4.7 Article

FRET-based glucose imaging identifies glucose signalling in response to biotic and abiotic stresses in rice roots

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 215, Issue -, Pages 65-72

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH, URBAN & FISCHER VERLAG
DOI: 10.1016/j.jplph.2017.05.007

Keywords

FRET nanosensor; Glucose dynamics; Abiotic stress; Biotic stress; Rice

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Basic Research Program of China (973 Program) [2013CB126902]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31370307, 31070250]

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Glucose is the primary energy provider and the most important sugar-signalling molecule, regulating metabolites and modulating gene expression from unicellular yeast to multicellular plants and animals. Therefore, monitoring intracellular glucose levels temporally and spatially in living cells is an essential step for decoding the glucose signalling in response to biotic and abiotic stresses. In this study, the genetically encoded FRET (FOrster resonance energy transfer) nanosensors, FLIPglu-2 mu Delta 13 and FLIPglu-600 mu Delta 13, were used to measure cytosolic glucose dynamics in rice plants. First, we found that the FRET signal decreased in response to external glucose in a concentration-dependent manner. The glucose concentration at which the cytosolic level corresponded to the K-0.5 value for FLIPglu-2 mu Delta 13 was approximately 10.05 mu M, and that for FLIPglu-600 mu Delta 13 was 0.9 mM, respectively. The substrate selectivity of nanosensors for glucose and its analogues is D-Glucose > 2-deoxyglucose > 3-O-methylglucose > L-Glucose. We further showed that the biotic elicitors (flg22 and chitin) and the abiotic elicitors (osmotic stress, salinity and extreme temperature) induce the intracellular glucose increases in the detached root segments of transgenic rice containing FLIPglu-2 mu Delta 13 in a stimulus-specific manner, but not in FLIPglu-600 mu Delta 13 transgenic lines. These results demonstrated that FRET nanosensors can be used to detect increases in intracellular glucose within the physiological range of 0.2-20 mu M in response to various stimuli in transgenic rice root cells, which indicated that intracellular glucose may act as a potential secondary messenger to connect extracellular stimuli with cellular physiological responses in plants.

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