Current Biology
Volume 33, Issue 4, 27 February 2023, Pages 697-710.e6
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Article
Hydathode immunity protects the Arabidopsis leaf vasculature against colonization by bacterial pathogens

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.01.013Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Adapted and non-adapted bacterial pathogens colonize hydathodes via guttation

  • Only adapted bacteria escape from hydathodes toward the xylem and not the apoplast

  • The plant immune hubs BAK1 and EDS1-PAD4-ADR1 confine bacteria inside hydathodes

  • Pipecolic acid and salicylic acid suppress bacterial spread along leaf veins

Summary

Plants prevent disease by passively and actively protecting potential entry routes against invading microbes. For example, the plant immune system actively guards roots, wounds, and stomata. How plants prevent vascular disease upon bacterial entry via guttation fluids excreted from specialized glands at the leaf margin remains largely unknown. These so-called hydathodes release xylem sap when root pressure is too high. By studying hydathode colonization by both hydathode-adapted (Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris) and non-adapted pathogenic bacteria (Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato) in immunocompromised Arabidopsis mutants, we show that the immune hubs BAK1 and EDS1-PAD4-ADR1 restrict bacterial multiplication in hydathodes. Both immune hubs effectively confine bacterial pathogens to hydathodes and lower the number of successful escape events of an hydathode-adapted pathogen toward the xylem. A second layer of defense, which is dependent on the plant hormones’ pipecolic acid and to a lesser extent on salicylic acid, reduces the vascular spread of the pathogen. Thus, besides glands, hydathodes represent a potent first line of defense against leaf-invading microbes.

Keywords

hydathode
host entry
guttation
Brassinosteroid-insensitive 1-associated receptor kinase 1
BAK1
plant immunity
vascular pathogen
Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris
pipecolic acid

Data and code availability

  • The non-pooled bioassay data is available in Data S2.

  • This paper does not report original code.

  • Any additional information required to reanalyze the data reported in this paper is available from the lead contact upon request.

Cited by (0)

3

These authors contributed equally

4

Twitter: @HAvandenBurgLab

5

Lead contact