Insect wounding activates a large number of signals that function coordinately to modulate gene expression and elicit defense responses. How each signal influences gene expression in absence of wounding is also important since it can shed light on changes occurring during the shift to
wound response. Using simulated Helicoverpa armigera herbivory on chickpea, we had identified at least 14 WRKY genes that showed 5-50 fold increase in expression within 5-20 min of wounding. Our studies show that contrary to their collective effects upon wounding, individual chemical cues show distinct and often opposite effects in absence of wounding. In particular,
jasmonic acid, a key early defense
hormone, reduced transcripts of most WRKY genes by > 50% upon treatment of unwounded chickpea leaves as did
salicylic acid.
Neomycin (a JA biosynthesis inhibitor) delayed and also reduced early
wound expression. H2O2 transiently activated several genes within 5-20 min by 5-8 fold while
ethylene activated only a few WRKY genes by 2-5 fold. The summation of the individual effects of these chemical cues does not explain the strong increase in transcript levels upon wounding. Detailed studies of a 931 nt region of the CaWRKY41 promoter, show strong
wound-responsive GUS expression in Arabidopsis even in presence of
neomycin. Surprisingly its expression was lost in the coi1, ein2 and myc2myc3myc4 mutant backgrounds suggesting the requirement of intact
ethylene and JA signaling pathways (dependent on MYCs) for
wound-responsive expression. The studies highlight the complexity of gene regulation by different chemical cues in the presence and absence of wounding.
Supplementary Information: The online version contains Supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12298-022-01170-y.