Publication | Open Access
SABP2, a methyl salicylate esterase is required for the systemic acquired resistance induced by acibenzolar‐<i>S</i>‐methyl in plants
100
Citations
30
References
2010
Year
Methyl Salicylate EsteraseEngineeringGeneticsPlant PathologyPlant BiochemistrySalicylic Acid InducesDrug ResistancePlant Molecular BiologyBiosynthesisPlant Defence ActivatorMethyl Salicylic AcidBiochemistryHost ResistanceBiologyPlant ImmunityBiotechnologyGenetic EngineeringInduced ResistanceSystems BiologyMedicinePlant PhysiologySalicylic Acid
Tobacco SABP2, a 29kDa protein catalyzes the conversion of methyl salicylic acid (MeSA) into salicylic acid (SA) to induce SAR. Pretreatment of plants with acibenzolar-S-methyl (ASM), a functional analog of salicylic acid induces systemic acquired resistance (SAR). Data presented in this paper suggest that SABP2 catalyzes the conversion of ASM into acibenzolar to induce SAR. Transgenic SABP2-silenced tobacco plants when treated with ASM, fail to express PR-1 proteins and do not induce robust SAR expression. When treated with acibenzolar, full SAR is induced in SABP2-silenced plants. These results show that functional SABP2 is required for ASM-mediated induction of resistance.
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