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Conserved and Divergent: Salicylic Acid Biosynthesis and Signaling Pathways across the Plant Kingdom.

Liu Y, Wu M, Li X, Zhang Y

Plant Signaling

Understanding how plants naturally defend themselves against disease could help scientists breed crops that resist infections without needing as many pesticides — meaning healthier food and more resilient gardens.

Plants produce a natural chemical that acts like an alarm system, warning the plant to defend itself against invading germs. Scientists long assumed most plants used the same method as a common lab plant to make this chemical, but new research shows that the majority of plants — including food crops — use a completely different recipe. This changes how researchers think about boosting disease resistance in the plants we grow for food.

Key Findings

1

Most seed plants produce salicylic acid via a phenylalanine-derived pathway, not the isochorismate pathway previously considered the primary route.

2

The isochorismate pathway, established as the model in Arabidopsis, appears to be a recent evolutionary innovation limited to the Brassicales order — a narrow slice of the plant family tree.

3

Studies in tobacco relative Nicotiana benthamiana and rice helped reveal the complete alternative biosynthesis pathway, highlighting its widespread distribution across diverse plant lineages.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Plants use a chemical called salicylic acid as a key immune signal to fight off certain infections. This review reveals that most plants make this chemical through a different route than the well-studied lab plant Arabidopsis, overturning a long-held assumption about how plant immunity works.

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Abstract Preview

Salicylic acid (SA) is a pivotal plant hormone that modulates immune responses in a pathogen lifestyle-dependent manner, typically amplifying defenses against biotrophic and hemibiotrophic pathogen...

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 11 other discoveries — Arabidopsis, Tobacco, Rice plant-signaling, crop-improvement, climate-adaptation 5 related articles

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