4.8 Article

Broad-spectrum stress tolerance conferred by suppressing jasmonate signaling attenuation in Arabidopsis JASMONIC ACID OXIDASE mutants

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 109, Issue 4, Pages 856-872

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15598

Keywords

basal defense; drought; jasmonate; JAO; JOX; metabolism; stress tolerance

Categories

Funding

  1. CNRS
  2. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-12-BSV8-005]
  3. Universite de Strasbourg
  4. Ministere de l'Enseignement Superieur et de la Recherche

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Jasmonate signaling for adaptative or developmental responses relies on increased synthesis of the hormone JA-Ile, with JAO2 playing a key role in modulating JA responses and enhancing stress resilience by pre-activating mild transcriptional programs. The JAO2 regulatory node controls a selected spectrum of JA responses and has the potential to modulate basal JA turnover for multiple stress resilience.
Jasmonate signaling for adaptative or developmental responses generally relies on an increased synthesis of the bioactive hormone jasmonoyl-isoleucine (JA-Ile), triggered by environmental or internal cues. JA-Ile is embedded in a complex metabolic network whose upstream and downstream components strongly contribute to hormone homeostasis and activity. We previously showed that JAO2, an isoform of four Arabidopsis JASMONIC ACID OXIDASES, diverts the precursor jasmonic acid (JA) to its hydroxylated form HO-JA to attenuate JA-Ile formation and signaling. Consequently, JAO2-deficient lines have elevated defenses and display improved tolerance to biotic stress. Here we further explored the organization and regulatory functions of the JAO pathway. Suppression of JAO2 enhances the basal expression of nearly 400 JA-regulated genes in unstimulated leaves, many of which being related to biotic and abiotic stress responses. Consistently, non-targeted metabolomic analysis revealed the constitutive accumulation of several classes of defensive compounds in jao2-1 mutant, including indole glucosinolates and breakdown products. The most differential compounds were agmatine phenolamides, but their genetic suppression did not alleviate the strong resistance of jao2-1 to Botrytis infection. Furthermore, jao2 alleles and a triple jao mutant exhibit elevated survival capacity upon severe drought stress. This latter phenotype occurs without recruiting stronger abscisic acid responses, but relies on enhanced JA-Ile signaling directing a distinct survival pathway with MYB47 transcription factor as a candidate mediator. Our findings reveal the selected spectrum of JA responses controlled by the JAO2 regulatory node and highlight the potential of modulating basal JA turnover to pre-activate mild transcriptional programs for multiple stress resilience.

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