Plants use a protein pump's built-in brake to trigger whole-body insect defense
Pawar S, Deshpande S, Kundu A, Giri A, Kumari A
Plant Signaling
Tomatoes, cabbages, and kale in your garden use the same electrical signaling system described here to call up chemical defenses when caterpillars bite, so this research points toward crops bred to fight back harder without pesticide sprays.
When a plant gets chewed on by an insect, it sends an electrical alarm signal through its 'veins' to warn the rest of the plant. Researchers found that a protein pump in those veins has a built-in brake on its tail end, and this brake controls how strong and long-lasting that alarm signal is. Tweaking the brake changes everything downstream: which defensive chemicals the plant makes, how much of them it produces, and ultimately how well it survives an insect attack.
Key Findings
Removing the autoinhibitory C-tail of the AHA1 proton pump increased pump activity and shortened the electrical repolarization signal after wounding, reducing expression of the jasmonate defense marker JAZ10 in both wounded and distant leaves.
Phloem sieve tube elements are specifically required for transmitting electrical defense signals systemically, confirmed by selectively boosting AHA1 activity only in those cells.
Glucosinolate levels were strongly elevated in aha1-7 loss-of-function mutants but not in C-tail truncation lines, linking pump regulation to a distinct branch of sulfur-based insect defense chemistry.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists discovered that a molecular 'off switch' on a key protein pump in Arabidopsis plants controls how well the plant defends itself against insect attack. By fine-tuning this pump's activity, plants coordinate electrical alarm signals, hormone responses, and defensive chemistry across their entire body.
Abstract Preview
Original paper
Autoinhibition of Plasma Membrane H+-ATPase1 Regulates Systemic Herbivore Defense in Arabidopsis.
Autoinhibited plasma membrane H+-ATPases1 (AHA1) plays a crucial role in wound-induced systemic signaling, yet its role in insect resistance has not been fully explored. Prior research on fungal an...
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