Changing light promotes isoflavone biosynthesis in soybean pods and
enhances their resistance to mildew infection
Abstract
Mildew severely reduces soybean yield and quality, and pods are the
first line of defense against pathogens. Maize-soybean intercropping
(MSI) reduces mildew incidence on soybean pods; however, the reason
remains unclear. Previous studies confirmed the key function of soy
isoflavone in soybean mildew resistance, while changing light (CL) from
maize shading is the most important environmental feature in MSI. CL
also regulates isoflavone biosynthesis in soybean seeds. We hypothesized
that CL affects isoflavone accumulation in soybean pods, impacting their
disease resistance. In the present study, shading treatments were
applied during different developmental stages of soybean plants
according to various CL environments under MSI. Chlorophyll fluorescence
imaging (CFI) and classical evaluation methods confirmed that CL,
especially vegetative stage shading (VS), enhances pod resistance to
mildew. Further metabolomic analyses and exogenous inhibitor experiments
revealed the important relationship between jasmonic acid (JA) and
isoflavone biosynthesis, which has a synergistic effect on the enhanced
resistance of CL-treated pods to mildew. VS promoted the biosynthesis
and accumulation of constitutive isoflavones upstream of the isoflavone
pathway, such as aglycones and glycosides, in soybean pods. When mildew
infects pods, endogenous JA signaling stimulates the biosynthesis of
downstream inducible malonylated isoflavones and glyceolin to improve
pod resistance.