4.8 Article

Concurrent activation of cell death-regulating signaling pathways by singlet oxygen in Arabidopsis thaliana

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 41, Issue 1, Pages 68-80

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-313X.2004.02276.x

Keywords

singlet oxygen; programmed cell death; oxylipin; salicylic acid; ethylene

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Upon a dark/light shift the conditional flu mutant of Arabidopsis starts to generate singlet oxygen (O-1(2)), a non-radical reactive oxygen species that is restricted to the plastid compartment. Immediately after the shift, plants stop growing and develop necrotic lesions. We have established a protoplast system, which allows detection and characterization of the death response in flu induced by the release of O-1(2). Vitamin B6 that quenches O-1(2) in fungi was able to protect flu protoplasts from cell death. Blocking ethylene production was sufficient to partially inhibit the death reaction. Similarly, flu mutant seedlings expressing transgenic NahG were partially protected from the death provoked by the release of O-1(2), indicating a requirement for salicylic acid (SA) in this process, whereas in cells depleted of both, ethylene and SA, the extent of cell death was reduced to the wild-type level. The flu mutant was also crossed with the jasmonic acid (JA)-depleted mutant opr3, and with the JA, OPDA and dinor OPDA (dnOPDA)-depleted dde2-2 mutant. Analysis of the resulting double mutants revealed that in contrast to the JA-induced suppression of H2O2/superoxide-dependent cell death reported earlier, JA promotes singlet oxygen-mediated cell death in flu, whereas other oxylipins such as OPDA and dnOPDA antagonize this death-inducing activity of JA.

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