- Manosalva, Patricia;
- Manohar, Murli;
- von Reuss, Stephan H;
- Chen, Shiyan;
- Koch, Aline;
- Kaplan, Fatma;
- Choe, Andrea;
- Micikas, Robert J;
- Wang, Xiaohong;
- Kogel, Karl-Heinz;
- Sternberg, Paul W;
- Williamson, Valerie M;
- Schroeder, Frank C;
- Klessig, Daniel F
Plant-defense responses are triggered by perception of conserved microbe-associated molecular patterns (MAMPs), for example, flagellin or peptidoglycan. However, it remained unknown whether plants can detect conserved molecular patterns derived from plant-parasitic animals, including nematodes. Here we show that several genera of plant-parasitic nematodes produce small molecules called ascarosides, an evolutionarily conserved family of nematode pheromones. Picomolar to micromolar concentrations of ascr#18, the major ascaroside in plant-parasitic nematodes, induce hallmark defense responses including the expression of genes associated with MAMP-triggered immunity, activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases, as well as salicylic acid- and jasmonic acid-mediated defense signalling pathways. Ascr#18 perception increases resistance in Arabidopsis, tomato, potato and barley to viral, bacterial, oomycete, fungal and nematode infections. These results indicate that plants recognize ascarosides as a conserved molecular signature of nematodes. Using small-molecule signals such as ascarosides to activate plant immune responses has potential utility to improve economic and environmental sustainability of agriculture.