Root-Associated Entomopathogenic Fungi Modulate Their Host Plant's Photosystem II Photochemistry and Response to Herbivorous Insects.
Julietta MoustakaNicolai Vitt MeylingThure Pavlo HauserPublished in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
The escalating food demand and loss to herbivores has led to increasing interest in using resistance-inducing microbes for pest control. Here, we evaluated whether root-inoculation with fungi that are otherwise known as entomopathogens improves tomato ( Solanum lycopersicum ) leaflets' reaction to herbivory by Spodoptera exigua (beet armyworm) larvae using chlorophyll fluorescence imaging. Plants were inoculated with Metarhizium brunneum or Beauveria bassiana , and photosystem II reactions were evaluated before and after larval feeding. Before herbivory, the fraction of absorbed light energy used for photochemistry (Φ PSII ) was lower in M. brunneum -inoculated than in control plants, but not in B. bassiana -inoculated plants. After herbivory, however, Φ PSII increased in the fungal-inoculated plants compared with that before herbivory, similar to the reaction of control plants. At the same time, the fraction of energy dissipated as heat (Φ NPQ ) decreased in the inoculated plants, resulting in an increased fraction of nonregulated energy loss (Φ NO ) in M. brunneum . This indicates an increased singlet oxygen ( 1 O 2 ) formation not detected in B. bassiana -inoculated plants, showing that the two entomopathogenic fungi differentially modulate the leaflets' response to herbivory. Overall, our results show that M. brunneum inoculation had a negative effect on the photosynthetic efficiency before herbivory, while B. bassiana inoculation had no significant effect. However, S. exigua leaf biting activated the same compensatory PSII response mechanism in tomato plants of both fungal-inoculated treatments as in control plants.