Plant hormone signalling plays a major role in how leaves protect
themselves against attack by herbivorous insects. Scientists also know
that roots are crucial to the process, but few herbivore induced
leaf-to-root signal have been unambiguously identified.
In the EU-funded
SHOOT-ROOT-SIGNALING project, biologists searched for such messengers in wild tobacco (Nicotiana attenuata).
They successfully identified several chemical markers that indicated
changes in the roots of plants that had been attacked on their leaves.
In fact, they determined that sugars, starch and nicotine could serve as
robust, reproducible and ecologically relevant markers for assessing
shoot-to-root signalling.
Although they couldn't identify common messenger molecules between
roots and leaves, they did observe a strong, rapid increase in
jasmonates and auxin (two phytohormones) in the leaves. Further
experiments showed that jasmonates are involved in depleting
carbohydrate pools in roots, while auxin is likely to modulate this
response.
These and other insights gained during the project confirm the
involvement of roots in plant responses to herbivory. This work will
inform future efforts to understand plant-herbivore interactions and may
help to develop herbivore-resistant plant varieties.