Publication | Open Access
<i>Burkholderia phytofirmans</i>PsJN Primes<i>Vitis vinifera</i>L. and Confers a Better Tolerance to Low Nonfreezing Temperatures
227
Citations
59
References
2011
Year
EngineeringBotanyGeneticsBetter TolerancePlant PathologyPlant HealthPhysiological Plant PathologyLow Nonfreezing TemperaturesPlant StressAbiotic StressBiotic StressBurkholderia PhytofirmansGrapevine TissuesMicrobial EcologyPgpr-induced PrimingPhytopharmacologyPlant BiologyPlant-microbe InteractionBiologyMicrobiologySymbiosisMedicinePlant PhysiologyGrapevine Tolerance
Several endophytic bacteria reportedly induce resistance to biotic stress and abiotic stress tolerance in several plant species. Burkholderia phytofirmans PsJN is a plant-growth-promoting rhizobacterium (PGPR) that is able to colonize grapevine tissues and induce resistance to gray mold. Further, PsJN induces physiological changes that increase grapevine tolerance to low nonfreezing temperatures. To better understand how bacteria induced the observed phenomena, stress-related gene expression and metabolite accumulation were monitored in 6-week-old Chardonnay grapevine plantlets after exposure to low nonfreezing temperatures. Under normal conditions (26°C), plantlet bacterization had no significant effect on the monitored parameters. By contrast, at 4°C, both stress-related gene transcripts and metabolite levels increased earlier and faster, and reached higher levels in PsJN-bacterized plantlets than in nonbacterized counterparts, in accordance with priming phenomena. The recorded changes may be correlated with the tolerance to cold stress conferred by the presence of PsJN. This is the first time that PGPR-induced priming has been shown to protect plants against low-temperature stress. Moreover, 1 week after cold exposure, levels of stress-related metabolites had declined more in PsJN-bacterized plants, suggesting that the endophyte is involved in the cold acclimation process via the scavenging system.
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