Journal of Food, Nutrition and Population Health Open Access

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Watery saliva secreted by the grain aphid Sitobion avenae stimulates aphid resistance in wheat

4th Edition of International Conference on Agriculture & Food Chemistry
July 08-09, 2019 Vienna, Austria

Julian Chen and Yong Zhang

Institute of Plant Protection, CAAS, China

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Food Nutr Popul Health

Abstract:

Wheat is very important cereal grains in world food supply. The grain aphid, Sitobion avenae, is one of the most dominant and destructive pests of wheat. Aphid causes damage by sucking phloem sap and also as vector of barley yellow dwarf virus, causing huge negative impact on quality and quantity of wheat production. Application of herbivory induced plant defense is a sustainable and promising approach to control pests. In our study, the role of Sitobion avenae watery saliva in resistance induction was examined by infiltrating aphid saliva into wheat leaves. Gene expression studies showed that watery saliva infiltration in wheat leaves induced a strong salicylic acid-responsive defense but moderate jasmonic acid-dependent defense. Feeding on treated wheat leaves, compared with untreated leaves, aphid was decreased significantly by the number of nymphs daily reproduced and the intrinsic rate of increase of the population of Sitobion avenae (rm). In a choice test, saliva-infiltrated leave had a repelling effect on aphid. Additionally, electrical penetration graph results showed that saliva-treated wheat leaves had negatively affected aphid’s feeding behavior. These data provided direct evidences that salivary components of Sitobion avenae are involved in the induction of wheat resistance against aphids.

Biography :

Julian Chen has completed her PhD in Institute of Plant Protection at Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (IPP-CAAS). She has worked as a Professor of Agricultural Insects and Pests Control in IPP-CAAS. She has published more than 130 papers in reputed journal, such as Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, Journal of Pest Science, Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.

E-mail: jlchen@ippcaas.cn