Bibliometric and meta-analysis on the publication status, research trends and impact inducing factors of JA-SA interactions in plants

Front Plant Sci. 2024 Nov 28:15:1487434. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1487434. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Interactions between jasmonic acid (JA) and salicylic acid (SA) pathways in plants are important for regulating metabolite production and resistance functions against environmental stresses. These interactions in plants have mostly been reported to be antagonistic, but also to be synergistic under specific external inducing conditions. At present, publications on plant JA-SA interactions lack a bibliometric analysis. External inducing factors that elicit synergism of JA-SA interactions need to be explored. Here, we use bibliometrics to analyze publications on plant JA-SA interactions over the past three decades, and analyze external inducing factors that influence the quality of JA-SA interactions in plants by meta-analysis. More contributions have been made by authors in China, Netherlands, the United States of America, and Germany than elsewhere. Considerable research has been performed on variation in plant defense mediated by two pathways, the transduction mechanisms of JA-SA signaling crosstalk, and plant hormone signaling networks. Meta-analysis showed that the excitation sequence of the two pathways, and the concentrations of pathway excitors are key factors that affect pathways interactions. The JA and SA pathways tend to be reciprocally antagonistic when elicited simultaneously, whereas JA-SA interactions tend to be synergistic when the two pathways are elicited at different times and the pre-treated inducer is at a lower concentration. The SA pathway is more susceptible to being synergized by the JA pathway. Key molecular nodes identified in the JA-SA signaling interaction in model plants, and prospects for future research are discussed.

Keywords: JA-SA interactions; applied sequence; bibliometric analysis; elicitor concentration; key molecular nodes; meta-analysis; phytohormone signaling networks; plant resistance.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was supported by the Modern Agricultural Industry Technology System (CARS-19), Hubei Province Postdoctoral Innovative and Practice Post Project, Hubei Province Scientific and Technical Talents Serving Enterprises Projects (RCFWQY202400302), Hubei Academy of Agricultural Sciences Youth Science Foundation (2024NKYJJ21) and Wuhan Science and Technology Commissioner Production and Research Special Project (2023110201030667).