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Low strigolactone root exudation: a novel mechanism of broomrape (Orobanche and Phelipanche spp.) resistance available for faba bean breeding.

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TLDR
Results presented here show that resistance to parasitic weeds based on low strigolactone exudation does exist within faba bean germplasm, and selection for this trait is feasible in a breeding program.
Abstract
Faba bean yield is severely constrained in the Mediterranean region and Middle East by the parasitic weeds Orobanche crenata, O. foetida, and Phelipanche aegyptiaca. Seed germination of these weeds is triggered upon recognition of host root exudates. Only recently faba bean accessions have been identified with resistance based in low induction of parasitic seed germination, but the underlying mechanism was not identified. Strigolactones are a group of terpenoid lactones involved in the host recognition by parasitic plants. Our LC-MS/MS analysis of root exudates of the susceptible accession Prothabon detected orobanchol, orobanchyl acetate, and a novel germination stimulant. A time course analysis indicated that their concentration increased with plant age. However, low or undetectable amounts of these germination stimulants were detected in root exudates of the resistant lines Quijote and Navio at all plant ages. A time course analysis of seed germination induced by root exudates of each faba bean accession indicated important differences in the ability to stimulate parasitic germination. Results presented here show that resistance to parasitic weeds based on low strigolactone exudation does exist within faba bean germplasm. Therefore, selection for this trait is feasible in a breeding program. The remarkable fact that low induction of germination is similarly operative against O. crenata, O. foetida, and P. aegyptiaca reinforces the value of this resistance.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Strigolactone Signaling and Evolution.

TL;DR: This review focuses on the molecular mechanisms, core developmental roles, and evolutionary history of strigolactone signaling and proposes potential translational applications of strIGolactones research to agriculture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genome-wide analysis of MATE transporters and expression patterns of a subgroup of MATE genes in response to aluminum toxicity in soybean

TL;DR: A first insight is provided on soybean MATE family and their potential roles in soybean response to abiotic stresses especially Al toxicity by phylogenetic analysis with known plant MATE transporters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Broomrape Weeds. Underground Mechanisms of Parasitism and Associated Strategies for their Control: A Review

TL;DR: The points of vulnerability of some underground events, key for their parasitism such as crop-induced germination or haustorial development are reviewed as inhibition targets of the broomrape-crop association.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of the Crop Rhizosphere: Impact of Domestication on Root Exudates in Tetraploid Wheat (Triticum turgidum L.)

TL;DR: Overall, it is shown that domestication and breeding have had major effects on root exudates in the rhizosphere, which suggests the adaptive nature of these changes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological relevance of strigolactones in nutrient uptake and other abiotic stresses, and in plant-microbe interactions below ground

TL;DR: Current knowledge on the different roles of Strigolactones below-ground is discussed, paying special attention to their involvement in phosphorus uptake by the plant by regulating root architecture and the establishment of mutualistic symbiosis with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Plant sesquiterpenes induce hyphal branching in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi

TL;DR: Strigolactones are a group of sesquiterpene lactones, previously isolated as seed-germination stimulants for the parasitic weeds Striga and Orobanche, and a synthetic analogue, GR24, induced extensive hyphal branching in germinating spores of the AM fungus Gigaspora margarita at very low concentrations.
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Strigolactone inhibition of shoot branching

TL;DR: Evidence is presented that carotenoid cleavage dioxygenase 8 shoot branching mutants of pea are strigolactone deficient and that strigOLactone application restores the wild-type branching phenotype to ccd8 mutants, and that other branching mutants previously characterized as lacking a response to the branching inhibition signal also lack striglactone response.
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Inhibition of shoot branching by new terpenoid plant hormones

TL;DR: It is proposed that strigolactones act as a new hormone class—or their biosynthetic precursors—in regulating above-ground plant architecture, and also have a function in underground communication with other neighbouring organisms.
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Roles of Arbuscular Mycorrhizas in Plant Phosphorus Nutrition: Interactions between Pathways of Phosphorus Uptake in Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Roots Have Important Implications for Understanding and Manipulating Plant Phosphorus Acquisition

TL;DR: This finding demonstrates that the direct pathway delivers less P to AM plants than to NM counterparts and implies fungus-to-plant signaling, which helps to explain the persistence of AM symbiosis over evolutionary time, even in plants that apparently show no benefits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mycorrhiza-Induced Resistance and Priming of Plant Defenses

TL;DR: An overview of the impact on interactions between mycorrhizal plants and pathogens, herbivores, and parasitic plants, and the current knowledge of the underlying mechanisms is given, focusing on the priming of jasmonate-regulated plant defense mechanisms that play a central role in the induction of resistance by arbuscularmycorrhiza.
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