Glutathione contributes to plant defense against parasitic cyst nematodes

2021 
Cyst nematodes (CNs) are an important group of root-infecting sedentary endoparasites that severely damage many crop plants worldwide. An infective CN juvenile enters the hosts roots and migrates towards the vascular cylinder, where it induces the formation of syncytial feeding cells, which nourish the CN throughout its parasitic stages. Here, we examined the role of glutathione (L-{gamma}-glutamyl-L-cysteinylglycine, GSH) in Arabidopsis thaliana upon infection with the CN Heterodera schachtii. Arabidopsis lines with mutations pad2, cad2, or zir1 in the glutamate-cysteine ligase (GSH1) gene, which encodes the first enzyme in the glutathione biosynthetic pathway, displayed enhanced CN susceptibility, but susceptibility was reduced for rax1, another GSH1 allele. Biochemical analysis revealed differentially altered thiol levels in these mutants that was independent of nematode infection. All GSH-deficient mutants exhibited impaired activation of defense marker genes as well as genes for biosynthesis of the antimicrobial compound camalexin early in infection. Further analysis revealed a link between glutathione-mediated plant susceptibility to CN infection and the production of camalexin upon nematode infection. These results suggest that GSH levels affects plant susceptibility to CN by fine-tuning the balance between the cellular redox environment and the production of compounds related to defense against infection.
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