Abstract

Climate change and an increasing population, present a massive global challenge with respect to environmentally sustainable nutritious food production. Crop yield enhancements, through breeding, are decreasing, whilst agricultural intensification is constrained by emerging, re-emerging, and endemic pests and pathogens, accounting for ~30% of global crop losses, as well as mounting abiotic stress pressures, due to climate change. Metabolomics approaches have previously contributed to our knowledge within the fields of molecular plant pathology and plant–insect interactions. However, these remain incredibly challenging targets, due to the vast diversity in metabolite volatility and polarity, heterogeneous mixtures of pathogen and plant cells, as well as rapid rates of metabolite turn-over. Unravelling the systematic biochemical responses of plants to various individual and combined stresses, involves monitoring signaling compounds, secondary messengers, phytohormones, and defensive and protective chemicals. This demands both targeted and untargeted metabolomics approaches, as well as a range of enzymatic assays, protein assays, and proteomic and transcriptomic technologies. In this review, we focus upon the technical and biological challenges of measuring the metabolome associated with plant stress. We illustrate the challenges, with relevant examples from bacterial and fungal molecular pathologies, plant–insect interactions, and abiotic and combined stress in the environment. We also discuss future prospects from both the perspective of key innovative metabolomic technologies and their deployment in breeding for stress resistance.

Highlights

  • Climate change and population growth pose a major global challenge to environmentally sustainable food production

  • We provide two contrasting examples of the effector modulation of primary metabolism for pathogen nutrition

  • Metabolomics has revolutionized the understanding of plant–microbe interactions, by providing a valuable biochemical phenotypic screen of the chemical diversity of plants

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change and population growth pose a major global challenge to environmentally sustainable food production. Different subcellular organelles are known to play unique and pivotal roles in integrating biotic and abiotic stress signals, with, for example, chloroplasts orchestrating the production of a range of phytohormones and secondary metabolites [7,15]. This highlights the future importance of sub-cellular metabolomic analyses. In the face of microbial challenges, metabolomics lomics has revealed specific and common metabolic signatures as hallmarks of infection has revealed specific and common metabolic signatures as hallmarks of infection processes These include antimicrobial metabolite counterattacks or metabolicorsignals, to reorganize reorganize plant physiology and adapt to stress.

Experimental
Metabolomics Research in Molecular Plant Pathology—Challenges and Complexity
Metabolomics Research in Fungal and Oomycete Plant Pathology
Metabolomics Research in Plant—Pest Resistance Breeding
Future Prospects
LC-HRMS are inoculated
Concluding Remarks
Findings
Analysis
Full Text
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