeding on Jiazhe B had serotonin 1.72- to 2.30-fold that of those feeding on Jiazhe LM at the whole body level, and more than 3.31 and 1.84 times in the hemolymph and head, respectively. Further studies showed that the expression of genes involved in serotonin biosynthesis and transport was ~88.1% greater in SSB larvae feeding on Jiahze LM than those feeding on Jiazhe B. These observations indicated that SSB increases serotonin synthesis when feeding on serotonin deficient rice but is unable to fully compensate the dietary serotonin deficiency. Put together, the present study strongly suggests that it is the deficiency of serotonin, not the secondary effect of OsT5H knockout on innate defense response confers the SSB resistance in rice, which implies that reducing serotonin level, particularly through inhibition of its inductive synthesis upon SSB damage, could be an efficient strategy for breeding SSB resistant varieties.

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