Plant Immunity to Insect Herbivores
Michigan State University · Cornell University
Abstract
Herbivorous insects use diverse feeding strategies to obtain nutrients from their host plants. Rather than acting as passive victims in these interactions, plants respond to herbivory with the production of toxins and defensive proteins that target physiological processes in the insect. Herbivore-challenged plants also emit volatiles that attract insect predators and bolster resistance to future threats. This highly dynamic form of immunity is initiated by the recognition of insect oral secretions and signals from injured plant cells. These initial cues are transmitted within the plant by signal transduction pathways that include calcium ion fluxes, phosphorylation cascades, and, in particular, the jasmonate…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 77.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 149
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Herbivore
- Biology
- Plant tolerance to herbivory
- Insect
- Coevolution
- Plant Immunity
- Arthropod
- Resistance (ecology)