4.2 Host–Pathogen Signaling in Agarwood Resin Formation

This explains how the tree “talks” to invading microbes and triggers resin production.

1. What Is Host–Pathogen Signaling?

  • Host: the agarwood tree
  • Pathogen: invading microbe (fungus or bacterium)
  • Signaling: chemical communication that tells the tree:

“You are under attack — defend yourself!”

  • This activates the tree’s immune and wound responses, which leads to resin formation.

2. Steps in Host–Pathogen Interaction

  1. Microbe enters wound
    • Drilled hole, bark removal, insect damage
  2. Tree detects invasion
    • Uses receptors in cells to sense microbe molecules
  3. Signal molecules released
    • Reactive oxygen species (ROS)
    • Phytohormones (like jasmonic acid)
    • Secondary metabolites (sesquiterpenes, chromones)
  4. Defense response activated
    • Resin production starts
    • Vascular blockage occurs
    • Microbes are slowed or contained
  5. Resin zone develops over time
    • Dark, aromatic, polymerized resin

3. Why Signaling Determines Resin Quality

Signaling StrengthResult
WeakLight resin, slow formation
ModerateDark, aromatic, high-quality resin
Overactive / uncontrolledTissue necrosis, tree death, poor resin

4. Farmer Key Message

“The tree produces resin because it senses the invader.
Your job is to guide this process safely — not force it.”

5. Practical Tips for Farmers

✔ Use controlled microbial inoculants
✔ Ensure mechanical wounds are moderate
✔ Combine with mild chemical elicitors if needed
✔ Allow time for resin polymerization
✔ Observe leaf health and resin zone development