Ecology Letters
Letter

Suppression of terpenoid synthesis in plants by a virus promotes its mutualism with vectors

Jun‐Bo Luan

Corresponding Author

Ministry of Agriculture Key Laboratory of Agricultural Entomology, Institute of Insect Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China

Correspondence: E‐mail: jbluan@hotmail.com;shshliu@zju.edu.cnSearch for more papers by this author
Dan‐Mei Yao

Ministry of Agriculture Key Laboratory of Agricultural Entomology, Institute of Insect Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China

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Tong Zhang

State Key Laboratory of Rice Biology, Institute of Biotechnology, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China

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Linda L. Walling

Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, Center for Plant Cell Biology, University of California, Riverside, CA, 92521–0124 USA

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Mei Yang

Institute of Pesticide and Environmental Toxicology, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China

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Yu‐Jun Wang

Ministry of Agriculture Key Laboratory of Agricultural Entomology, Institute of Insect Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China

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Shu‐Sheng Liu

Corresponding Author

Ministry of Agriculture Key Laboratory of Agricultural Entomology, Institute of Insect Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China

Correspondence: E‐mail: jbluan@hotmail.com;shshliu@zju.edu.cnSearch for more papers by this author
First published: 20 December 2012
Citations: 90
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Abstract

Vectors often perform better on plants infected with pathogens, and this promotes the spread of pathogens. However, few studies have examined how plant defensive compounds mediate such mutualistic relationships. Although tobacco plants are relatively poor host plants for the whitefly Bemisia tabaci, tobacco's suitability to the whitefly was substantially increased when infected by the begomovirus Tomato yellow leaf curl China virus. The change in suitability was associated with induced terpenoid synthesis in whitefly‐infested plants and repressed terpenoid synthesis in virus‐infected plants. Elevation of terpenoid levels via exogenous stem applications reduced the performance of whiteflies. In contrast, suppression of terpenoid synthesis via gene silencing improved whitefly fitness. By integrating genomics, transcriptomics and metabolomics, this study demonstrated that virus infection depleted the terpenoid‐mediated plant defence against whiteflies, thereby favouring vector–virus mutualism. These data suggest that plant terpenoids play a key role in shaping vector–pathogen relationships.

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