Przejdź do zawartości
Merck

An abscisic acid-independent oxylipin pathway controls stomatal closure and immune defense in Arabidopsis.

PLoS biology (2013-03-26)
Jean-Luc Montillet, Nathalie Leonhardt, Samuel Mondy, Sylvain Tranchimand, Dominique Rumeau, Marie Boudsocq, Ana Victoria Garcia, Thierry Douki, Jean Bigeard, Christiane Laurière, Anne Chevalier, Carmen Castresana, Heribert Hirt
ABSTRAKT

Plant stomata function in innate immunity against bacterial invasion and abscisic acid (ABA) has been suggested to regulate this process. Using genetic, biochemical, and pharmacological approaches, we demonstrate that (i) the Arabidopsis thaliana nine-specific-lipoxygenase encoding gene, LOX1, which is expressed in guard cells, is required to trigger stomatal closure in response to both bacteria and the pathogen-associated molecular pattern flagellin peptide flg22; (ii) LOX1 participates in stomatal defense; (iii) polyunsaturated fatty acids, the LOX substrates, trigger stomatal closure; (iv) the LOX products, fatty acid hydroperoxides, or reactive electrophile oxylipins induce stomatal closure; and (v) the flg22-mediated stomatal closure is conveyed by both LOX1 and the mitogen-activated protein kinases MPK3 and MPK6 and involves salicylic acid whereas the ABA-induced process depends on the protein kinases OST1, MPK9, or MPK12. Finally, we show that the oxylipin and the ABA pathways converge at the level of the anion channel SLAC1 to regulate stomatal closure. Collectively, our results demonstrate that early biotic signaling in guard cells is an ABA-independent process revealing a novel function of LOX1-dependent stomatal pathway in plant immunity.

MATERIAŁY
Numer produktu
Marka
Opis produktu

Sigma-Aldrich
(+)-Abscisic acid, ≥98% (HPLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
2-cis,4-trans-Abscisic acid, synthetic, 98%