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Featured researches published by Shi Ming Luo.


Archive | 2008

Allelopathy in sustainable agriculture and forestry

Ren Sen Zeng; Azim U. Mallik; Shi Ming Luo

History.- Historical Examples of Allelopathy and Ethnobotany from the Mediterranean Region.- Allelopathy: Advances, Challenges and Opportunities.- Allelopathy in Chinese Ancient and Modern Agriculture.- Allelochemicals and Allelopathic Mechanisms.- Allelochemicals in Plants.- Allelopathy: Full Circle from Phytotoxicity to Mechanisms of Resistance.- Allelopathic Mechanisms and Experimental Methodology.- Indirect Effects of Phenolics on Plant Performance by Altering Nitrogen Cycling: Another Mechanism of Plant-Plant Negative Interactions.- Genomic Approaches to Understanding Allelochemical Effects on Plants.- Allelopathy from a Mathematical Modeling Perspective.- Application of Allelopathy in Agriculture and Forestry.- Progress and Prospect of Rice Allelopathy Research.- Rice Allelopathy Research in China.- Recent Advances in Wheat Allelopathy.- Sorghum Allelopathy for Weed Management in Wheat.- Allelochemicals in Pre-cowing Soils of Continuous Soybean Cropping and Their Autointoxication.- Autotoxicity in Agriculture and Forestry.- Black Walnut Allelopathy: Implications for Intercropping.- Plant Growth Promoting Rhizobacteria and Mycorrhizal Fungi in Sustainable Agriculture and Forestry.- Utilization of Stress Tolerant, Weed Suppressive Groundcovers for Low Maintenance Landscape Settings.- Allelopathy in Forested Ecosystems.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Silencing COI1 in Rice Increases Susceptibility to Chewing Insects and Impairs Inducible Defense

Mao Ye; Shi Ming Luo; Jie Fen Xie; Yan Fang Li; Tao Xu; Yang Liu; Yuan Yuan Song; Keyan Zhu-Salzman; Ren Sen Zeng

The jasmonic acid (JA) pathway plays a key role in plant defense responses against herbivorous insects. CORONATINE INSENSITIVE1 (COI1) is an F-box protein essential for all jasmonate responses. However, the precise defense function of COI1 in monocotyledonous plants, especially in rice (Oryza sativa L.) is largely unknown. We silenced OsCOI1 in rice plants via RNA interference (RNAi) to determine the role of OsCOI1 in rice defense against rice leaf folder (LF) Cnaphalocrocis medinalis, a chewing insect, and brown planthopper (BPH) Nilaparvata lugens, a phloem-feeding insect. In wild-type rice plants (WT), the transcripts of OsCOI1 were strongly and continuously up-regulated by LF infestation and methyl jasmonate (MeJA) treatment, but not by BPH infestation. The abundance of trypsin protease inhibitor (TrypPI), and the enzymatic activities of polyphenol oxidase (PPO) and peroxidase (POD) were enhanced in response to both LF and BPH infestation, but the activity of lipoxygenase (LOX) was only induced by LF. The RNAi lines with repressed expression of OsCOI1 showed reduced resistance against LF, but no change against BPH. Silencing OsCOI1 did not alter LF-induced LOX activity and JA content, but it led to a reduction in the TrypPI content, POD and PPO activity by 62.3%, 48.5% and 27.2%, respectively. In addition, MeJA-induced TrypPI and POD activity were reduced by 57.2% and 48.2% in OsCOI1 RNAi plants. These results suggest that OsCOI1 is an indispensable signaling component, controlling JA-regulated defense against chewing insect (LF) in rice plants, and COI1 is also required for induction of TrypPI, POD and PPO in rice defense response to LF infestation.


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 2013

Priming of Anti-Herbivore Defense in Tomato by Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungus and Involvement of the Jasmonate Pathway

Yuan Yuan Song; Mao Ye; Chuan You Li; Rui Long Wang; Xiao Chen Wei; Shi Ming Luo; Ren Sen Zeng

Mycorrhizas play a vital role in soil fertility, plant nutrition, and resistance to environmental stresses. However, mycorrhizal effects on plant resistance to herbivorous insects and the related mechanisms are poorly understood. This study evaluated effects of root colonization of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum Mill.) by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) Glomus mosseae on plant defense responses against a chewing caterpillar Helicoverpa arimigera. Mycorrhizal inoculation negatively affected larval performance. Real time RT-PCR analyses showed that mycorrhizal inoculation itself did not induce transcripts of most genes tested. However, insect feeding on AMF pre-inoculated plants resulted in much stronger defense response induction of four defense-related genes LOXD, AOC, PI-I, and PI-II in the leaves of tomato plants relative to non-inoculated plants. Four tomato genotypes: a wild-type (WT) plant, a jasmonic acid (JA) biosynthesis mutant (spr2), a JA-signaling perception mutant (jai1), and a JA-overexpressing 35S::PS plant were used to determine the role of the JA pathway in AMF-primed defense. Insect feeding on mycorrhizal 35S::PS plants led to higher induction of defense-related genes relative to WT plants. However, insect feeding on mycorrhizal spr2 and jai1 mutant plants did not induce transcripts of these genes. Bioassays showed that mycorrhizal inoculation on spr2 and jai1 mutants did not change plant resistance against H. arimigera. These results indicates that mycorrhizal colonization could prime systemic defense responses in tomato upon herbivore attack, and that the JA pathway is involved in defense priming by AMF.


Plant Growth Regulation | 2014

Molecular, biochemical and bioassay based evidence of lower allelopathic potential in genetically modified rice

Khalid Mahmood; Muhammad Bismillah Khan; Muhammad Ijaz; Ren Sen Zeng; Shi Ming Luo

This study examines allelopathic potential of genetically modified rice. The experiment was conducted on two isogenic lines Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) and non-Bacillus thuringiensis (non-Bt). Both isogenic lines have same allelopathic ability before insect feeding and after limited insect feeding (Spodoptera litura) non-Bt rice genotype demonstrates more allelopathic potential. The S. litura cannot feed Bt rice genotype. The role of shoot herbivory in allelopathic induction is further supported when Bt plants also exhibited higher allelopathic potential after insect regurgitant application to the damaged leaves. Allelopathic potential was assessed through several methods after treatments of mechanical damage, insect feeding and insect regurgitant application to damaged rice leaves. Rhizosphere soil and leaf leachates of non-Bt rice cultivar exhibited higher allelopathic potential on lettuce and barnyard grass after herbivore feeding. Enzyme activities (PAL and C4H) responsible for biosynthesis of phenolic compounds and their concentration were significantly higher in non-Bt plant after herbivore feeding and attain the same level in Bt plants after insect regurgitant application to damaged leaves. Similarly, genes (OsPAL and OsCYC1) responsible for biosynthesis of allelopathic compounds showed high expression in non-Bt plants after herbivore feeding. Our results indicate that herbivore feeding enhance rice allelopathic potential and no insect feeding as incase of Bt plants may reduce allelopathic potential of genetically modified rice.


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 2007

Rice allelopathy induced by methyl jasmonate and methyl salicylate.

Hai Hong Bi; Ren Sen Zeng; Li Ming Su; Min An; Shi Ming Luo


Scientific Reports | 2015

Hijacking common mycorrhizal networks for herbivore-induced defence signal transfer between tomato plants

Yuan Yuan Song; Mao Ye; Chuanyou Li; Xinhua He; Keyan Zhu-Salzman; Rui Long Wang; Yi Juan Su; Shi Ming Luo; Ren Sen Zeng


Mycorrhiza | 2011

Induction of DIMBOA accumulation and systemic defense responses as a mechanism of enhanced resistance of mycorrhizal corn (Zea mays L.) to sheath blight

Yuan Yuan Song; Man Cao; Li Jun Xie; Xiao Ting Liang; Ren Sen Zeng; Yi Juan Su; Jing Hua Huang; Rui Long Wang; Shi Ming Luo


Plant Growth Regulation | 2013

UV-irradiation enhances rice allelopathic potential in rhizosphere soil

Khalid Mahmood; Muhammad Bismillah Khan; Yuan Yuan Song; Muhammad Ijaz; Shi Ming Luo; Ren Sen Zeng


Ecological Modelling | 2009

Modelling tritrophic interactions mediated by induced defence volatiles

Ying Hu Liu; De Li Liu; Min An; Yin Lian Fu; Ren Sen Zeng; Shi Ming Luo; Hanwen Wu; James Pratley


Archive | 2008

Autotoxicity in Agriculture and Forestry

Ying Hu Liu; Ren Sen Zeng; Min An; Azim U. Mallik; Shi Ming Luo

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Ren Sen Zeng

South China Agricultural University

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Yuan Yuan Song

South China Agricultural University

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Min An

Charles Sturt University

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Mao Ye

South China Agricultural University

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Rui Long Wang

South China Agricultural University

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Khalid Mahmood

University of Copenhagen

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Yi Juan Su

South China Agricultural University

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Ying Hu Liu

South China Agricultural University

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Hanwen Wu

Charles Sturt University

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