Abstract

Witches’-broom (WB, excessive initiation, and outgrowth of axillary buds) is one of the remarkable symptoms in plants caused by phytoplasmas, minute wall-less intracellular bacteria. In healthy plants, axillary bud initiation and outgrowth are regulated by an intricate interplay of nutrients (such as sugars), hormones, and environmental factors. However, how these factors are involved in the induction of WB by phytoplasma is poorly understood. We postulated that the WB symptom is a manifestation of the pathologically induced redistribution of sugar and phytohormones. Employing potato purple top phytoplasma and its alternative host tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), sugar metabolism and transportation, and the spatiotemporal distribution of phytohormones were investigated. A transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis revealed that starch breakdown was inhibited, resulting in the degradation of damaged chloroplasts, and in turn, premature leaf senescence. In the infected source leaves, two marker genes encoding asparagine synthetase (Sl-ASN) and trehalose-6-phosphate synthase (Sl-TPS) that induce early leaf senescence were significantly up-regulated. However, the key gibberellin biosynthesis gene that encodes ent-kaurene synthase (Sl-KS) was suppressed. The assessment of sugar content in various infected tissues (mature leaves, stems, roots, and leaf axils) indicated that sucrose transportation through phloem was impeded, leading to sucrose reallocation into the leaf axils. Excessive callose deposition and the resulting reduction in sieve pore size revealed by aniline blue staining and TEM provided additional evidence to support impaired sugar transport. In addition, a spatiotemporal distribution study of cytokinin and auxin using reporter lines detected a cytokinin signal in leaf axils where the axillary buds initiated. However, the auxin responsive signal was rarely present in such leaf axils, but at the tips of the newly elongated buds. These results suggested that redistributed sucrose as well as cytokinin in leaf axils triggered the axillary bud initiation, and auxin played a role in the bud elongation. The expression profiles of genes encoding squamosa promoter-binding proteins (Sl-SBP1), and BRANCHED1 (Sl-BRC1a and Sl-BRC1b) that control axillary bud release, as determined by quantitative reverse transcription (qRT)-PCR, indicated their roles in WB induction. However, their interactions with sugars and cytokinins require further study. Our findings provide a comprehensive insight into the mechanisms by which phytoplasmas induce WB along with leaf chlorosis, little leaf, and stunted growth.

Highlights

  • Phytoplasmas are minute, and exclusively intracellular bacteria that infect numerous plant species, and cause serious economic losses [1]

  • The results indicated that sugar metabolism was severely impaired and sucrose transportation through phloem was impeded, which led to sucrose reallocation to new sink tissues

  • MM) exhibited a series of developmental symptoms such as big bud and cauliflower-like inflorescence (CLI) at about 28 and 45 dpi, respectively, and excessive initiation of axillary buds in the upper shoots appeared at 45 dpi

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Summary

Introduction

Phytoplasmas are minute, and exclusively intracellular bacteria that infect numerous plant species, and cause serious economic losses [1]. A phytoplasma infection induces a series of remarkable symptoms in host plants, mainly characterized by flower abnormalities, including virescence (flower petals turning green), phyllody (leafy flowers), and cauliflower-like inflorescence (CLI) [2,3]. Many phytoplasma-affected plants exhibit witches’-broom (WB, excessive shoot branching) [2]. WB is always accompanied by little leaf, leaf chlorosis, and stunted growth. Several phytoplasma virulence factors have been identified in aster yellows witches’-broom phytoplasma (AYWB) and onion yellows phytoplasma (OY). They are AYWB derived SAP05, SAP11, and SAP54, and OY originated TENGU and phyllogen [4–8]

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