Takahashi et al. (1991)
showed that treatment of germinating rice
(Oryza sativa L.) or cucumber (Cucumis sativus
L.) seeds with a 50-Hz vibration for 72 h results in a stimulation
of the hypocotyl elongation rate. To test whether Arabidopsis plants also show a stimulatory growth response to vibration and whether any
morphogenetic response to vibration requires the ETR1 or EIN2 proteins,
we assessed the effects of a 50-Hz vibration on wild-type, etr1-3, and ein2-1 seedlings. Consistent with
results seen for rice and cucumber, vibration of Arabidopsis seedlings
for 72 h resulted in a stimulation of hypocotyl elongation (Fig.
4). At 72 h, stimulated wild-type
seedling hypocotyls were 5.2 ± 0.1 mm in length, whereas
untreated plant hypocotyls were approximately 3.6 ± 0.1 mm
(P < 0.001). ETR1 and EIN2 are not required for this response
because both ethylene-insensitive mutants showed increases in hypocotyl
elongation (4.8 ± 0.1 to 7.1 ± 0.2 mm for
etr1-3 and 3.9 ± 0.2 to 5.7 ± 0.2 mm for
ein2-1; P < 0.001) after exposure to vibratory
stimulation.

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| Figure 4.
Enhancement of hypocotyl elongation by vibration.
Hypocotyl lengths of etiolated seedlings were measured following no
treatment (open bars) or vibration (closed bars). , Mean for
untreated plants; , mean for vibrated plants.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Mechanical stimuli such as wind bursts or direct contact are
frequently encountered by plants. Plants have evolved the ability to
sense and respond to these stimuli in ways that increase their resistance to such stresses. Arabidopsis plants have been shown previously to be delayed in bolting and display overall less elongation in response to repetitive touch stimulation (Braam and Davis, 1990
). In
addition, a prominent and fast molecular response occurs in
Arabidopsis; the TCH genes are up-regulated in expression in response to mechanical stimuli. The work described here takes a genetic
approach to investigating the role of the ethylene-signaling pathway in
controlling the developmental and molecular responses to mechanical
stimulation. Definitive evidence demonstrates that ETR1 and
EIN2, two loci that act early in ethylene signaling, are not
required for plants to sense and respond to different forms of
mechanical stress. The etr1-3 and ein2-1
Arabidopsis mutants show a delay in inflorescence emergence, a reduced
rate of inflorescence elongation, and a decrease in the height of
mature inflorescences in response to wind treatment; these responses are similar to those of wind-treated wild-type plants (Fig. 1). Slight
differences in the sensitivities between genotypes may be due to the
overall structure and stature of the plants, making them differentially
sensitive to mechanical perturbation. The critical result is that the
ethylene mutants are clearly able to respond to the mechanical stimuli.
We also investigated whether Arabidopsis displays growth-response
changes when subjected to the mechanical stimulus of vibration. The
elongation rate of hypocotyls of etiolated Arabidopsis, like that of
etiolated rice and cucumber hypocotyls (Takahashi et al., 1991
), is
enhanced when seedlings are subjected to a 50-Hz vibration (Fig. 4).
This mechanoresponse also occurs in plants lacking ETR1 or EIN2
function. Therefore, the developmental and growth alterations that
occur in Arabidopsis plants subjected to either wind or vibration do
not require the functioning of ETR1 or EIN2. ETR1 and EIN2 are not
necessary for the up-regulation of TCH gene expression in
response to touch or vibration (Figs. 2 and 3). Hence, ethylene is
unlikely to be involved in either the molecular or developmental responses of plants to mechanical stimuli.
Previous observations support these conclusions. Plants treated with
touch or shaking show a rapid (1-3 min) reduction in the rate of
elongation, whereas evolution of ethylene is not detectable until 30 to
45 min following stimulation (Goeschl et al., 1966
; Jaffe and Biro,
1979
). Additional data that help rule out an early required role for
ethylene biosynthesis in the mechanoresponse pathway is the recent
finding that there is a very rapid phosphorylation of protein kinases
following touch or wounding (Suzuki and Shinshi, 1995
; Usami et al.,
1995
; Bögre et al., 1996
, 1997
). Furthermore, treatment of plants
with some inhibitors of ethylene production or action have been shown
to have no effect on thigmomorphogenesis (Takahashi and Suge,
1980
; Boyer et al., 1983
; Biddington, 1986
) or to reduce radial
expansion only, with no effect on touch-induced decreases in elongation
growth (Biro and Jaffe, 1984
). In contrast, however, Boyer et al.
(1979
, 1983
, 1986)
reported that ethylene action/biosynthesis
inhibitors can reduce the thigmomorphogenetic effects on both radial
expansion and elongation. Because Arabidopsis plants do not display a
significant increase in radial expansion following mechanical
stimulation, we are unable to test whether the ethylene response
effectors etr1-1 and ein2-1 affect changes in
radial expansion following mechanical stress.
In summary, the work presented here indicates that ETR1 and EIN2
protein functions are not required for the molecular and developmental
responses of Arabidopsis to mechanical stress. A more direct
mechanosignaling/transduction pathway must exist, perhaps involving the
function of transmembrane proteins (He et al., 1996b
; Brummell et al.,
1997
; Thonat et al., 1997
) and/or stretch-activated channels (Falke et
al., 1988
; Zimmermann et al., 1997
) as mechanosensors,
Ca2+ as a second messenger (Knight et al., 1991
;
Braam, 1992
; Bush, 1995
; Haley et al., 1995
; Polisensky and Braam,
1996
), and a kinase cascade (Suzuki and Shinshi, 1995
; Usami et al.,
1995
; Bögre et al., 1997
) to signal mechanoresponses, such as
TCH gene expression (Braam and Davis, 1990
), oxidative burst
(Yahraus et al., 1995
), cell wall changes (Bradley et al., 1992
; Levine
et al., 1994
; Xu et al., 1995
), and growth alterations (Jaffe, 1973
;
Jaffe and Forbes, 1993
; Mitchell, 1996
).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
1
This work was funded by the National Institutes
of Health (grant no. R9 GM 46346) and the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (grant no. NSCORT NAGW-5007).
2
Present address: Department of Molecular and
Human Genetics, One Baylor Plaza, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston,
TX 77030.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail braam{at}bioc.rice.edu; fax
1-713-285-5154.
Received August 1, 1997;
accepted October 23, 1997.
 |
ABBREVIATIONS |
Abbreviation:
CaM, calmodulin.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We would like to thank Tara Miller for assistance with
preparing some of the plant materials. We would also like to thank members of the Braam laboratory for critical reading of the manuscript.
 |
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