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Ozone Sensitivity in Hybrid Poplar Is Correlated with a
Lack
of Defense-Gene Activation1
Jennifer Riehl Koch,
Amy J. Scherzer,
Steven M. Eshita, and
Keith
R. Davis*
Forestry Sciences Laboratory, United States Department of
Agriculture Northeastern Forest Experiment Station, Delaware, Ohio
43015-8640 (J.R.K., A.J.S., S.M.E.); and the Department of Plant
Biology and the Plant Biotechnology Center, The Ohio State University,
Columbus, Ohio 43210-1002 (K.R.D.)
Ozone is a major gaseous
pollutant thought to contribute to forest decline. Although the
physiological and morphological responses of forest trees to ozone have
been well characterized, little is known about the molecular basis for
these responses. Our studies compared the response to ozone of
ozone-sensitive and ozone-tolerant clones of hybrid poplar
(Populus maximowizii × Populus
trichocarpa) at the physiological and molecular levels.
Gas-exchange analyses demonstrated clear differences between the
ozone-sensitive clone 388 and the ozone-tolerant clone 245. Although
ozone induced a decrease in photosynthetic rate and stomatal
conductance in both clones, the magnitude of the decrease in stomatal
conductance was significantly greater in the ozone-tolerant clone.
RNA-blot analysis established that ozone-induced mRNA levels for
phenylalanine ammonia-lyase, O-methyltransferase, a
pathogenesis-related protein, and a wound-inducible gene were
significantly higher in the ozone-tolerant than in the ozone-sensitive
plants. Wound- and pathogen-induced levels of these mRNAs were also
higher in the ozone-tolerant compared with the ozone-sensitive plants.
The different physiological and molecular responses to ozone exposure
exhibited by clones 245 and 388 suggest that ozone tolerance involves
the activation of salicylic-acid- and jasmonic-acid-mediated signaling
pathways, which may be important in triggering defense responses
against oxidative stress.
1
This work was supported in part by funds
provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service,
Northeastern Forest Experiment Station.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail davis.68{at}osu.edu; fax
1-614-292-5379.
Plant Physiol. (1998) 118: 1243-1252
Copyright Clearance Center: 0032-0889/98/118//10
© 1998 American Society of Plant Physiologists
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