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Arboviruses manipulate rice’s volatile emissions, protecting insect vectors from natural enemies in the field

SCIENCE ADVANCES. 2026-01; 
Qing Liu, Qian Wang, Qiong Li, Weiran Wang, Qi Li, Ziyuan Peng, Yuling Jiao, Feng Cui, Ian T Baldwin, Xiaoming Zhang State Key Laboratory of Animal Biodiversity Conservation and Integrated Pest Management, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Abstract

Vector-borne plant viruses depend on insect vectors for transmission and often suppress host defenses that limit vector survival and spread. However, their impact on volatile-mediated indirect defenses remains unclear. Here, we show that rice viruses inhibit methyl salicylate (MeSA) emission, impairing parasitoid recruitment and promoting vector persistence. Field experiments demonstrate that MeSA, a key herbivore-induced volatile, suppresses vector populations by attracting egg parasitoids. Viruses counter this by targeting basic-helix-loop-helix transcription factor OsMYC2, a jasmonic acid signaling hub, thereby down-regulating OsBSMT1 and MeSA biosynthesis, responses conserved across diverse rice viruses and... More

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