Unité Mixte de Recherche, 1931 du Centre National de la
Recherche Scientifique, and Laboratoires Goëmar, Station
Biologique, Place G. Teissier, BP 74, F-29682 Roscoff, Brittany,
France (F.C.K., B.K., P.P.); and Institut des Sciences
Végétales, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique,
avenue de la Terrasse, F-91198 Gif-sur-Yvette, France (J.G.)
Oligomeric degradation products of alginate elicited a respiratory
and oxidative burst in the sporophytes of the kelp Laminaria digitata. The generation of activated oxygen species (AOS),
O2
, and H2O2 was
detected at the single cell level, using nitroblue tetrazolium
precipitation and a redox-sensitive fluorescent probe, respectively.
The oxidative burst involved diphenyleneiodonium-sensitive AOS-generating machinery and its amplitude depended on the type of
tissue. After a first elicitation plants were desensitized for about
3 h. The activity of alginate oligosaccharides was dose dependent,
saturating around 40 µM. It was also structure-dependent, with homopolymeric blocks of
-1,4-L-guluronic acid, i.e.
the functional analogs of oligogalacturonic blocks in pectins, being the most active signals. The perception of oligoguluronate signals resulted in a strong efflux of potassium. Pharmacological dissection of
the early events preceding the emission of AOS indicated that the
transduction chain of oligoguluronate signals in L.
digitata is likely to feature protein kinases, phospholipase
A2, as well as K+, Ca2+, and anion channels.
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INTRODUCTION |
The oxidative burst, i.e. a rapid,
transient production of large amounts of activated oxygen species (AOS)
such as superoxide (O2
),
hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) or
hydroxyl radicals (OH) was discovered several decades ago as a
"respiratory burst" during phagocytosis in cells of the human
immune system (Baldridge and Gerard, 1933
). The same phenomenon was
found later in plants (Doke, 1983a
, 1983b
) and it is recognized today
as a ubiquitous characteristic of defense systems in these phyla (e.g.
Baker and Orlandi, 1995
; Bolwell et al., 1995
; Lamb and Dixon, 1997
;
Wojtaszek, 1997
). This defense response is most often triggered by
cell-cell recognition, involving the perception at the plant cell
membrane of signal molecules from the invading organism or from the
host cell walls, referred to as elicitors. Common elicitors of non-host
resistance are oligosaccharides, glycoproteins, and glycopeptides (e.g.
Scheel and Parker, 1990
; Boller, 1995
). In higher plant pathogen
recognition systems, xyloglucan (Fry et al., 1993
) and pectin (e.g.
Boudart et al., 1998
) elicitors are of endogenous origin (i.e. from the
plant), whereas glucans and chitins are exogenous (released from the
pathogen during the interaction).
An increasing amount of scientific evidence (for review, see Wojtaszek,
1997
) points out that the onset of the oxidative burst is controlled by
a signal transduction cascade involving G proteins, adenylate cyclases,
phopholipases, protein kinases, protein phosphatases, ion channels,
changes in membrane potential, permeability and ion fluxes, and finally
the activation of AOS-generating oxidases/dehydrogenases. The main
enzymatic source of AOS in the oxidative burst of plant cells remains
controversial, but most results point to three mechanisms: (a) an
O2
-generating plasmalemmic
NAD(P) H oxidase (Desikan et al., 1996
; Groom et al., 1996
; Pugin et
al., 1997
; Jabs et al., 1997
; Keller et al., 1998
; Torres et al.,
1998
), analogous to that of mammalian cells (Morel et al., 1991
); (b)
other, apoplastic oxidases, such as oxalate oxidase (e.g. Dumas et al.,
1993
; Zhang et al., 1995
; Thordal-Christensen et al., 1997
) and amine
oxidase (Allan and Fluhr, 1997
); and (c) pH-dependent apoplastic
peroxidases (Bolwell et al., 1995
; 1998
; Frahry and Schopfer, 1998
;
Martinez et al., 1998
), which generate either
O2
anions or hydrogen peroxide.
The high concentrations of AOS generated in the oxidative burst have
direct, cytotoxic effects on invading pathogens (Peng and Kùc,
1992
). In addition, the oxidative burst is known to orchestrate a
variety of secondary defense responses, which include the production of
low-Mr compounds with antimicrobial
activity referred to as phytoalexins (Ebel et al., 1995
; Apostol et
al., 1987
), synthesis of pathogenesis-related proteins (Hammond-Kossack and Jones, 1996
; Fritig et al., 1998
), and crosslinking of cell wall
proteins (Brisson et al., 1994
; Otte and Barz, 1996
). Oxygen radicals
are also thought to be involved in the hypersensitive response, i.e.
limited necrosis at the site of pathogen attack (Levine et al., 1994
;
Tenhaken et al., 1995
; Richberg et al., 1998
), as well as in systemic
acquired resistance (Chen et al., 1993
; Dempsey and Klessig, 1994
; Van
Camp et al., 1998
).
In contrast there is only limited knowledge about the cell-cell
recognition mechanisms and chemical defenses involved in host-pathogen interactions in the marine environment (Potin et al., 1999
) and we do
not know whether the concepts derived from the study of terrestrial
plant pathosystems also apply to the distantly related lineages found
in the sea. A few observations, however, indicate that oligosaccharide
recognition and the oxidative burst mediate host-microbe interactions
in marine algae, too. Oxidative burst per se was first reported in the
red alga Eucheuma platycladum following mechanical injury
(Collén and Pedersén, 1994
). More recently, oxidative burst
induced by oligosaccharide elicitors was shown to induce protection
against parasites in the red algae Chondrus crispus (Bouarab
et al., 1999
) and Gracilaria conferta (Weinberger et al.,
1999
), and AOS were demonstrated to play a key role in programmed cell
death in blooms of the phytoplankton dinoflagellate Peridinium
gatunense (Vardi et al., 1999
).
This study was undertaken to investigate whether such phenomena also
exist in brown algae, using as model system Laminaria digitata, a common kelp on the rocky shores of the North Atlantic. Oligosaccharides derived from alginate, the main brown algal cell wall
polysaccharide (Fig. 1), are shown to
elicit a marked oxidative burst in the cortical cells of L. digitata sporophytes, sufficient to control populations of
epiphytic bacteria. Pharmacological evidence indicates that the
transduction of alginate oligosaccharide signals involves some of the
steps described for higher plants (Wojtaszek, 1997
; Scheel,
1998
), leading to the activation of a diphenylene iodonium
chloride (DPI)-sensitive AOS-generating system.

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Figure 1.
Chemical structure of alginates from brown algae.
Alginates are linear anionic copolymers of
-1,4-D-mannuronic acid and of its
C5 epimer, -1,4-L-guluronic acid.
They consist of the alternation of homopolymeric blocks of
poly- -1,4-D-mannuronic acid, referred to here as MM
blocks (a), of homopolymeric blocks of
poly- -1,4-L-guluronic acid (GG blocks; b), and of
heteropolymeric blocks with random arrangements of both monomers (MG
blocks; c).
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RESULTS |
Oligoguluronates Induce a Strong Respiratory and Oxidative Burst in
L. digitata Sporophytes
Treatment of young sporophytic thalli of L. digitata
with alginate oligosaccharides induced a massive increase in oxygen
consumption within 2 to 3 min of their addition (Fig.
2A). As shown in Figure 2A, the increase
in oxygen consumption was sometimes bimodal, first a sharp respiratory
burst, with an initial rate up to 8 times that of basal respiration,
followed a few minutes later by a second, less intense increase of
apparent respiration. In the presence of oligoguluronates at the
concentration of 50 µg mL
1, the increase in
oxygen consumption typically lasted 10 min, amounting to a total extra
consumption of approximately 5 µmol O2
g
1 fresh weight. Only the guluronate-containing
alginate oligosaccharides, i.e. GG blocks and MG blocks, were able to
elicit a respiratory response in L. digitata sporophytes. In
contrast, MM blocks transiently decreased the apparent respiration
(Fig. 2A).

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Figure 2.
Oligoalginate-induced respiratory and oxidative
bursts in L. digitata. A, Oligoguluronates stimulate
oxygen consumption in young L. digitata plants. Young
L. digitata plantlets were elicited with 50-µg
mL 1 G blocks ( ), MG ( ) blocks, or M
blocks ( ), respectively. Their oxygen consumption was recorded with
a Clark-type oxygen electrode and expressed relative to basal
respiration (with Rreal as the respiration
rate at a given moment and Rbasal as the
basal respiration rate averaged over 15 min prior to elicitation). B,
Oxidative burst in L. digitata: structure-response
relationships. Kinetics of
H2O2 release of L. digitata fronds challenged with G blocks ( ), MG blocks ( ), M
blocks ( ), and seawater (control, ). C, Oxidative burst in
L. digitata: dose-response behavior. Hydrogen peroxide
production by L. digitata plantlets, after elicitation with
1 µg mL 1 (crosses), 10 µg
mL 1 ( ), and 100 µg
mL 1 ( ), respectively (control, ). The
threshold for triggering a burst was at 2.5 µg
mL 1 ( ).
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At the same time a sudden and strong release of
H2O2 into the incubation
medium was observed (Fig. 2B). The peroxide concentration in the medium
reached its maximum 5 to 10 min after the addition of alginate
fragments, then decreased progressively back to the initial level after
about 40 to 50 min. Addition of catalase (100 U
mL
1) prior to GG fragments completely inhibited
the signal in the luminol assay (data not shown), indicating that this
assay primarily detected
H2O2. Superoxide dismutase
(SOD; 200 U mL
1) did not have a significant
effect on the signal. The oxidative response was again dependent on the
structure of the alginate oligosaccharides used as signal. MM did not
elicit H2O2 release in
L. digitata sporophytes (Fig. 2B). In contrast, when applied at the concentration of 50 µg mL
1 in
experiments involving a biomass ratio of 20 to 50 mg fresh weight
mL
1, oligoguluronates typically initiated
release of H2O2 up to
concentrations in the 10 µM range. MG were also
active in eliciting an oxidative response, yet to a much lesser extent
than oligoguluronates (Fig. 2B).
The initial rate and amplitude of
H2O2 release were also
dependent on the concentration of alginate oligosaccharides. The threshold of elicitor concentration required to trigger an oxidative burst was between 1 (not yet active) and 2.5 µg
mL
1 (already triggering a response), whereas
the response saturated at about 150 µg mL
1
(Fig. 2C). A desensitizing effect was observed after the first elicitation: after a first elicitation producing a burst, subsequent challenges with alginate oligosaccharides remained ineffective over
a period of at least 3 h. When transferred to running seawater, elicited plantlets did not develop visible necroses in culture.
DPI, an irreversible inhibitor of the mammalian neutrophil NADPH
oxidases (O'Donnell et al., 1993
), inhibited the oxidative response in L. digitata sporophytes when used at a
concentration of 10 µM (Fig.
3). Quinacrine, a general inhibitor of
flavoprotein oxidases (Auh and Murphy, 1995
), also blocked
H2O2 release (data not
shown).

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Figure 3.
Effect of DPI on the oxidative burst in L. digitata. Kinetics of
H2O2 emission by L. digitata plantlets challenged with 150 µg
mL 1 GG ( ), 150 µg
mL 1 GG after pre-incubation for 15 min with 10 µM DPI ( ), and by unchallenged plantlets
( ).
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Histology of the Oxidative Burst in L. digitata
Sporophytes
Based on analyses by confocal microscopy with the
fluorescent, redox-sensitive dye dichlorohydrofluorescin, AOS formation was triggered as soon as 1 min after elicitation of L. digitata plantlets with oligoguluronates and increased
exponentially for at least 7 min. AOS mainly accumulated around
epidermal and outer cortical cells, but not in the medulla (Fig.
4). Staining L. digitata with
nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) in the presence of oligoguluronates resulted in a blue precipitate, indicating that superoxide anions are
formed during the oxidative burst (Fig.
5A). As indicated by a deeper blue stain,
the accumulation of superoxide was enhanced by diethyldithiocarbamate
(DDC), a strong inhibitor of SOD (Auh and Murphy, 1995
; Jabs et al.,
1997
; Fig. 5C). However, attempts to prevent NBT accumulation by the
addition of exogenous SOD were unsuccessful. In contrast and consistent
with the effect of DPI on the release of hydrogen peroxide,
pretreatment of young plantlets with this inhibitor (10 µM DPI, 15 min) did decrease precipitation of
NBT upon elicitation with GG blocks (Fig. 5E). In agreement with the
results of confocal microscopy, the staining with NBT of cross
sections of L. digitata plantlets showed that
O2
was accumulated mainly in
the cortical cell layers, whereas it was hardly detectable in the
medulla (Fig. 5, F and G).

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Figure 4.
Laser scanning confocal imaging of elicited
oxidative burst in L. digitata plantlets. L. digitata plantlets were loaded with the redox-sensitive
fluorescent probe dichlorohydrofluorescein diacetate (DCFH-DA,
Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) and examined by laser scanning confocal
microscopy. Elicitors were added at t = 300 s
during the time course of image acquisition. The green fluorescence of
dichlorofluorescein was monitored on channel 1, concomitant with the
red fluorescence of plastids on channel 2. Four images are presented,
representative of the time course of fluorescence with flurorescences
in channels 1 and 2 overlaid. Squares labeled 1, 2, and 3, respectively, were delineated from the outer cortex to the medulla, to
record the three curves showing the respective integrated fluorescence.
The data reported here correspond to one representative experiment out
of three (bar corresponds to 10 µm and RLU refers to relative light
units defined by the integrated luminosity of the pixels of the given
area).
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Figure 5.
Superoxide generation in cortical tissues of
L. digitata young sporophytes. After the addition of
oligoguluronates, plantlets were stained with NBT from 15 to 30 min
after elicitation to assay superoxide detected by a dark blue
precipitate after bleaching of the plant pigments. The plants were
treated as follows: A (control), pre-incubation with DDC, but without
previous elicitation (almost no NBT staining due to low steady-state
superoxide production); B, elicitation with 50 µg
mL 1 GG (NBT staining 30 min later; some
O2 detectable, but most of it
is rapidly converted to
H2O2); C, inhibition of SOD
by pre-incubation with 1 mM DDC and elicitation
with 50 µg mL 1 GG (NBT staining 15 min later;
intensive stain due to massive accumulation of
O2 ); D, elicitation with 50 µg mL 1 GG (NBT staining 15 min later) on
younger cultivated plantlets (control assay for the panel on the
right); E, pre-incubation with 10 µM DPI and
elicitation with 50 µg mL 1 GG (NBT staining
15 min later) on younger cultivated plantlets (almost no accumulation of
O2 because the enzymatic
source is inhibited). In A through E, the bar corresponds to 1 cm. F,
Superficial view of the cortical cells near the margin of the blade of
a young L. digitata plantlet pre-incubated with DDC and
stained with NBT 15 min after elicitation (bar corresponds to 20 µm).
A strong blue precipitate is visible in the surroundings of the
epidermal cells. G, Cross section of the same blade (bar corresponds to
25 µm), showing the accumulation of blue precipitate around the
cortical cells.
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Strong tissue-specific differences were observed when various tissues
of adult L. digitata sporophytes were compared in their response with oligoguluronates. The young blade tissues were the most
sensitive and the meristematic and older blade tissues were the least
reactive parts. The sensitivity appeared to be confined to the cortex,
the medulla (i.e. stipe tissue without cortex) showing no
response upon elicitation (Fig. 6). Only
L. digitata sporophytes and sporophyte suspended-cell
cultures (data not shown) reacted with an oxidative burst upon
elicitation with alginate oligosaccharides. L. digitata
gametophytes, the filamentous, haploid life history phase, did
notrespond to the presence of oligoalginate signals (data not
shown).

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Figure 6.
Comparison of the oxidative burst in various
tissues of L. digitata after elicitation with
oligoguluronates. Small tissue discs of an L. digitata plant
were compared in their peak response with elicitation by GG blocks (50 µg mL 1). The data reported here correspond to
one representative experiment out of three.
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Pharmacological Analysis of the Oxidative Burst in L. digitata Sporophytes
In an attempt to unravel the signal transduction pathways leading
to AOS formation upon elicitation with alginate oligosaccharides in
L. digitata, a number of compounds known to affect these
processes in higher plants were tested. Pre-incubation of L. digitata plantlets in the presence of 10 µM staurosporine, a general inhibitor of protein kinases (Tavernier et al., 1995
), inhibited the emission of
H2O2 following elicitation
with oligoguluronates. Inhibitors of calcium channels such as verapamil
and methoxyverapamil effectively blocked the induction of the oxidative
burst. The Ca2+ ionophore A23187 induced a strong
oxidative burst, about 3 times higher than the control response to GG
blocks. The inhibitor of higher plant anion channels, A9C (Cazalé
et al., 1998
), inhibited the burst, and so did two other anion channel
inhibitors, 4,4'-diisothiocyanatestilbene-2, 2'-disulfonic acid
(DIDS) and 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino-) benzoic acid (NPPB;
Lurin et al., 1996
; Jabs et al., 1997
). Chlorpromazine-HCl, an
antagonist of phospholipase A2 in higher plants
(Chandra et al., 1996
), completely blocked the induction of the
response in L. digitata. Mastoparan, a specific activator of
G proteins (Legendre et al., 1992
, 1993
), failed to induce release of
H2O2 from L. digitata sporophytes, even at concentrations as high as 10 µM.
All of the specific ionophores tested, namely valinomycin and
nonactin (K+), monensin
(Na+), A23187 ionophore
(Ca2+), and dinitrophenol
(H+) enhanced the oxidative response
of L. digitata to oligoguluronate signals (Table
I). When used alone at the concentration
of 57 µM, valinomycin induced a strong
oxidative burst, about one order of magnitude stronger than the usual
response to GG blocks (Fig. 7). Both
signals were capable of acting synergistically,
triggering bursts two orders of magnitude higher than the oxidative
response induced by oligoguluronates (Fig. 7).

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Figure 7.
Effect of valinomycin on the oxidative burst
triggered by oligoguluronates in L. digitata. A, Induction
of an oxidative burst (without elicitation by GG) by 57 µM valinomycin (added at t = 0). B, Enhancement by valinomycin of the oxidative burst triggered by
150 µg mL 1 GG: dose-response behavior
(control, ; 0.57 µM valinomycin, ; 5.7 µM valinomycin, ). Note that the
addition of valinomycin enhances the oxidative burst, whereas
concentrations around 57 µM are sufficient to
trigger an oxidative burst without the physiological signal (GG).
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Oligoguluronates Trigger Potassium Efflux in L. digitata Sporophytes
A marked potassium efflux was observed from L. digitata sporophytes challenged with oligoguluronates in
artificial seawater partially depleted in potassium (Fig.
8). After a slight initial decrease of
the K+ concentration in the surrounding medium, a
steady net K+ efflux was established,
corresponding to a loss of about 10 µmol K+ per
gram fresh weight within 1 h. Concomitantly, a slight
alkalinization (0.07 pH units) was detectable in unbuffered media
within the first 3 min after elicitation, followed by an external
acidification continuing for at least 1 h, from pH 8.25 to 7.85 (Fig. 8). Overnight, the leakage of potassium from a 50 mg
mL
1 biomass of L. digitata plantlets
raised the external medium concentration by an average of 4.16 mM in elicited samples, compared with 1.67 mM in the controls.

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Figure 8.
Time course of K+ efflux
( ) and pH variations ( ) in the incubation medium of L. digitata plantlets (50 mg fresh weight
mL 1) treated at time 0 with 150 µg
mL 1 oligoguluronates. The data reported here
correspond to one representative experiment out of three.
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H2O2 Generated by the Oxidative Burst
Controls Growth of Kelp Pathogenic and Epiphytic Bacteria
The question of whether the amount of AOS generated by the
oxidative burst in L. digitata can be toxic for pathogens
was then indirectly tested by cultivation of an alginate-degrading
bacterial strain associated with Laminaria japonica,
Pseudoalteromonas elyakovii (Sawabe et al., 2000
), and the
epiphytic strain referred to as Ldm2 in the presence of various
concentrations of H2O2.
Both strains were completely inhibited in their growth by
H2O2 concentrations as low
as 10 µM. An
H2O2 concentration of 250 µM was sufficient to kill a culture of P. laminariocolax and to reduce the survival of strain Ldm2 by
60%.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The Brown Algal Kelp L. digitata Recognizes
Guluronate-Rich Alginate Fragments as Signals to Trigger an Oxidative
Burst
Alginate (Fig. 1) is the main cell wall component of Laminariales,
amounting to approximately 60% of L. digitata isolated cell
walls (Mabeau and Kloareg, 1987
). It consists of three types of blocks
(Haug et al., 1974
), MM or GG, and blocks with mixtures of both
monomers (MG). The above results demonstrate that reminiscent of the
behavior of higher plants pectin oligosaccharides (e.g. Legendre et
al., 1993
), the sporophytes of the brown algal kelp L. digitata respond to incubation in the presence of alginate oligosaccharides by a sudden increase in oxygen consumption,
concomitant with a marked release of hydrogen peroxide. The oxidative
burst is rapid, starting within 2 to 3 min of the addition of
oligosaccharides, and transient, lasting for no longer than 30 min.
External H2O2
concentrations reach their maximum 10 min after elicitation, i.e. at
the same time or shortly after the peaks of oxygen consumption (Fig. 2,
A and B). The average molar ratio between total oxygen consumption and
the release of hydrogen peroxide upon the elicitation of L. digitata plantlets with alginate oligosaccharides, approximately
five oxygen molecules consumed for the net release of one molecule of
hydrogen peroxide, indicates that this brown alga rapidly detoxifies
AOS during the oxidative burst. In higher plants detoxification
of AOS involves protecting mechanisms such as the ascorbate-glutathione
cycle, as well as scavenging enzymes such as catalases and peroxidases
(Wojtaszek, 1997
). No such mechanism has been described in brown algae
yet. We are currently exploring the possibility that the
mobilization of the intracellular iodine reservoir (Küpper et
al., 1998
) participates in the protection against oxidative
stress in Laminariales (A. Baker, L. Carpenter, B. Kloareg, F. Küpper, P. Liss, and G. Malin, unpublished data).
L. digitata sporophytes react to the presence of alginate
oligosaccharides in a dose-response dependent manner. Given that the
oligoguluronate blocks used in these experiments had an average degree
of polymerization of 20 to 25 (Heyraud et al., 1996
), the threshold
signal concentration required to elicit a significant burst is 0.5 µM, the oxidative response typically saturating
around 40 µM (Fig. 2C). A clear
structure-activity relationship was observed in the capacity of
alginate oligosaccharides to elicit an oxidative burst in L. digitata. Alginate polymers and MM elicited no response. Only the
homo-oligomeric fragments composed of GG and their co-oligomers with MG
were recognized, with GG eliciting a stronger response than MG (Fig. 2,
A and B). These observations indicate that stretches of guluronate
residues are essential in the recognition of alginate oligosaccharides
by L. digitata.
Oligoguluronate fractions obtained with the help of an alginate lyase,
i.e. with unsaturated uronic acid residues at their non-reducing ends,
were as active as those prepared by mild acid hydrolysis, indicating
that the configuration of the non-reducing ends is not involved with
signal recognition. However, the biodegradation products of sulfated
fucans, a cell wall matricial polysaccharide that can be thought of as
a structural and a functional analog of the fucoxyloglucans of higher
plants (Kloareg and Quatrano, 1988
), did not elicit any oxidative
response in L. digitata sporophytes. Laminaran, the low
molecular weight
-1,3-glucan storage polysaccharide of brown algae,
which structurally mimics
-1,3-1,6-glucan fungal elicitors is known
to elicit a variety of defense responses in higher plants (Ebel,
1998
). Based on
H2O2 assays, laminaran was not recognized as a defense signal by L. digitata
sporophytes (data not shown). Altogether, alginate fragments made of
guluronate residues appear as a relatively specific defense signal in
L. digitata. It is worth noting here that the ordered
conformation of poly-
-1,4-L-guluronic acid is
very similar to that of the poly-
-1,4-L-GalUA
blocks of pectins, both leading to intermolecular associations in the
presence of calcium ions (Kohn, 1975
). Oligogalacturonates indeed
exhibited a slight elicitor activity on L. digitata
sporophytes (data not shown).
AOS Production Involves an NADPH Oxidase-Like Enzyme in L. digitata Sporophytes
Histochemical evidence based on the superoxide-specific stain NBT
and the SOD inhibitor DDC (Fig. 5) points out that the AOS first formed
during the oxidative burst is superoxide, most of which is subsequently
converted to H2O2. This is
further supported by the inhibition with DPI of the release of hydrogen
peroxide (Fig. 3) and the staining with NBT (Fig. 5C) as diphenylene
iodonium is known as an irreversible inhibitor of flavin-containing
enzymes, including the superoxide-generating NAD(P) H oxidases of
mammalian neutrophils (O'Donnell et al., 1993
) and of higher plants
(Auh and Murphy, 1995
; Dwyer et al., 1996
; Pugin et al., 1997
). The fact that exogenous SOD did not affect the hydrogen peroxide release or
NBT staining is likely due to a poor penetration of this enzyme through
the thick brown algal cell wall.
The results obtained with quinacrine tend to further support that the
oxidative-burst machinery of L. digitata contains a flavoprotein. Yet quinacrine is also a non-specific inhibitor of
PLA2 (Henderson et al., 1989
) and consistent with
the effect of chlorpromazine-HCl, this inhibitor may also
indirectly affect AOS formation by interrupting a
PLA2-dependent transduction event. Altogether and
keeping in mind the argument about the uses and misuses of inhibitors
in studies of AOS sources in higher plants (Bestwick et al., 1999
), we
propose that a possible source of superoxide in L. digitata
is an oxidase with a flavoprotein subunit (inhibited by DPI and likely
by quinacrine).
Transduction of Oligoguluronate Signals Features Some Conserved
Steps with Higher Plants
The general inhibitor of protein kinases, staurosporine,
reported to block the protein phosphorylation events involved in induction of defense responses in tobacco cells upon elicitation by
cryptogein (Viard et al., 1994
) or oligogalacturonides (Mathieu et al.,
1996
), also inhibited the emission of
H2O2 by L. digitata plantlets. Yet the protein phosphatase inhibitors
calyculin A and cantharidin (Levine et al., 1994
; Jabs et al., 1997
)
did not induce a release of
H2O2 in L. digitata. Phospholipase A2, another typical
element of eukaryotic signal transduction pathways (Chapman, 1998
), is
also likely to participate in the oligoguluronate transduction chain,
as suggested by the strong inhibition of
H2O2 production by
chlorpromazine-HCl, a selective inhibitor of this phospholipase following elicitation in higher plants (Chandra et al., 1996
). In
contrast no evidence was observed as to the involvement of G proteins
in the transduction of oligoguluronate signals. Mastoparan, a specific
activator of G proteins intrinsically capable of triggering an
oxidative burst in soybean cells (Legendre et al., 1992
), was ineffective to induce or enhance the production of AOS in L. digitata sporophytes, even at high concentrations.
Calcium entry, which is known to be involved with the activation of the
oxidative machinery in higher plants (e.g. Jabs et al., 1997
; Pugin et
al., 1997
) also appears to regulate the emission of AOS in L. digitata. This is demonstrated by the enhancing effect of the
Ca2+ ionophore A23187 and the inhibitory effects
of the antagonists of Ca2+ channels such as
verapamil and methoxyverapamil (known to affect calcium channels in
fucoid brown algae; Robinson, 1996
), which completely blocked the
oxidative burst.
Incubation of L. digitata sporophytes in the presence of
oligoguluronates results in a marked potassium efflux (Fig. 8).
Assuming that intracellular potassium concentrations are approximately 380 mM (see "Materials and Methods") and
given the potassium concentration of the artificial seawater used in
this study (500 µM instead of 10 mM in natural seawater), elicited L. digitata plantlets release about 2.6% of their internal potassium
within the first h and about 13.1% overnight (14 h). Changes in plasma
membrane permeability indeed appear to be directly involved in the
regulation of oxidative burst in L. digitata. The enormous
enhancement of the effect of oligoguluronates by the
K+ ionophore valinomycin also points at the key
role in the signal transduction chain of changes in membrane
polarization by K+ efflux. Yet the situation in
L. digitata seems to be different from that in higher
plants, where valinomycin fails to induce a burst when applied alone
(Jabs et al., 1997
). Pre-incubation with the
uncoupler/H+ carrier 2,4-dinitrophenol similarly
enhanced the response, presumably also by changes in membrane
polarization. Chloride channels may be involved too, as indicated by
the partial inhibition of the burst by the anion channel antagonists,
A9C, DIDS, and NPPB.
Establishing the hierarchical organization of the various transduction
steps discussed above would now require an investigation of their links
with other early events, such as ion fluxes, and the identification of
defense responses that may function downstream or independently of the
oxidative burst triggered by oligoguluronate recognition. The
desensitizing effect of elicitation with alginate oligosaccharides
suggests that such signaling pathway(s) cannot be repetitively
activated over a certain period. A comparable refractory behavior
during which cells remain insensitive to further elicitation for
several hours is known in higher plants for various oligosaccharide
elicitors, oligogalacturonides in tobacco (Rouet-Mayer et al., 1997
)
and soybean cells (Legendre et al., 1993
), and chitin fragments in
tomato cells (Felix et al., 1998
).
Biological Significance of the Oxidative Burst in L. digitata
Enzymes that depolymerize alginate have been detected in a variety
of marine molluscs, as well as in a number of marine bacteria associated with Laminariales, including Pseudomonas
alginovora, a species epiphytic to L. digitata (Boyen
et al., 1990
), as well as strain H4 (Sawabe and Ezura, 1996
) and
P. elyakovii (Sawabe et al., 2000
), two bacteria isolated
from diseased cultures in L. japonica nurseries.
Laminariales also are plagued by filamentous brown algal
endophytes (Ellertsdottir and Peters, 1997
), which are likely to
express alginases when invading the host tissue. Therefore,
recognition of alginate fragments by L. digitata sporophytes is likely to signal challenging with alginolytic, potentially detrimental organisms.
As reported for fungal pathogens of higher plants (Peng and Kùc,
1992
), the oxidative burst may be viewed as an immediate, efficient
defense in itself. The amounts of
H2O2 released by L. digitata sporophytes upon recognition of oligoguluronates, up to 1 µmol g fresh weight
1, together with the
estimation that the apoplastic volume corresponds to approximately 10%
of the tissue fresh weight in this brown alga (see Fig. 4), suggest
that at the peak of production, the peroxide levels in the apoplasm can
transiently reach concentrations as high as several millimolars, a
figure comparable with those observed in soybean cells (Legendre et
al., 1993
). Such levels are at least one order of magnitude above the
concentrations that were required to control the growth or even to kill
the two kelp disease-associated bacteria investigated here, P. elyakovii and strain Ldm2. Exogenous applications of
H2O2 in the
mM range were indeed shown to control
Pseudoalteromonas teriolytica, the causative agent of the
red spot disease in L. japonica (Ezura et al., 1990
; Sawabe
et al., 1998
).
Confocal microscopy (Fig. 4), histochemical staining (Fig. 5), as well
as the comparison of algal fragments with and without the cortical cell
layer (Fig. 6) indicate that reactivity to oligoguluronates is confined
to cortical cells, i.e. cells that are the first to be exposed to
pathogen attack. Young, fast-growing tissues of the blade are the most
reactive upon elicitation. Yet meristematic areas showed almost no
reaction. This suggests that the capability to produce AOS is linked to
cell differentiation, as in cotton fibers (Potikha et al., 1999
). The
gametophyte generation, which in nature rapidly differentiates gametes
and thus has a short life span, consistently does not recognize
oligoguluronates as defense signals.
In conclusion, guluronate-rich alginate oligosaccharides, which are
likely to be released during interactions with alginolytic organisms,
elicit an oxidative burst in L. digitata. Since they are
readily recognized by whole plantlets, oligoguluronates may thus be
used as a new tool to decipher transduction pathways and defense
reactions in Laminariales. This order belongs to the phylum of
Heterokonta, which emerged as an independent lineage during the
so-called crown diversification of higher eukaryotes (Bhattacharya et
al., 1991
). As in the case of the rhodophytes Gracilaria
conferta (Weinberger et al., 1999
) and Chondrus crispus
(Bouarab et al., 1999
), it would be of particular interest to delineate
in L. digitata conserved ancestral pathways and machineries
from those that are unique to the marine environment. In this respect
the results reported here suggest that brown algal kelps feature
some of the transduction cascade components known for higher plants, as
well as a superoxide-generating oxidase with similarities to the
well-characterized mammalian NADPH oxidase. The hydrogen peroxide
concentrations generated in the surroundings of the algae appear
sufficient to exert an inhibitory effect toward potentially harmful
micro-organisms. Other defenses may involve the oxidation of
intracellular iodide, leading to the release of toxic, iodinated
compounds (Potin et al., 1999
).
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Material
Young Laminaria digitata plantlets (2-15 cm in
length) were seeded and grown in a well-aerated, running-seawater tank
as follows. Adult fertile sporophytes were placed for 1 week in the
tank and allowed to release spores. Gametophytes developed along the
walls and fertilization yielded young L. digitata
plantlets. Cultures were grown using a photoperiod of 16 h of
light and 8 h of darkness at a photon flux density of 50 to 60 µmol photons m
2 s
1 and at temperatures
corresponding to the surface seawater temperature at Roscoff, ranging
from 9°C to 17°C throughout the seasonal cycle. Adult L.
digitata sporophytes were collected by diving between Ile Verte
and Ile de Batz, close to the Institute in Roscoff. In some experiments
unialgal sporophytes were used, originating from the female gametophyte
strain Lam dig Hel 1004 and the male gametophyte strain Lam dig Hel
1003 (kindly provided by D.G. Müller, Konstanz, Germany),
and grown in the laboratory in Provasoli ES medium (Starr and Zeikus,
1987
) prepared from artificial seawater (WIMEX, Krefeld, Germany,
adjusted to 30
salinity). They were illuminated with daylight-type
fluorescent lamps at an irradiance of 9 µE m
2
s
1 for 10 h per day and kept at 10°C ± 1°C. Cultures were transferred to fresh medium at 1- or 2-week intervals.
Inhibition of the Growth of Kelp-Associated Bacterial
Strains
One of the alginolytic strains used, isolated from diseased
L. japonica and identified as
Pseudoalteromonas elyakovii, was provided by T. Sawabe
(Hokkaido University, Japan). The other one lacks taxonomic
classification so far and was termed strain "Ldm2." It is an
isolate from epiphytic bacteria living on decaying diseased young
L. digitata collected from the field. Bacteria were
first grown for around 12 h in ZoBell medium (ZoBell and Upham,
1944
). During their exponential growth phase, 200 µL of the cultures
were transferred as inocula to a mixture of 15 mL ZoBell medium and 10 mL sterile, filtered seawater with various additions of
H2O2. Growth of the cultures was followed for
up to 16 h by measuring the
A600.
Elicitors
Alginate oligosaccharides with a polymerization degree ranging
from 15 to 25 (Heyraud et al., 1996
) were prepared in the laboratory according to Haug et al. (1974)
using sodium alginate from
Laminaria hyperborea stipes (provided by B. Larsen,
Trondheim University, Norway) and yielding three categories of alginate
oligosaccharides (GG, MM, and MG blocks). In an alternate manner,
alginate oligosaccharides were obtained by enzyme degradation of sodium
alginate with an alginate lyase from the abalone Haliotis
tuberculata (Boyen et al., 1990
). In elicitation experiments,
GG, MM, and MG blocks were applied at final concentrations ranging from
1 to 150 µg mL
1.
Inhibitors and Activators of AOS Generation and Signal Transduction
Chains
Several compounds were screened for their potential activating
or inhibiting activity on signal transduction and AOS generation after
elicitation: KCN (final concentration in the seawater eliciting medium
of 50 µM; target, heme-dependent enzymes) and
NaN3 (5 and 50 µM; target, a wide range of
redox enzymes) from stock solutions dissolved in H2O,
respectively; quinacrine (500 µM; target,
flavin-dependent redox enzymes, in particular oxidases), DDC (1 mM; target, SOD), nifedipin (100 µM; target,
Ca2+ channels), and chlorpromazine-HCl (10 and 260 µM, 1 mM; target, phospholipase A) from stock
solutions dissolved in ethanol, respectively; and DPI (10 and 100 µM, 1 mM; target, NADPH oxidases) and A9C (100 µM and 1 mM; target, anion channels)
from a stock in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and purchased from Sigma
(L'Isle d'Abeau Chesnes, France). Calyculin A (10 µM;
target, protein phosphatases) and cantharidin (10 µM;
target, protein phosphatases) were from stocks in DMSO; staurosporine
(5 µM; target, protein kinases), valinomycin (57 and 570 nM, 5.7 µM; target, K+
ionophore), nonactin (1 µM; target, K+
ionophore), monensin (25 and 250 µM; target,
Na+ ionophore), A23187 (5 and 50 µM; target,
Ca2+ ionophore), DIDS (1 mM; target, anion
channels), NPPB (100 µM; target, anion channels),
verapamil (D200; 100 µM; target, Ca2+
channels), and methoxyverapamil (D600; 100 µM; target,
Ca2+ channels) in ethanol, respectively, were purchased
from Calbiochem (France Biochem, Meudon, France).
Hydrogen Peroxide/AOS Measurements
The concentration of hydrogen peroxide present in the medium
around plants was determined using the luminol chemiluminescence method
(Glazener et al., 1991
) with a luminometer (LUMAT LB 9507, EG&G
Berthold, Bad Wildbach, Germany). It was usual that 400-µL aliquots
(out of initially 10 mL) were taken for one measurement. In the
luminometer, 50 µL of 20 units mL
1 of horseradish
peroxidase (Boehringer Mannheim, Meylan, France, dissolved in pH 7.8 phosphate buffer) and 100 µL of 0.3 M luminol (5-amino-2,
3-dihydro-1,4-phthalazinedione, Sigma) solution were added to the
sample. Chemiluminescence was recorded immediately after the last
injection with a signal integration time of 10 s. For calculating
the concentration of H2O2 present in the
samples, calibration with a standard curve was carried out at least
once during any series of measurements. Control assays of this method revealed that L. digitata sporophytes and gametophytes
maintain very low levels (<100 nM) of
H2O2 in their surroundings under steady-state
conditions. Catalase at 100 U mL
1 and SOD at 200 U
mL
1 (Boehringer Mannheim) were used to test the types of
AOS detected in the assay.
O2 Measurements
Oxygen consumption was measured in darkness with an oxygen
electrode (DW3 Clark-type, Hansatech Instruments, King's Lynn, UK).
The 20-mL reaction vessel had a small opening allowing for the
injection of microliter volumes of solutions (e.g. containing oligosaccharides) during the course of the experiments. Young L.
digitata sporophytes approximately 3 cm in length and 50 mg in
fresh weight were incubated in natural seawater to determine respiration rates.
Histochemical Staining for O2
Detection
Immediately after triggering an oxidative burst by elicitation
(including in the presence of the SOD inhibitor DDC, 200 U mL
1 of SOD, or 10 µM DPI, respectively),
plantlets were placed in 10 mM NaN3 in 10 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.8) and immersed for 15 to 30 min in 3 mL of the same buffer containing 0.1% (w/v) NBT
(Sigma) as described in Jabs et al. (1996)
. Plant pigments were
subsequently cleared by boiling for 2 min in alcoholic lactophenol (95% [w/v] ethanol:lactophenol, 2:1). Macroscopic and microscopic photographs were taken of entire plantlets and of thin cross sections to localize superoxide formation.
Laser Scanning Confocal Microscopy
DCFH-DA was dissolved in DMSO or ethanol to produce 10 mM stock, which was frozen as aliquots. Young L.
digitata thalli were cross-sectioned using razor blades, and
cross sections were placed in the dark for 15 min into Petri dishes
containing 5 mL of 22 µm-filtered seawater and 5 µL of DCFH-DA from
the stock solution. Petri dishes 35 mm in diameter were prepared for
microscopy by sealing a glass coverslip over a 18-mm hole drilled in
the bottom of the dish. Cross sections were removed from the
DCFH-DA-loading solution, rinsed with 22 µm filtered seawater, and
affixed to the bottom of a Petri dish containing 2 mL of seawater for
microscopy. Imaging was performed using a laser scanning confocal
microscope (model IX 70/Fluoview, Olympus, Tokyo) with images recorded
every 60 s. An argon/krypton OMNICHROM laser was used for
excitation at 488 nm set on 20% power, with 525 nm emission (channel
1) and 580 nm emission (channel 2). Images were captured over a 15-min time course. Thalli were elicited 5 min after the beginning of the time
course with 150 µg mL
1 oligoguluronates. Analysis of
images was performed using the Fluoview software (version 2.0, Olympus).
K+ and H+ Fluxes
The protocol of Mathieu et al. (1991)
for measurement of
potassium efflux was modified as follows. The extracellular
K+ concentration was determined at intervals using a
K+-specific electrode (F2312K, Radiometer,
Copenhagen). Artificial seawater (450 mM NaCl, 10 mM CaCl2, 5 mM MgCl2, 2 mM NaHCO3, and 40 mM
MgSO4) adjusted to 500 µM K+ was
used for all assays with living plants. A pH electrode was constantly
inserted in the medium surrounding the plantlets. For comparability,
readings were taken at every measurement of K+. The
intracellular K+ concentration of L.
digitata plantlets was determined by drying 10 samples of
plantlets, which were subsequently analyzed by means of
induction-coupled plasma-atom emission spectroscopy by the Service
Central d'Analyse of Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (Vernaison, France). The average potassium content of dried plantlets was 8.771% ± 1.814%. Given that, in L. digitata,
1 g of dry weight corresponds to approximately 6.56 g fresh
weight (this study) and that the apoplastic volume represents around
10% of the tissue fresh weight (Mabeau and Kloareg, 1987
), this
corresponds to intracellular K+ concentrations around 380 mM. This compares well with the 300 mM measured
for other brown algae (Reed and Barron, 1983
).
We would like to thank Claire Gachon (Ecole Normale
Supérieure-Ulm, Paris), Jean-François Lennon, Aldo
Asensi, Guy Levavasseur, Sylvie Rousvoal and Christophe Richard (CNRS,
Roscoff, France), Alain Heyraud (CNRS, Grenoble, France), Dieter
G. Müller (University of Konstanz), and J.-M. Legendre (Centre
Hospitalier Universitaire Morvan, Brest, France) for
their help and G. Stark (University of Konstanz) for useful suggestions.
Received April 28, 2000; accepted August 15, 2000.