Hijacking plant immunity: winners and losers in dual pest and pathogen attacks on a shared host
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Nottingham
Department Name: Sch of Biosciences
Abstract
Plants cannot run away when an attacker comes to attack them. Being unable to flee means that they are under pressure to resist attackers... they do this by switching on defences such as the production of antibiotic plant chemicals. Meanwhile, the attackers have adapted to supress plant defence responses to colonise their host. An interesting and important question is, "what happens when plants are exposed to more than one attacker?"
Here we consider the case of wheat, a globally important crop for global food security, and two of its key attackers: aphids (greenfly) and Fusarium head blight (FHB) disease. FHB is a major disease of wheat caused by Fusarium graminearium, an aggressive fungal pathogen. The disease also produces toxins (called mycotoxins), deoxynivalenol (DON) and nivalenol (NIV), in the grain, which are harmful to humans and animals when consumed. Cereal crop production is constrained by plant pests and diseases, which reduce the yield and quality of harvested grain. They are becoming more difficult for farmers to control because availability of pesticides is going down due to the evolution of pesticide resistance and changes in the law that ban pesticides, for example, neonics. Most previous studies of plant diseases and pests have considered them in isolation and little is known of the interactions between them. Aphids occur in cereal fields at the same time as FHB and interact with the disease and the wheat host plant.
Our project will discover how wheat plants respond to these attackers, not only on their own but also when exposed to dual attack. Our early findings show that FHB disease infection is doubled on plants with aphids when compared to clean plants. Here we will determine how and why this happens. We will investigate the biochemical and molecular basis of this aphid-induced plant defence suppression. We will conduct gene expression analyses of the wheat host and the aphid and will analyse differences in biochemical production. We will define and characterise the modulated host-defence networks in our biological experiments and determine their biological significance. Insects are influenced by the odours that plants release: a diseased plant smells different from a healthy one and may become repellent. We will collect plant odours, identify their chemical structures and expose aphids to them to test how they respond. We will make electrical recordings from insect antennae to determine which chemicals they can smell and do behaviour tests to see if they are attracted or repelled. Finally, the project will carry out experiments to determine if the aphids are able to metabolise the toxins produced by the FHB disease. The results from changes in the gene expression and metabolism of the aphid exposed to the mycotoxins will identify new detoxification pathways in the insect relevant to future targets for insect control. Our project will allow us to define novel molecular and metabolomic targets for making our crops more resilient to the aphid pest and the pathogen causing FHB disease in wheat.
The research will advance scientific understanding of how plants respond to combined attack from a pest and a disease. The information this project will provide is essential because we do not know how the aphids change the host to increase its susceptibility to FHB in wheat. This is a novel approach because most previous studies have overlooked how attackers sharing a host plant influence each other by manipulating the host. Outcomes of our work will create future opportunities to improve crop resilience to these attacking organisms.
Here we consider the case of wheat, a globally important crop for global food security, and two of its key attackers: aphids (greenfly) and Fusarium head blight (FHB) disease. FHB is a major disease of wheat caused by Fusarium graminearium, an aggressive fungal pathogen. The disease also produces toxins (called mycotoxins), deoxynivalenol (DON) and nivalenol (NIV), in the grain, which are harmful to humans and animals when consumed. Cereal crop production is constrained by plant pests and diseases, which reduce the yield and quality of harvested grain. They are becoming more difficult for farmers to control because availability of pesticides is going down due to the evolution of pesticide resistance and changes in the law that ban pesticides, for example, neonics. Most previous studies of plant diseases and pests have considered them in isolation and little is known of the interactions between them. Aphids occur in cereal fields at the same time as FHB and interact with the disease and the wheat host plant.
Our project will discover how wheat plants respond to these attackers, not only on their own but also when exposed to dual attack. Our early findings show that FHB disease infection is doubled on plants with aphids when compared to clean plants. Here we will determine how and why this happens. We will investigate the biochemical and molecular basis of this aphid-induced plant defence suppression. We will conduct gene expression analyses of the wheat host and the aphid and will analyse differences in biochemical production. We will define and characterise the modulated host-defence networks in our biological experiments and determine their biological significance. Insects are influenced by the odours that plants release: a diseased plant smells different from a healthy one and may become repellent. We will collect plant odours, identify their chemical structures and expose aphids to them to test how they respond. We will make electrical recordings from insect antennae to determine which chemicals they can smell and do behaviour tests to see if they are attracted or repelled. Finally, the project will carry out experiments to determine if the aphids are able to metabolise the toxins produced by the FHB disease. The results from changes in the gene expression and metabolism of the aphid exposed to the mycotoxins will identify new detoxification pathways in the insect relevant to future targets for insect control. Our project will allow us to define novel molecular and metabolomic targets for making our crops more resilient to the aphid pest and the pathogen causing FHB disease in wheat.
The research will advance scientific understanding of how plants respond to combined attack from a pest and a disease. The information this project will provide is essential because we do not know how the aphids change the host to increase its susceptibility to FHB in wheat. This is a novel approach because most previous studies have overlooked how attackers sharing a host plant influence each other by manipulating the host. Outcomes of our work will create future opportunities to improve crop resilience to these attacking organisms.
Technical Summary
It is important to understand how host defences are modulated by prior attack by other species because plants, in the field, are exposed to multiple attacking organisms. Our data show that Sitobion avenae and Fusarium graminearium profoundly affect each other by altering the condition of their shared host plant, wheat. Fusarium head blight disease severity doubles on aphid infested plants but diseased plants are poorer hosts for aphids. Our goal is to determine the mechanisms underpinning this host manipulation by the aphid or pathogen. We will use a multi-omics approach to define the changes in the host transcriptome and metabolome to identify modulated defence. To isolate local and systemically induced defence suppression we will perform experiments with distal and local aphid feeding on the host and explore the effect of duration of exposure to attackers. To separate the effect of aphid saliva and honeydew we will use bioassays with artificially collected saliva/honeydew to quantify effects on pathogen growth. Conversely, we will determine the effect of secondary fungal metabolites (deoxinivalenol (DON) and nivalenol (NIV)), host metabolites and volatiles on aphid behaviour and performance. Studies will be facilitated by available DON/ NIV producers and Tri5 knockout-transformant strains unable to produce the mycotoxins. Chemical ecology studies will use electrophysiological recordings from aphid antennae to identify bioactive disease induced volatiles and olfactometer bioassays to measure aphid behavioural responses. Transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses will define changes in the functional pathways of both the host plant and the aphid, including putative DON and NIV detoxification mechanisms in aphids. The project will thus determine how the presence of another attacking organism alter host defence and change the fitness of the interacting organisms. It will identify the consequences of aphid-pathogen interactions for disease and pest infestation in wheat.
Planned Impact
The project will primarily benefit the R&D community seeking to develop novel approaches to crop protection and the farming industry, who face the reality of multiple attacking organisms in their crops. These parties will benefit from a better understanding of wheat plant responses to aphids and Fusarium head blight (FHB) disease. To give an indication of the scale of the challenge, economic losses from FHB in the USA in wheat and barley are £563 million over two years with secondary economic losses of £1.16 billion [1]. Fungicides are applied to 99% of conventionally produced wheat crops in the UK and receive an average of 3 sprays per season. Sustainable disease control via improved disease resistance would save the industry £2.1million per annum in recovered loss and spray costs.
The project will have added value as it will not only provide new information about plant-aphid interactions, particularly how aphids suppress plant defence, but also add to knowledge of plant-pathogen interactions and our understanding of how crops respond to dual attack. Information about plant responses to attack will be of value to industrial plant pathologists, entomologists and crop breeders working in the area of crop protection. Outputs from the project will inform future crop varietal selection for improved resilience against multiple enemies. It will also inform the identification of new bioactive compounds for insect control.
Specifically, the crop protection and farming industries are anticipated to benefit through provision of:
- New transcriptomic and metabolomic resources for wheat interaction with a serious pest (grain aphid) and pathogen (Fusarium graminearum)
- New targets for breeding for aphid and disease resistance in wheat
- New molecules with repellent and/or antibiotic activity against aphids
- Information for agronomists about the increased disease and mycotoxin risk to wheat in the presence of aphids
- New knowledge to support collaborative projects to exploit the research findings
FHB is of huge significance due to the health threat posed by the mycotoxins produced by the fungal pathogen. The food industry must minimise the risk of mycotoxins in foods, through good practice undertaken during growing, harvesting and storage. This project will provide insights into factors increasing mycotoxin risk and information will benefit the food and feed industry seeking to minimise risk. It will also be benefit health professionals and the wider public, by making a contribution to sustainable, safe food supply chains.
Development of sustainable crop protection is crucial for attaining sustainable intensification of agriculture [2] and pressures from pests and diseases are expected to increase with climate change [3]. Cereal crop production is constrained by plant pests and diseases, which reduce the yield and quality of harvested grain. They are becoming more difficult for farmers to control because availability of pesticides is going down due to the evolution of pesticide resistance and changes in the law that ban pesticides, for example, neonics.
(1) Nganje and Johnson (2003) J. Can. Ag. Econ. Soc. 4:16-26
(2) Pretty et al. (2018) Nature Sustainability 1: 441-446
(3) Bebber et al. (2018) Nature Climate Change 3, 985-988
The project will have added value as it will not only provide new information about plant-aphid interactions, particularly how aphids suppress plant defence, but also add to knowledge of plant-pathogen interactions and our understanding of how crops respond to dual attack. Information about plant responses to attack will be of value to industrial plant pathologists, entomologists and crop breeders working in the area of crop protection. Outputs from the project will inform future crop varietal selection for improved resilience against multiple enemies. It will also inform the identification of new bioactive compounds for insect control.
Specifically, the crop protection and farming industries are anticipated to benefit through provision of:
- New transcriptomic and metabolomic resources for wheat interaction with a serious pest (grain aphid) and pathogen (Fusarium graminearum)
- New targets for breeding for aphid and disease resistance in wheat
- New molecules with repellent and/or antibiotic activity against aphids
- Information for agronomists about the increased disease and mycotoxin risk to wheat in the presence of aphids
- New knowledge to support collaborative projects to exploit the research findings
FHB is of huge significance due to the health threat posed by the mycotoxins produced by the fungal pathogen. The food industry must minimise the risk of mycotoxins in foods, through good practice undertaken during growing, harvesting and storage. This project will provide insights into factors increasing mycotoxin risk and information will benefit the food and feed industry seeking to minimise risk. It will also be benefit health professionals and the wider public, by making a contribution to sustainable, safe food supply chains.
Development of sustainable crop protection is crucial for attaining sustainable intensification of agriculture [2] and pressures from pests and diseases are expected to increase with climate change [3]. Cereal crop production is constrained by plant pests and diseases, which reduce the yield and quality of harvested grain. They are becoming more difficult for farmers to control because availability of pesticides is going down due to the evolution of pesticide resistance and changes in the law that ban pesticides, for example, neonics.
(1) Nganje and Johnson (2003) J. Can. Ag. Econ. Soc. 4:16-26
(2) Pretty et al. (2018) Nature Sustainability 1: 441-446
(3) Bebber et al. (2018) Nature Climate Change 3, 985-988
Publications
Description | We have generated significant new knowledge of the local and systemic aphid-induced changes in the wheat host defensome to F. graminearum and mycotoxin accumulation, including key defence pathways manipulated by the aphid pest, and the fungal pathogen, which contribute to compromised immunity of the host. New research avenues were developed to explore the biochemical and metabolic strategies employed by different fungal chemotypes for manipulation of aphid behaviour with consequences for disease epidemics. New collaborations were established on aphid metabolism of Fusarium mycotoxins with research group in Boku, Vienna. Research approaches and research bioinformatics skills were developed for handling, and analysis, of multi-omics data generated by the project activities. It is envisaged that two significant publications will be developed from the work making research data sets generated here available to the wider entomology and pathology community. The project generated increased research capability from PhD training aligned with project objectives. |
Exploitation Route | The outcomes and the new knowledge generated by the project will be taken forward by plant breeders and agri industry to improve wheat resistance and crop protection against multiple attackers. |
Sectors | Agriculture Food and Drink Environment |
Description | Genetic mechanisms of tolerance of barley to aphids |
Amount | £66,000 (GBP) |
Organisation | Syngenta International AG |
Sector | Private |
Country | Switzerland |
Start | 03/2023 |
End | 12/2023 |
Description | Genetic resistance of barley to barley yellow dwarf virus PhD studentship |
Amount | £60,000 (GBP) |
Organisation | Syngenta International AG |
Sector | Private |
Country | Switzerland |
Start | 09/2023 |
End | 10/2027 |
Description | PhD iCase Identification and validation of candidate genes for aphid resistance in wheat |
Amount | £50,000 (GBP) |
Organisation | Syngenta International AG |
Sector | Private |
Country | Switzerland |
Start | 09/2021 |
End | 10/2025 |
Description | Private research project on systemic acquired resistance in barley to viral disease and aphid vectors |
Amount | £70,000 (GBP) |
Organisation | Syngenta International AG |
Sector | Private |
Country | Switzerland |
Start | 09/2022 |
End | 04/2023 |
Title | Multi-Omics data analysis for cereal aphids, fungal pathogens and wheat |
Description | Transcriptomics, volatomics and metabolomics data sets are not yet published |
Type Of Material | Data analysis technique |
Year Produced | 2023 |
Provided To Others? | No |
Impact | Impact not yet realised as these are early discoveries |
Description | Chemical ecology studies for aphid- Fusarium interactions |
Organisation | Keele University |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Fusarium expertise and experimentation with fungal inoculation. Access to transcriptomics and metabolomics data. |
Collaborator Contribution | Chemical ecology expertise. Access to volatomics data and insect behavioural studies |
Impact | This is a multi-disciplinary collaboration including plant pathology, omics, chemical ecology and entomology. |
Start Year | 2019 |
Description | Metabolism of masked mycotoxins by aphids |
Organisation | University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences |
Country | Austria |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Aphid biological samples from artificial feeding assays |
Collaborator Contribution | metabolic analysis of conjugated mycotoxins in aphid samples |
Impact | no outputs yet |
Start Year | 2022 |
Description | 16th European Fusarium Seminar, Rome, Italy, 12th - 15th June 2023 |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Other audiences |
Results and Impact | Presentation "Fusarium graminearum recruits Rhopalosiphum padi for increased pathogen virulence on wheat". |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
Description | Oral presentation |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Other audiences |
Results and Impact | Oral presentation Mechanisms of aphid-induced susceptibility of wheat to Fusarium head blight"16th European Fusarium Seminar, Rome, Italy, 12th - 15th June 2023 |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
Description | Presentation at the European Congress of Entomology held 16th-20th October 2023 |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
Results and Impact | Presentation title: "Rhopalosiphum padi is attracted to Fusarium graminearium causing Fusarium head blight, leading to increased pathogen fitness on their shared wheat host." |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
Description | Royal Entomological society 13-16th September 2022 |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Industry/Business |
Results and Impact | Presentation titled "Fusarium and aphids, friends, or foes on their shared wheat host" |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
Description | Royal Entomological society 13-16th September 2022 |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Industry/Business |
Results and Impact | Presentation titled "Fusarium head blight infection by Nivalenol chemotype of F. graminearium attracts Sitobion avenae in wheat" |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
Description | Royal enomology society meeting 2021 |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
Results and Impact | Presentation of intitial results to specialist group |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2021 |
Description | UKPlantSciPresents webinar series |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press) |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Other audiences |
Results and Impact | 70 people from diverse backgrounds attended the webinar online which sparked discussions, questions and resulted in new project |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2021 |
Description | talk for Key stage 4 and 5 students (age 14-18) |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Schools |
Results and Impact | Oral Presentation at EntoSci held 25th April 2023, an event for Key stage 4 and 5 students (age 14-18) with ~500 attendees. Presentation title: "Effect of insect pests and pathogenic fungi on wheat". |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |