Abstract
Plant resistance can provide effective, economical, and sustainable pest control. Tolerance to the soybean aphid has been identified and confirmed in the soybean KS4202. Although its resistance mechanisms are not fully understood, evidence suggests that enhanced detoxification of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is an active system under high aphid infestation. We further explored tolerance by evaluating the differences in constitutive and aphid-induced defenses in KS4202 through the expression of selected defense-related transcripts and the levels of the phytohormones abscisic acid (ABA), jasmonic acid (JA), JA-isoleucine (JA-Ile), cis-(+)-12-oxo-phytodienoic acid (OPDA), and salicylic acid (SA) over several time points. Higher constitutive levels of ABA and JA, and basal expression of ABA- and JA-related transcripts were found in the tolerant genotype. Conversely, aphid-induced defenses in KS4202 were expressed as an upregulation of peroxidases under prolonged aphid infestation (>7 days). Our results point at the importance of phytohormones in constitutive defense in KS4202 tolerance to the soybean aphid. Understanding the underlying mechanisms of tolerance will assist breeding for soybean with these traits, and perhaps help extend the durability of Rag (Resistance to Aphis glycines)-mediated resistance genes.
Introduction
Insects are important pests of plants that cause substantial loss in plant productivity and fitness. In response to insect feeding, plants have evolved a wide array of defense strategies to protect themselves against herbivore attack. Plant resistance to insects can be categorized into three main categories: antibiosis, antixenosis, and tolerance1. Plants exhibiting antibiosis negatively affect an insect’s biology upon feeding, resulting in increased mortality, reduced longevity, and reduced fecundity. Antixenosis, or non-preference, affects the insect’s behavior to deter or reduce colonization on resistant plants. Tolerance, a less understood plant resistance category, is composed of multiple plant characteristics. Relative to susceptible hosts, tolerant plants can maintain insect populations while withstanding or recovering from herbivore injury and still yielding significantly more biomass1. In contrast to the other plant resistance categories, which have a direct effect on the insect’s biology or behavior, tolerance does not impose the same selection pressure on the insect, therefore the likelihood of biotype emergence is generally considered minimal1,2.
Hemipterans, within the family Aphididae, are one of the most economically important insect pests on plants worldwide, representing 26% of the 45 major crop pests of main food crops in temperate climates3. Aphids can build extraordinary populations due to high reproductive potential (parthenogenesis), short generation times, and the high proportion of viviparous females in the population. Additionally, short-term changes in population size, as well as deprivation of host nutrition, induce the formation of winged forms that disseminate by wind currents over long distances4. Because the interaction of demographic factors impose high variability in aphid build up, aphid management is particularly challenging. For several years, farmers have been using insecticides as one of the major tactics to control aphids. However, the continued reliance on insecticides has led to the loss of aphid resistance in field-grown crops, and leading to cascading negative effects on non-target and beneficial organisms and environmental safety5–8. Alternatively, aphid management can be best performed by blending plant resistance with integrated pest management (IPM)9–11.
Arthropod-tolerant plants blend well with IPM, as it exerts minimal negative impacts on the targeted pest as well as most natural enemies, and may have higher economic injury levels (EILs) relative to susceptible genotypes12,13. Higher EILs generally translate into a delayed chemical control, reducing the need for frequent chemical applications14. Despite the evident benefits of implementing tolerance for mitigating insect damage, the absence of detailed knowledge in the mechanisms and genetics underlying plant tolerance limits its incorporation in breeding programs and IPM.
Existing research on tolerance to hemipteran pests emphasize the upregulation of photosynthetic activity and reactive oxygen species (ROS)-detoxification mechanisms15. In plants, redox control is governed by enzymes and antioxidants that rapidly detoxify ROS. Environmental stressors, such as insect feeding, may cause oxidative bursts leading to ROS accumulation, and ultimately cell toxicity and death. Several studies have indicated that insect feeding increases localized and plant-wide peroxidase activity, and that this activity is higher in tolerant plants16–19.
The current literature on compatible and incompatible interactions between plants and several aphid species has uncovered that plants defend themselves using a variety of defense signaling pathways. Many of these interactions are dependent on several hormonal pathways, including but not limited to salicylic acid (SA), jasmonic acid (JA) and ethylene (ET) signaling20–22. Plant receptors recognize aphid-feeding via elicitors, which may be derived from an aphid’s saliva or even products of endosymbiotic bacteria23–25. Upon aphid probing, a cascade of defense reactions occurs via the recognition of aphid elicitors, where calcium- and ROS- related signaling play important roles in triggering the activation of defense pathways such as JA, SA, and ET21,26.
Accumulation of SA as a response to aphid colonization has been documented in multiple plant systems and is credited with being important in plant resistance to phloem-feeding insects27–29. SA also mediates localized plant tissue hypersensitive and systemic acquired responses, and induces the expression of defense responsive transcripts, including pathogenesis-related (PR) genes and proteins. In soybean, Glycine max (L.) Merrill, PR1 was highly expressed in aphid resistant Rag1 (Resistance to Aphis glycines1) plants infested with soybean aphids (Aphis glycines Matsumura), when no changes occurred in the susceptible genotype30,31. Studies have also shown that phloem feeding insects may induce JA-associated transcripts as well, although this pathway is better characterized in plants stressed by chewing insects32,33. Aphid-infested wheat (Triticum aestivum) and barley (Hordeum vulgare) have also induced JA-associated transcripts including lipoxygenases (LOX), coronatine-insensitive1 (COI1), 12-oxophytodienoate reductase (OPR) and cytochrome P45034,35. In addition, abscisic acid (ABA) plays an important role in abiotic stress tolerance and pathogen resistance though its role in insect-plant interactions is less understood.
The soybean aphid (Aphis glycines Matsumura) is considered as the most economically important pest of soybean in the U.S.3. Upon introduction of the soybean aphid from Asia in 2000, the application of chemical insecticides, development of economic thresholds and injury levels, and deployment of aphid-resistant cultivars have been the primary methods for controlling soybean aphids5,6,36. Traditional aphid-resistant soybeans contain one or more dominant Rag genes, which exhibit antibiosis and/or antixenosis, that deters aphid feeding and subsequent damage37–40. However, the sustainable implementation of these traits faces challenges due to the emergence of soybean aphid biotypes41–43.
Soybean tolerance to the soybean aphid was observed in the soybean genotype KS420244–46. Tolerance in KS4202 was demonstrated in other studies where aphid feeding reduced soybean yield at a rate of 3.1% for every 10,000 aphid-days that accumulates14,45,46. Conversely, the same comparison in susceptible soybean resulted in yield losses of ~7%36. Defensive mechanisms in KS4202 may be composed of metabolic changes that involve oxidative enzymes and a primed photosynthetic system16,17. Functional transcriptomic approaches revealed a wide variety of responses induced by soybean aphids in KS4202, including the overexpression of peroxidases, cytochrome P450s, and WRKY transcription factors in the tolerant soybean47. Two peroxidase transcripts, Peroxidase 52 (PRX52) and Ascorbate peroxidase 4 (APX4), were reported to be significantly induced by soybean aphids in KS4202 at 15 days post-infestation (dpi). KS4202 also exhibits tolerance to Bemisia tabaci biotype B via unknown factors that are independent of the oxidative enzymes, such as superoxide dismutase, polyphenoloxidase, and peroxidases48.
While the upregulation of peroxidase activity in aphid-tolerant soybean is generally understood, other defense mechanisms remain unknown. Additional knowledge may help to identify phenotypic characteristics linked to tolerance that will assist breeding of tolerant plants. In this study, we evaluated the differences in constitutive and induced responses between tolerant KS4202 and susceptible soybeans by monitoring the expression of selected defense-related transcripts, including peroxidases, phytohormone-associated transcripts and quantifying the levels of ABA, JA, and SA over the time of aphid infestation. Finally, we propose a working hypothesis for soybean aphid tolerance in KS4202.
Results
Aphid colonization pattern in KS4202 is similar to aphid-susceptible soybeans
To demonstrate the similarities in aphid colonization between KS4202 and susceptible soybean, total soybean aphid numbers (adults and nymphs) were recorded in the late response study (Fig. 1). Consistent with previous studies17,47, aphid population numbers were similar between soybean genotypes and the brief duration of soybean aphid infestation did not result in visual damage (i.e. visual damage = 1) for either tolerant or susceptible soybean.
Figure 1.
KS4202 is susceptible to aphid colonization. Mean aphid number (±SE) for infested soybean in the late response study (N = 5).
KS4202 exhibits higher constitutive levels of ABA and JA
To assess both constitutive and aphid-induced differences in phytohormone levels between KS4202 and susceptible soybeans, a time-course experiment was performed in which plant tissue (V3 stage) was harvested pre- and at 6 and 24 hours post-infestation (hpi). Tolerance in KS4202 is well defined during this stage and continues to be expressed as soybean plants enter reproductive stages39. Our results indicate that KS4202 had higher levels of ABA within each time point analyzed compared to aphid-susceptible soybeans (Fig. 2a). The constitutive levels of ABA in the tolerant soybean were over 2x greater than K03-4686 (P = 0.0004) and Wyandot (P = 0.0002) while similar in both susceptible soybeans (P = 0.3693). After aphid infestation, ABA levels decreased in KS4202 at 6 hpi (P = 0.0313) but remained higher compared to both susceptible genotypes K03-4686 (P = 0.0245) and Wyandot (Fig. 2a; P = 0.0382). There were no significant differences in the ABA levels before and after infestation in both aphid susceptible soybeans .
Figure 2.
KS4202 shows higher constitutive levels (ng/g fresh weight [FW]) of ABA, JA, and JA-Ile. ABA, SA, JA, JA-Ile, and OPDA levels in tolerant KS4202 and susceptible K03-4686 and Wyandot soybean (N = 3). Different lowercase letters indicate significant differences between genotypes within the same treatment (P < 0.05). Different uppercase letters indicate significant differences between treatments within the same genotype (P < 0.05). Error bars represent mean ± SE.
Similarly, constitutive levels of both JA and JA-Ile were higher in the tolerant soybean (Fig. 2b,c; JA: P = 0.0003, JA-Ile: P < 0.0001). While not statistically significant, levels of JA in KS4202 were also higher than susceptible genotypes at 6 (K03-4686: P = 0.0759; Wyandot: P = 0.1168) and 24 hpi (K03-4686: P = 0.102; Wyandot: P = 0.0886) with similar trends seen with JA-Ile. Aphid feeding induced no noticeable changes in the accumulation of these hormones in any genotype (Fig. 2b,c; P > 0.05). Endogenous levels of the JA precursor, cis-(+)-12-oxo-phytodienoic acid (OPDA), were similar across all soybeans tested (Fig. 2d; P > 0.05). Furthermore, our results indicate that constitutive levels of SA do not appear to be different between tolerant and susceptible genotypes (Fig. 2e; P = 0.21); however, aphid infestation resulted in higher SA levels at 6 hpi in all soybean genotypes (Fig. 2e; KS4202: P = 0.0168; K03-4686: P = 0.0041; Wyandot: P = 0.0421).
To further evaluate constitutive differences related to tolerance, additional studies focused on the relative expression of JA-, SA-, and ABA-related transcripts. The same biological replicates used for hormone analysis were used to test constitutive and aphid-induced expression at early feeding time points (6 and 24 hpi). A second study evaluated the expression of the same transcripts at later aphid infestation time points (1, 3, and 7 dpi). The NAC domain protein NAC19 (previously described as ARABIDOPSIS TRANSCRIPTION ACTIVATING FACTORS1 or ATAF1) and soybean cold‐inducible zinc finger transcription factor, SCOF-1, were used as ABA-responsive marker transcripts49,50. Overall, constitutive expression of both NAC19 and SCOF-1 were higher in KS4202 relative to aphid-susceptible soybeans (Fig. 3a,b; P < 0.0001).
Figure 3.
Constitutive (i.e., aphid uninfested plants) expression of JA-, SA-, and ABA-related transcripts in aphid-susceptible soybeans relative to aphid-tolerant KS4202 (N = 5). Baseline expression in KS4202 is 1 for each genotype. (*) indicates a significant difference (P < 0.05) between susceptible and KS4202. Error bars represent mean ± SE.
There were also significant interactions between soybean genotype × aphid treatment (P = 0.0028) and genotype × hpi (P < 0.0001) treatments for NAC19. In KS4202, a sharp increase in expression of this transcript occurred at 6 hpi (P < 0.001) followed by a decrease at 24 hpi (P = 0.02) in infested plants relative to uninfested. Aphid-mediated suppression of NAC19 was also seen at both early time points in the susceptible, K03-4686, although no notable changes occurred with Wyandot (Table 1). Expression of SCOF-1 did not change in tolerant plants as a response to aphid feeding and was suppressed at 24 hpi in K03-4686 (P = 0.001) and 6 hpi in Wyandot (P = 0.08). Expression of both NAC19 and SCOF-1 were not evaluated at 1 and 3 dpi in the late-response study; however at late infestation (7 dpi) aphid feeding triggered 2.53x relative fold change of NAC19 (P = 0.05) in KS4202.
Table 1.
Early response study: Aphid-induced expression of JA-, SA- and ABA-related transcripts at 6 and 24 hpi (N = 5).
KS4202 (tolerant) | K03-4686 (susceptible) | Wyandot (susceptible) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 hpi | 24 hpi | 6 hpi | 24 hpi | 6 hpi | 24 hpi | ||
JA | LOX2 | 0.42 ± 0.06* | 0.79 ± 0.10 | 1.09 ± 0.13 | 1.13 ± 0.15 | 0.59 ± 0.13 | 0.62 ± 0.11 |
LOX10 | 2.13 ± 0.28 | 1.46 ± 0.15 | 3.87 ± 0.68 | 1.74 ± 0.23 | 0.15 ± 0.04* | 1.43 ± 0.28 | |
SA | PR1 | 0.46 ± 0.07* | 1.39 ± 0.16 | 1.02 ± 0.12 | 0.95 ± 0.11 | 0.94 ± 0.17 | 1.37 ± 0.23 |
ABA | NAC19 | 28.55 ± 3.40* | 0.05 ± 0.01* | 0.23 ± 0.02* | 0.10 ± 0.01* | 1.21 ± 0.10 | 0.79 ± 0.10 |
SCOF-1 | 1.61 ± 0.14 | 0.75 ± 0.14 | 1.69 ± 0.25 | 0.17 ± 0.02* | 0.40 ± 0.03 | 1.55 ± 0.21 |
Baseline expression in uninfested soybean is 1 for each genotype. (*) indicates a significant difference (P < 0.05) between the infested and uninfested control soybean. Error bars represent mean ± SE.
Two lipoxygenases, LOX10 previously found to be differentially expressed in KS420247 and LOX2, a chloroplastic-like linoleate 13S-lipoxygenase 2 in the JA-biosynthesis pathway of soybean, and OPDA-REDUCTASE 3 (OPR3) were used as markers for JA-related transcript expression. The constitutive expression of all three transcripts showed varying changes in both early and late response studies. The expression of LOX2 was higher in KS4202 relative to the susceptible Wyandot (Fig. 3c; P = 0.0006). Similarly, constitutive expression of LOX10 in KS4202 was higher than the susceptible soybeans, although not statistically significant (Fig. 3d; P = 0.40). While both transcripts were upregulated in compared to Wyandot, no notable differences occurred between KS4202 and K03-4686 (Fig. 3c, LOX2: P = 0.61; Fig. 3d, LOX10: P = 0.65). Additionally, no trends in aphid-induced changes were seen for these transcripts at early and late infestation time points (Tables 1 and 2) other than an initial suppression of LOX2 in KS4202 (P = 0.003) and LOX10 in Wyandot at 6 hpi (P = 0.03; Table 1). In KS4202, constitutive expression of OPR3 was higher relative to both susceptible soybeans (Fig. 3e; K03-486: P = 0.07; Wyandot: P = 0.14). Aphid-induced changes in OPR3 expression were not evaluated in the early response study, however, the late response study indicated that this transcript was only induced in KS4202 at 7 dpi (Table 2; P = 0.047).
Table 2.
Late response study: Aphid-induced expression of JA-, SA- and ABA-related transcripts at 1, 3 and 7 dpi (N = 5).
KS4202 (tolerant) | K03-4686 (susceptible) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 dpi | 3 dpi | 7 dpi | 1 dpi | 3 dpi | 7 dpi | ||
JA | LOX2 | 0.80 ± 0.05 | 1.13 ± 0.12 | 1.32 ± 0.10 | 1.52 ± 0.27 | 2.71 ± 0.29 | 2.40 ± 0.13 |
LOX10 | 0.43 ± 0.08 | 1.11 ± 0.39 | 1.18 ± 0.10 | 1.78 ± 0.21 | 1.77 ± 0.31 | 1.98 ± 0.29 | |
OPR3 | 1.67 ± 0.16 | 0.59 ± 0.09 | 2.21 ± 0.15* | 1.06 ± 0.08 | 0.58 ± 0.04 | 1.92 ± 0.16 | |
SA | PR1 | 1.13 ± 0.05 | 0.60 ± 0.02 | 6.02 ± 0.73* | 2.96 ± 0.15 | 0.23 ± 0.02 | 4.42 ± 0.21 |
ABA | NAC19 | — | — | 2.53 ± 0.19* | — | — | 0.78 ± 0.10 |
SCOF-1 | — | — | 0.43 ± 0.04 | — | — | 1.38 ± 0.21 |
Baseline expression in uninfested soybean is 1 for each genotype. (*) indicates a significant difference (P < 0.05) between the infested and uninfested control soybean. Error bars represent mean ± SE.
Soybean aphid feeding triggers SA in soybeans
Although no constitutive differences of SA between tolerant and susceptible soybeans were observed (Fig. 2e; P = 0.21), all soybeans responded to aphid feeding with higher SA levels at 6 hpi (P < 0.0001). Interestingly, in our study, constitutive expression of PR1 was higher in both susceptible soybeans relative to KS4202 (Fig. 3f; K03-4686: P = 0.0013; Wyandot: P < 0.0001). Upon aphid introduction, PR1 was suppressed even more in KS4202 at 6 hpi (Table 1; P = 0.02), before returning to uninfested expression levels at 24 hpi (Table 1; P = 0.34). Aphids elicited no notable early-response changes in Wyandot (Table 1). In the late response study, expression of PR1 behaved similarly in the susceptible K03-4686 and tolerant KS4202, with aphid-feeding slightly down-regulating expression at 3 dpi (Table 2; P = 0.41) and increasing expression at 7 dpi (Table 2; P = 0.008).
Soybean tolerance to aphids is independent of PHYTOALEXIN DEFICIENT4
Previously, it was shown that Glycine max PHYTOALEXIN DEFICIENT4 (GmPAD4) is required for providing resistance to pathogens and aphids51,52. Our results indicate that the expression of GmPAD4 was constitutively higher in the susceptible soybeans (Supplemental Fig. 1a; P = 0.0005). Conversely, in KS4202, aphids induced a 2x fold-change in GmPAD4 expression at 6 hpi (P = 0.0008) before returning to uninfested levels at 24 hpi (Supplemental Fig. 1b). Suppression of GmPAD4 in infested K03-4686 occurred at 24 hpi (P = 0.04), although not significant at 1 dpi in the late response study (P = 0.24). At 3 dpi, aphids also induced GmPAD4 in K03-4686 (Supplemental Fig. 1c).
Peroxidase activity is upregulated in KS4202 after several days of aphid infestation
Using next generation sequencing, the transcript Peroxidase 52 (PRX52), had a 2.6 log2 fold change in KS4202 at 15 dpi47. While no differences in the constitutive expression of PRX52 among the soybeans were observed (Fig. 4a), aphid infestation suppressed PRX52 in KS4202 at 6 hpi (Fig. 4b, P = 0.003). The results for early and late response at 24 hpi, and 1 and 3 dpi, respectively, indicate no differences in the expression of this transcript upon aphid introduction in either soybean (Fig. 4b,c; P > 0.05). However, at 7 dpi, PRX52 was significantly upregulated in infested KS4202 when no changes were observed in the susceptible soybean (Fig. 4c; P = 0.049). To expand on these findings, an enzyme assay for peroxidase activity within plant tissues before and after aphid infestation at earlier time points (i.e., 6 and 24 hpi) was performed. Similar to the aforementioned results, no differences in constitutive activity or aphid-induced changes were observed (P > 0.05; Table 3).
Figure 4.
Constitutive and aphid-induced expression of PRX52. (a) Constitutive expression of PRX52 in aphid-susceptible soybean genotypes relative to aphid-tolerant KS4202 with a baseline expression of 1. (b) Early response study – Relative expression of PRX52 in aphid-infested plants at 6 and 24 hpi (c) Late response study – Relative expression of PRX52 in aphid-infested plants at 1, 3, and 7 dpi. Baseline expression in uninfested soybean is 1 for each genotype. Five biological replicates per treatment combination were used. (*) indicates a significant difference between treatments and control. Error bars represent mean ± SE.
Table 3.
Total peroxidase activity (μmol/min/mg protein) for soybeans at pre-aphid infestation (0 h) and post-aphid infestation (6 and 24 hpi).
Genotype | 0 h | 6 hpi | 24 hpi | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Control | Control | Infested | Control | Infested | |
KS4202 | 20.02 ± 2.90 | 24.50 ± 5.75 | 24.16 ± 4.61 | 22.69 ± 5.01 | 24.93 ± 8.32 |
K03-4686 | 24.11 ± 7.41 | 21.50 ± 4.40 | 23.48 ± 6.22 | 31.12 ± 7.98 | 24.44 ± 4.16 |
Wyandot | 29.00 ± 11.55 | 21.57 ± 6.82 | 22.88 ± 5.99 | 23.13 ± 4.17 | 22.25 ± 11.87 |
Five biological replicates per genotype were used. (*) indicates a significant difference between treatments. Error bars represent mean ± SE.
Discussion
To date, multiple studies have investigated changes in JA, SA, and ABA in susceptible and Rag-mediated resistant soybean challenged by soybean aphids30,31,53,54, however, none documented these parameters in aphid tolerant soybean. Because host resistance to insects is a relative measure55 and KS4202 is so far, the sole genotype categorized as tolerant to the soybean aphid, the phytohormone levels and related gene expression were relative to two aphid-susceptible soybeans (K03-4686 and Wyandot). Combined with former studies on the role of induced response of peroxidases16,17, here we highlight the importance of constitutive levels of ABA, JA and JA-Ile phytohormones as mechanism for aphid-tolerance in soybean.
While the role of ABA in plant abiotic stress responses and pathogen resistance is well documented56,57, its specific role in plant-insect interactions is less understood. Studham and MacIntosh (2013) previously reported that soybean aphid infestation induces ABA responses in susceptible soybean31. Further studies of this susceptible system have supported the hypothesis that soybean aphids induce ABA-related transcript expression when SA-mediated defenses accumulate54. Here, we report higher constitutive levels of endogenous ABA and expression of the ABA-related transcripts NAC19 and SCOF-1 in aphid-tolerant soybean. Based on these evidences, we hypothesize that the upregulation of ABA in KS4202 is required for the genotype’s susceptibility to aphid colonization, and that other evaluated factors such as JA and peroxidase activity contribute to tolerance of aphid-induced damage.
Plant perception of herbivores generates diverse defense responses that include interactions among several phytohormone pathways. Early models have suggested the important role of ABA as a synergist required for the induction of JA in response to herbivore wounding58; however, the exact relationship between ABA and JA appears to be dependent upon the specific plant-insect system. Thaler and Bostock (2004) reported no changes in JA expression between wild-type and ABA-deficient tomato plants, though ABA appeared to be a key player in reducing Spodoptera exigua caterpillar growth56. While high constitutive levels of JA and JA-Ile in KS4202 mirrored ABA, up-regulation of JA-related transcripts in response to aphid feeding were observed in susceptible soybean plants. The greater induction of these transcripts in the susceptible genotypes appears to be related to their overall lower constitutive expression relative to KS4202, which displayed minimal aphid-induced changes in LOX expression. Previous research has shown that the induction of LOX transcripts in response to aphids occurs rapidly (12–36 hours) in plants that exhibit anitbiosis59. Additionally, Marimuthu and Smith (2012) observed that JA-related genes were more highly induced in susceptible barley than in barley tolerant to Russian wheat aphid (Diuraphis noxia), when majority of the same transcripts were constitutively higher in tolerant plants60. Phytohormone analysis of susceptible and Rag-mediated resistant soybean also reported an induction of JA in susceptible genotypes after 1 and 7 days of soybean aphid feeding, suggesting that the lack of response in resistant soybeans may be due to suppression by aphids53. In combination, these studies support the hypothesis that induction of JA-related transcripts upon aphid feeding are not conditional of tolerance. Instead, the constitutive expression of JA-transcripts such as lipoxygenases is a more important component of plant tolerance to aphids.
While constitutive levels of ABA, JA, and JA-Ile were significantly higher in tolerant soybean, no differences in SA and OPDA were observed between genotypes pre- and post-aphid infestation. The slight down-regulation of constitutive SA in KS4202 may be due to the high expression of ABA and JA through known mechanisms of JA/SA antagonism61,62 and ABA suppression of SA-mediated responses in soybean63. In addition, the expression of PATHOGENESIS-RELATED1 (PR1), an SA-responsive transcript, was down-regulated in KS4202 relative to K03-468647, which is consistent with our findings on PR1 constitutive expression. The early induction of SA after 6 hpi in both tolerant and susceptible genotypes suggest its accumulation is a generalized plant response to aphids. Selig et al. reported similar findings with the expression of genes downstream of SA biosynthesis (PR1 and PR2) being cyclical in susceptible soybean including induction occurring after 6 h of soybean aphid feeding followed by a sudden decline54. Interestingly, soybean aphid feeding on soybean induced the production of methyl SA (MeSA) that attracts predatory beetles to the host plants, thereby limiting aphid proliferation64. However, our results confirm that, although MeSA contributes to indirect defenses in soybean64, SA is not a major contributor to soybean aphid tolerance in soybean.
In addition to JA and SA, ET is also a common hormonal response involved in plant-insect interactions. Marimuthu and Smith (2012) have proposed that constitutive expression of ET-responsive transcripts, in addition to the role of JA, is also important for aphid tolerance in barley60. Further, resistance to green peach aphids (Myzus persicae) in Arabidopsis also relies on the constitutive expression of JA or ET65. JA and ET have a synergistic relationship, and inhibition of ET biosynthesis can lead to a reduced accumulation of JA66,67. Although not quantified in this study, future research on the constitutive levels of ET and expression of ET-related transcripts in KS4202 will further contribute to a working model of tolerance to the soybean aphid.
Another possibility worth exploring is the prospect of WRKY transcription factors mediating pathway signaling in aphid tolerant soybean. Approximately 174 WRKY transcription factors have been identified to date in soybean, in which numerous subfamilies exhibit increased constitutive expression throughout different tissues68. WRKYs can interact as both negative and positive regulators of SA69–71. In soybean, several of these transcription factors provide increased resistance to the soybean cyst nematode (Heterodera glycines) and suggest SA-induced WRKYs may play a role in abiotic and biotic stress responses68. Many WRKY proteins, including AtWRKY53, act upstream of NPR1 (Non-expressor of PR genes 1) and positively regulate its transcription69,72. NPR1 proteins are required for the activation of SA-responsive PR genes71 that encode small proteins that have antimicrobial or antifungal properties68,73. Overexpression of WRKY53 induced PR proteins in wheat and reduced symptoms of pathogen infection in rice (Oryza sativa)74. The PR2 (β-1,3-glucanase) and PR3 (chitinase) transcripts and peroxidases have been associated with wheat antibiotic resistance to Russian wheat aphid75. Our data show higher constitutive expression of PR1 in susceptible soybean, with only slight induction after 7 dpi. In tolerant soybean, however, changes in expression of PR1 in response to aphid feeding are dependent upon the length of aphid infestation with rapid suppression at 6 hpi and 6x fold change induction at 7 dpi. Interestingly, changes in transcript expression of PR1 mirrored aphid-induced changes in PRX52 in tolerant soybean, suggesting that PR1 and PRX52 may be regulated by a common factor. Additionally, the soybean WRKY transcription factor WRKY60 has been reported to be up-regulated in KS4202 after late aphid infestation, suggesting WRKY transcription factors may be responsible for mediating pathways involved in soybean aphid tolerance exhibited by KS420245,76.
In Arabidopsis thaliana, AtPAD4 encodes a nucleocytoplasmic protein required for defense against both pathogens and the green peach aphid77,78. AtPAD4-mediated resistance to the green peach aphid is independent of both ENHANCED DISEASE SUSCEPTIBILITY1 (EDS1) and SA accumulation, which are required for pathogen resistance79. In soybeans, GmPAD4 is also induced by soybean aphids, and may contribute to antibiosis in Rag1 in the cultivar Dowling51. In our studies, aphid induction of GmPAD4 was inconsistent where as its constitutive expression was lower in tolerant soybean. Taken together, these indicate that GmPAD4 is not a key player in providing soybean tolerance to aphids, but instead may act as a key component in Rag-mediated antibiosis.
In some cases, the plant resistance to aphids is a quantitatively inherited trait22. Due to the complex nature of this category of resistance, it is highly likely that the tolerance may be controlled by quantitative trait loci (QTL) in plants. However, lack of genetically-closely related aphid tolerant lines pose a serious bottleneck in understanding the genetic basis of tolerance to aphids. A possible strategy to overcome this problem is to develop recombinant inbred lines (RILs), which can be potentially used as a permanent resource for mapping the tolerance traits80. Further, one of the biggest challenges in screening tolerant plants is to design a feasible method for evaluating tolerance phenotype. With the recent advancements in the area of high-throughput phenotyping15,81, we can now expedite screening for plants that are tolerant to aphids.
Overall, this research shows that constitutive elevated levels of JA and ABA is an important factor in soybean tolerance to soybean aphids (Fig. 5). Differently than the usual rapid transcriptional response observed in Rag soybeans30,31, induced transcriptional responses in tolerant soybean were slow and only detected later (>7 dpi). Nevertheless, primed induction of PRX52, WRKY60, and PR1 transcripts are likely contributing to tolerance. The deployment of plant tolerance is an underexplored and valuable strategy that can mitigate the injury caused by soybean aphids. Our work provides important insights into the genotype of aphid-tolerant soybeans, as well as how these plants respond to aphid feeding. The recent development of EILs for KS420214 in combination with the understanding of the tolerance mechanism provides a foundation for incorporating these plants in the IPM for soybean aphids. Besides the benefits of higher EILs, tolerance could also be used in association with Rag-soybeans. This would provide a more stable approach to manage soybean aphid population below economic damaging levels, and perhaps avoid substantial yield losses in the event of virulent aphid populations due to the tolerance background.
Figure 5.
A working model of mechanisms involved in KS4202’s tolerance to the soybean aphid. Expression of tolerance in KS4202 is well defined during the V3 stage (fully developed leaf at third node83). High basal levels of ABA, JA, JA-Ile and defense-related lipoxygenases (LOX) contribute to susceptibility to aphid colonization and tolerance to aphid feeding-induced damage. The participation of ethylene (ET) warrants further research. Early aphid feeding induces SA and suppresses ABA. Over time with increasing aphid pressure, peroxidases become induced for the detoxification of accumulating ROS. Concurrently to peroxidases, PR1, and a transcription factor (WRKY60), are also induced by aphid feeding. Kait Chapman prepared the soybean illustration and we thank Ellis Johnson for the aphid illustration.
Materials and Methods
Plant and insect source
Aphid-tolerant soybean KS4202 (an F4 plant selection from KS4694 x C1842) and two aphid-susceptible genotypes (K03-4686 and Wyandot) were chosen to gain a better understanding of the differences in tolerance and susceptibility to aphid feeding. The genotype K03-4686 was previously used as the reference susceptible source in aphid tolerance studies17,44,45,47 and Wyandot (an F4 selection from the three-parent cross (Northrup King S29-18 × PI 274.421) × Ohio FG1) was included as a second susceptible source82.
All plants were grown in a growth chamber at 23 ± 2 °C under 15 L: 9D (light:dark) night and 75% humidity. Seeds were pre-germinated on wet paper towels enclosed in plastic bags and maintained at room temperature (24 ± 2 °C) for approximately 3 days. Seedlings were then planted in cone-tainers containing growing media and grown until V3 stage (fully developed leaf at third node)83, when the studies were initiated.
A soybean aphid colony was reared on KS4202 soybean in a growth chamber maintained at 24 ± 2 °C under a 16: 8 h (light: dark) photoperiod. Aphids were progeny of a Nebraska isolate, collected in fields at the University of Nebraska Haskell Agricultural Laboratory, Concord, NE (42°23′3″N, 96°29′21″W) in field season of 2011. As a colony maintenance procedure, soybean aphids were tested for virulence on soybeans expressing Rag1 and Rag2 traits; our tests indicated that the insects were susceptible to both of these resistance traits (i.e. biotype 1). Voucher specimens of soybean aphids were deposited in the Systematics Research Collections of the University of Nebraska State Museum (UNSM).
Aphid bioassay and tissue collection
As no previous studies have shown early plant responses to soybean aphids in the aphid-tolerant genotype KS4202, a study was conducted to evaluate changes in transcript expression, hormone quantification, and peroxidase activity after 6 and 24 hours (early response study). In the early response study, V3 soybean plants were organized in a completely randomized factorial design including three soybean genotypes (KS4202, K03-4686, and Wyandot), two aphid infestation levels (0 [control] or 10 aphids per plant), and three evaluation time points (0, 6, and 24 hpi). Ten adult, apterous female aphids were placed on each newly expanded trifoliate. Infested trifoliates were then caged to prevent aphid escape. Cages were constructed with plastic petri dishes (8.9 × 2.5 cm) containing two mesh windows (7 cm diameter) and a small hole on the side to fit the petiole. A metal clip was placed on each side of the cage to secure the petri dishes. To provide cage support and prevent leaves from bending, a bamboo stick was cut to the appropriate height and placed in the potting soil. Each newly expanded trifoliate in uninfested (control) plants were also caged.
A second study, the late response study, was conducted to compare the overall changes in expression of defense related transcripts between tolerant and susceptible soybeans as a late response to soybean aphid feeding. Plants were completely randomized with a factorial treatment design that included two soybean genotypes (KS4202 and K03-4686), two soybean aphid infestation levels (0 [control] and 15 aphids per plant) and four plant evaluation/harvesting times (0, 1, 3, and 7 dpi). Plant trifoliates were then caged as previously described.
At each evaluation/harvesting time point, aphid number was recorded and removed from the plant with a soft paintbrush. Trifoliates were then excised and flash frozen in liquid nitrogen. Frozen tissue was ground with mortar and pestle and then separated into aliquots for RNA isolation and protein extraction, and hormone assays. Samples were stored at −80 °C until use.
Plant hormone quantification
For the plant hormone measurements, three replications from the early response study (0 [control], 6, and 24 hpi) plants were randomly chosen from each genotype. LC-MS assay and quantification of plant hormones was performed by the Proteomics and Metabolomics Facility at the Center for Biotechnology/University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Hormones were extracted from approximately 100 mg of ground leaf tissue using cold methanol: acetonitrile (50:50, v/v). D5-1AA, D5-tZ, D5-tZR, D6-ABA, D2-JA, and D4-SA were used as deuterium-labeled internal standards for IAA, IAA-Asp, cZ, tZ, tZR, ABA, JA, JA-Ile, OPDA, and SA to account for experimental variation. ZORBAX Eclipse Plus C19 column flowing was used for LC separation and interfaced with a Sciex QTRAP 6500+ mass spectrophotometer equipped with a TurbolonSpray electrospray ion source. For quantification, an external standard curve was prepared. IAA, IAA-Asp, cZ, tZ, and ZR were not detected.
Changes in transcript expression
Total RNA was isolated from approximately 300 mg of ground leaf tissue per sample with TRIzol reagent and treated with RNase-Free DNase I (Qiagen) for 10 min and followed by RNeasy MinElute Cleanup Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA) for purification. Purity and concentration of total RNA was determined with a spectrophotometer (NanoDrop 1000). cDNA was synthesized with 2.5 μg of RNA using ThermoScript RT-PCR system (Life Technologies) according to manufacturer’s protocol. Quantitative reverse transcription (qRT-PCR) reactions were performed on a 7500 Fast Real-time PCR (Applied Biosystems) using SsoAdvanced SYBR Green (Bio-Rad Laboratories, California, USA) following manufacturer’s protocol. Primers were designed using Primer-BLAST (National Center for Biotechnology Information) and sequences are provided in Supplemental Table 1. Soybean cyclophilin (CYP) was used as an endogenous control to normalize data84. Mean fold change from five biological replicates was calculated using the 2−ΔΔCT as previously described85.
Enzyme kinetics
Protein was extracted from ~100 mg of ground tissue per sample with Minute Total Protein Extraction for Plant Tissues (Invent Biotechnologies, Eden Prairie, MN). A protease inhibitor cocktail for plant tissue (Sigma-Aldrich, Saint Louis, MO) was sequentially added to each sample. Crude protein extract was added to 95% acetone and incubated for 1 hour at −20 °C. Samples were then centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 10 minutes at 4 °C and supernatant was discarded. The derived pellet was allowed to air dry at room temperature and dissolved in 120 μL of 25 mM sodium hydroxide and the resulting solution was diluted in water at a 1:11 ratio. Soluble protein was quantified with the BCA protein assay (Pierce, Rockford) with bovine serum albumin as a standard. Samples were incubated at 37 °C for 30 min before absorbance was measured at 562 nm.
Peroxidase activity was determined by a modified protocol from Hildebrand et al.86 and Pierson et al.44. Each well of a microplate (96 wells) was loaded with 5 μL of plant extract. The reaction was started by adding 2.5 μL of 30% H2O2, 75 μL of 18 mM guaiacol, 25 μL of 200 mM HEPES buffer (pH 6.0) and 71.3 μL of distilled water in the well containing the undiluted plant extract. Enzymatic activity for five biological replicates for each treatment combination was measured as the increase in absorbance after 2 minutes at 470 nm in a spectrophotometer (BioTek PowerWave). The specific activity of total peroxidase was calculated using the molar absorptivity of guaiacol at 470 nm (26.6 × 103 M−1 cm−1).
Statistical analysis
To determine the impact of aphid feeding on the selected transcripts (CT values), hormonal quantification, peroxidase activity, and aphid bioassay a generalized mixed model analysis (PROC GLIMMIX, Cary, NC) was performed. Means were separated using Fisher protected least significant difference (LSD) procedure when appropriate (P < 0.05).
Electronic supplementary material
Acknowledgements
We would like to acknowledge Luisa Valencia and Hillary Fischer for technical support with sample processing and RT-qPCR analysis, and the Proteomic and Metabolomics Facility (Center for Biotechnology at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln) for the LC-MS assay and quantification of plant hormones. We also thank Gautam Sarath for his advice on peroxidase assay. The North Central Soybean Research Program and the Nebraska Soybean Board provided financial support for this research. Work in the Louis laboratory was partially supported by the Nebraska Agricultural Experiment Station with funding from the Hatch Act (Accession # 1007272) through the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture. We thank Ellis Johnson for preparing an aphid illustration for Figure 5.
Author Contributions
K.M.C., L.M.-W., T.M.H.-M. and J.L. conceived and designed the research; K.M.C. and L.M.W. performed the research; K.M.C. and L.M-W. wrote the manuscript and K.M.C. prepared the figures; T.M.H.-M., T.E.H. and J.L. supervised the research and complemented the writing. All authors reviewed the manuscript.
Data Availability Statement
The datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
Competing Interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Footnotes
Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Electronic supplementary material
Supplementary information accompanies this paper at 10.1038/s41598-018-33477-w.
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
The datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.