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Plant Physiol, January 2001, Vol. 125, pp. 318-328
Free and Conjugated Benzoic Acid in Tobacco Plants and Cell
Cultures. Induced Accumulation upon Elicitation of Defense Responses
and Role as Salicylic Acid Precursors1
Julie
Chong,2
Marie-Agnès
Pierrel,2
Rossitza
Atanassova,3
Danièle
Werck-Reichhart,
Bernard
Fritig, and
Patrick
Saindrenan*
Institut de Biologie Moléculaire des Plantes du Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université Louis
Pasteur, 67084 Strasbourg cedex, France (J.C., M.-A.P., R.A., B.F.,
P.S.); and Institut de Biologie Moléculaire des Plantes du Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université Louis Pasteur,
67083 Strasbourg cedex, France (D.W.-R.)
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ABSTRACT |
Salicylic acid (SA) is a key endogenous component of local and
systemic disease resistance in plants. In this study, we investigated the role of benzoic acid (BA) as precursor of SA biosynthesis in
tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv Samsun NN) plants
undergoing a hypersensitive response following infection with tobacco
mosaic virus or in tobacco cell suspensions elicited with
-megaspermin, an elicitor from Phytophthora
megasperma. We found a small pool of conjugated BA in healthy
leaves and untreated cell suspensions of tobacco, whereas free BA
levels were barely detectable. Infection of plants with tobacco mosaic
virus or elicitation of cells led to a rapid de novo synthesis and
accumulation of conjugated BA, whereas free BA was weakly induced. In
presence of diphenylene iodonium, an inhibitor of superoxide anion
formation, SA accumulation was abolished in elicited cells and much
higher BA levels were concomitantly induced, mainly as a conjugated
form. Furthermore, piperonylic acid, an inhibitor of
cinnamate-4-hydroxylase was used as a powerful tool to redirect the
metabolic flow from the main phenylpropanoid pathway into the SA
biosynthetic branch. Under these conditions, in vivo labeling and
radioisotope dilution experiments with
[14C]trans-cinnamic acid as precursor clearly indicated
that the free form of BA produced in elicited tobacco cells is not the major precursor of SA biosynthesis. The main conjugated form of BA
accumulating after elicitation of tobacco cells was identified for the
first time as benzoyl-glucose. Our data point to the likely role of
conjugated forms of BA in SA biosynthesis.
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INTRODUCTION |
Salicylic acid (SA, 2-hydroxybenzoic
acid) is considered one of the key endogenous signals involved in the
activation of numerous plant defense responses (Shah and Klessig,
1999 ). Early evidence showed that application of SA induced resistance
against several pathogens and the expression of pathogenesis-related
proteins in a variety of plants (White, 1979 ; Ward et al., 1991 ). These properties subsequently were found to mimic the natural defense response in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) and cucumber when
elevated endogenous SA levels were correlated with induced resistance
to the invading pathogen (Malamy et al., 1990 ; Métraux et al.,
1990 ). Further studies have implicated SA as an essential component in the induction of systemic acquired resistance (SAR) in several plant
species (Shah and Klessig, 1999 ). SAR is a pathogen-inducible broad
spectrum resistance phenomenon occurring in tissues distant from the
primary infection. The most compelling evidence of the key role of SA
in both local and systemic disease resistance came from transgenic
tobacco and Arabidopsis overexpressing a bacterial salicylate
hydroxylase that catalyzes the conversion of SA to inactive catechol.
Infected transgenic plants are unable to express SAR and also show
reduced local resistance to pathogens (Gaffney et al., 1993 ; Delaney et
al., 1994 ). However, although essential in tissue expressing SAR, SA
itself is probably not the translocated signal responsible for
activating defense responses in the uninoculated parts of the plant
(Vernooij et al., 1994 ). Later on, several genetic screens identified
Arabidopsis mutants that are impaired in SA perception or accumulation
and exhibit an enhanced susceptibility to pathogen infection (Cao et
al., 1994 ; Delaney et al., 1995 ; Nawrath and Métraux,
1999 ).
The genetic manipulation of the rate of SA synthesis in plants should
provide a way to engineer high levels of pathogen resistance. However,
although significant progress has been made recently to establish the
role of SA in disease resistance, the genes encoding critical enzymes
of SA biosynthesis as well as the rate-limiting step in SA production
are still largely unknown. A large body of evidence suggests that SA
derives from the shikimate-phenylpropanoid pathway (Zenk and
Müller, 1964 ). In this pathway, Phe is first converted to
trans-cinnamic acid (t-CA) by the Phe ammonia-lyase enzyme
(PAL), t-CA is then either hydroxylated to
o-coumaric acid before oxidation of the side chain, or the
side chain of t-CA is shortened to benzoic acid (BA), which
in turn is hydroxylated at the ortho position (Sticher et al., 1997 ).
At least in tobacco and in cucumber, the biosynthetic pathway of SA was
proposed to proceed exclusively via free BA (Yalpani et al., 1993 ;
Meuwly et al., 1995 ). Hydroxylation of BA at the C-2 position would be catalyzed by a soluble Cyt P450 mono-oxygenase, benzoate-2-hydroxylase (BA2H), as reported in tobacco (Leon et al., 1995b ). The side chain of
t-CA could be shortened by a nonoxidative mechanism, which
was described for the biosynthesis of p-hydroxybenzoic acid in several systems and involves the formation of
p-hydroxybenzaldehyde as intermediate (French et al., 1976 ;
Schnitzler et al., 1992 ). However, the shortening of the side chain of
C6-C3 compounds is generally believed to proceed oxidatively by a
mechanism similar to the -oxidation of fatty acids. Biochemical
evidence for a -oxidation pathway was provided in Lithospermum
erythrorhizon where the biosynthesis of
p-hydroxybenzoic acid proceeds via
p-coumaroyl-coenzyme A (CoA), which is oxidized and cleaved
to p-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA and acetyl-CoA in a thioclastic
reaction (Löscher and Heide, 1994 ). Besides CoA thioesters,
phenylpropanoid Glc esters might also serve as activated intermediates
in the side chain shortening reactions (Funk and Brodelius,
1990 ).
Intermediates of SA biosynthesis have been previously studied in
tobacco where the induced HR to tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) was
artificially extended to the whole plant by a temperature shift
procedure, allowing a massive induction of SA biosynthesis. Under these
conditions, SA accumulation was suggested to result from the release of
free BA from a large preformed pool of conjugated BA (Yalpani et al.,
1993 ); this free BA in turn would induce BA2H activity converting BA to
SA (Leon et al., 1995a ). In this sequence, the accumulation of high SA
levels does not necessarily require an increase in PAL activity.
However, activation of the phenylpropanoid pathway was shown to be a
prerequisite for the biosynthesis of SA in cucumber (Meuwly et al.,
1995 ) and Arabidopsis (Mauch-Mani and Slusarenko, 1996 ). If BA per se
appears to play a central role in SA biosynthesis, until now the exact
form of BA acting as an intermediate remains elusive (Ribnicky et al.,
1998 ).
We have developed a specific method for BA determination and show in
this report that conjugated BA is not present as a large preformed pool
in tobacco cv Samsun NN. We also investigated the kinetics of
accumulation of free and conjugated BA and SA during the HR of
tobacco to TMV as well as in elicited Bright Yellow (BY) tobacco
cells. Furthermore, in vivo labeling experiments conducted in this
study clearly indicate that the free form of BA is not the major
intermediate of SA biosynthesis in elicited tobacco cells.
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RESULTS |
Time Course of BA and SA Accumulation in TMV-Infected Tobacco
Leaves and in Elicited Tobacco Cells
Levels of free and conjugated BA and SA were determined both
during the HR of tobacco plants to TMV and in BY tobacco cells treated
with -megaspermin, an HR-inducing proteinaceous fungal elicitor.
In contrast to previous data describing a large constitutive pool of
conjugated BA (100 µg g 1 fresh weight) in
untreated leaves of tobacco cv Xanthi-nc (Yalpani et al., 1993 ),
untreated tobacco leaves of the cv Samsun NN contained only 4 µg
g 1 fresh weight of conjugated BA, whereas the
levels of free BA were low (0.2 µg g 1 fresh
weight; Fig. 1A). Moreover, in our hands,
the levels of conjugated BA in healthy cv Xanthi-nc leaves were in the
same range (5 µg g 1 fresh weight).
Inoculation of cv Samsun NN with TMV triggered a strong accumulation of
conjugated BA, peaking after 96 h, and decreasing thereafter (Fig.
1A). Free BA was only weakly induced after TMV infection and appeared
as a minor component of the BA pool (Fig. 1A). TMV inoculation also
induced an increase in free and conjugated SA, which began 3 d
after infection and paralleled BA accumulation (Fig. 1B).

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Figure 1.
Levels of BA (A) and SA (B) after TMV infection.
Free (white bars) and conjugated (black bars) BA and SA were determined
in tobacco cv Samsun NN leaves after infection with TMV.
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Similar results were obtained with elicited tobacco cells (Fig.
2). Conjugated BA began to increase
4 h after elicitation and was maximal after 15 h, with levels
20 times higher than in H2O-treated cells (Fig.
2A). Elicitor treatment also induced a slight increase in free BA, but
the free form was approximately 10 times less abundant than conjugated
BA. Kinetics of free and conjugated SA also paralleled those of BA in
elicited cells (Fig. 2B).

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Figure 2.
Levels of BA (A) and SA (B) in elicited tobacco
cells. Free ( , ) and conjugated ( , ) BA and SA were
determined in BY tobacco cells treated with 50 nM
-megaspermin ( , ) or water ( , ). Results are means ± SD of three independent experiments.
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These results show that in tobacco, BA occurs mainly as the conjugated
form and that both free and conjugated BA accumulated during the HR to
TMV and after elicitation of cell suspension cultures with
-megaspermin.
Inhibition of Elicitor-Induced SA Accumulation by Diphenylene
Iodonium Parallels an Increase in BA Accumulation in Tobacco
Cells
It has been previously shown that the inhibition of active oxygen
species production by diphenylene iodonium (DPI) completely abolished SA accumulation induced by -megaspermin treatment of tobacco cells (Dorey et al., 1999 ). Since BA is thought to be a direct
precursor of SA in several plants, the fate of BA in elicited cells in
the presence of DPI was analyzed.
Whereas treatment of BY tobacco cells with -megaspermin induced a
strong SA accumulation, simultaneous DPI application completely abolished the elicitor-induced SA production (Fig.
3A). The results observed for BA levels
were strikingly different since BY tobacco cells elicited in the
presence of DPI accumulated 2 to 3 times more free BA and 6 to 7 times
more conjugated BA than cells elicited in the absence of DPI (Fig.
3B).

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Figure 3.
Effect of DPI on SA (A) and BA (B) accumulation in
elicited tobacco cells. A, Levels of total SA in cells treated with 50 nM -megaspermin ( ), 50 nM -megaspermin + 5 µM DPI ( ) or DPI alone ( ). B, Levels of free
( , ) and conjugated ( , ) BA in BY cells treated with 50 nM -megaspermin ( , ) or 50 nM
-megaspermin + 5 µM DPI ( , ). Results are
means ± SD of three independent experiments.
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These results show a clear correlation between the inhibition by DPI of
SA accumulation after elicitation and the concomitant increase in BA
accumulation, mainly as conjugated BA. Therefore, BA appears as a
likely intermediate in SA biosynthesis in planta. If free BA is the
direct precursor of SA, the strong accumulation of conjugated BA in
elicited cells treated with DPI may arise from the rapid conjugation of
the free form, which is no longer converted to SA. Alternatively,
conjugated forms of BA could also represent direct intermediates in SA biosynthesis.
Is Free BA the Key Intermediate in SA Biosynthesis?
To establish whether free BA is the major intermediate in SA
biosynthesis, we conducted in vivo radiolabeling experiments with
[14C]t-CA in BY-2 elicited tobacco
cells. BY-2 tobacco cells are well suited to in vivo labeling
experiments because they are highly homogenous with respect to cell
type and do not aggregate to form cell clusters. Exogenously
applied precursors such as [14C]Phe or
[14C]t-CA have been used in several
studies for determination of intermediates in SA biosynthesis, but most
of the labeling was usually incorporated into lignin and phytoalexin
precursors instead of being directed to the SA branch (Meuwly et al.,
1995 ). To increase the labeling of SA biosynthetic intermediates, we
used piperonylic acid, a natural molecule that behaves as a
potent inactivator of cinnamate-4-hydroxylase (Schalk et al., 1998 ).
Treatment of tobacco BY-2 cells with exogenous unlabeled
t-CA (100 µM) did not lead to an
increase in SA accumulation (0.15 ± 0.01 µg
g 1 fresh weight) compared with untreated cells
(0.12 ± 0.01 µg g 1 fresh weight).
However, simultaneous application of 100 µM
t-CA and 10 µM piperonylic acid
induced a strong accumulation of SA (3.2 ± 0.12 µg
g 1 fresh weight), which was 30 times higher
than in cells treated with t-CA alone. Moreover, levels of
SA were slightly increased in tobacco cells treated with piperonylic
acid alone (0.25 ± 0.02 µg g 1 fresh
weight) compared with control cells (0.12 ± 0.01 µg
g 1 fresh weight). This indicates that most of
both exogenously applied and endogenous t-CA are likely to
be metabolized by the main phenylpropanoid pathway downstream of
para-coumaric acid (p-CO) in the absence of
piperonylic acid. Together, our data show that piperonylic acid
effectively inhibits the metabolic flow to C6-C3 compounds, allowing a
diversion of the flow of metabolites to C6-C1 compounds such as SA.
For in vivo radiolabeling experiments, BY-2 tobacco cells were treated
with -megaspermin in presence or in absence of 10 µM
piperonylic acid for 11 h and then fed
[14C]t-CA for 1 h. Total
radioactivity associated with t-CA, p-CO, BA, and
SA was first measured in hydrolyzed methanolic extracts. Figure
4 shows that radioactivity incorporated
into BA and SA was low compared with the radioactivity detected in
p-CO, confirming that the flow of metabolites is mainly
directed to the general phenylpropanoid pathway, to the detriment of SA
biosynthesis both in elicited and in control cells. Treatment of
elicited tobacco cells with piperonylic acid abolished the
incorporation of radioactivity in p-CO with a concomitant
retention in t-CA (Fig. 4). Under these conditions, the flow
of precursor (t-CA) was redistributed and the radioactivity
associated to BA and SA was strongly enhanced (Fig. 4). Piperonylic
acid thus appears as a powerful tool for increasing the radiolabeling
of the intermediates in the SA pathway. The use of piperonylic acid
enabled us to measure and compare the specific radioactivities of free
BA and free SA.

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Figure 4.
Effect of piperonylic acid on the distribution of
total radioactivity (dpm) associated with total t-CA,
p-CO, BA, and SA after feeding
[14C]t-CA to elicited tobacco cells.
BY-2 cells were elicited with 50 nM
-megaspermin for 12 h in presence (hatched bars) or in absence
(black bars) of 10 µM piperonylic acid. Control
cells (white bars) were treated with water.
[14C]t-CA (2.2 µmol, 4.5 mCi
mmol 1) was added during the last hour of
elicitation. Total radioactivity associated with t-CA,
p-CO, BA, and SA was determined after acid and base
hydrolysis of the extracts. Note the difference of the scale used for
t-CA and p-CO, and BA and SA. Piper, Piperonylic
acid; -meg, -megaspermin. A duplicate experiment gave essentially
the same results.
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BY-2 tobacco cells were elicited in presence of 10 µM
piperonylic acid with or without exogenous unlabeled BA (100 µM) for 12 h. Pulse labeling was conducted with
[14C]t-CA during the last hour of
elicitation. As expected, the addition of exogenous free BA led to an
increase in the endogenous pool of free BA (Fig.
5A). However, levels of free SA were not
much enhanced by free BA addition (Fig. 5A).

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Figure 5.
Effect of the addition of unlabeled BA on the
levels of free t-CA, BA, and SA (A) and on the specific
radioactivities associated to the free forms of t-CA, BA,
and SA (B) after labeling with
[14C]t-CA. BY-2 tobacco cells were
treated simultaneously for 12 h with 50 nM
-megaspermin and 10 µM piperonylic acid in
presence (white bars) or in absence (black bars) of 100 µM unlabeled BA.
[14C]t-CA (2.2 µmol, 4.5 mCi
mmol 1) was added during the last hour of
elicitation. a and b correspond to the results of two independent
experiments.
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If free BA is a direct precursor of SA, the addition of unlabeled BA
should result in a reduction of the specific radioactivity associated
to SA. In the presence of exogenous unlabeled BA, the specific
radioactivity of free BA was very significantly reduced but
unexpectedly, the specific radioactivity of free SA was not lowered
(Fig. 5B). When tobacco cells were elicited in presence of exogenous
BA, the specific radioactivity of free BA was actually 10-fold lower
compared with that of free SA (Fig. 5B). However, these results do not
exclude conjugated forms of BA as SA precursors. The specific activity
of conjugated BA was determined in elicited cells in presence of
piperonylic acid and [14C]t-CA and
appeared to be in the same range (155 dpm
nmol 1) in presence or in absence of exogenous
unlabeled BA.
Identification of Conjugated BA as Benzoyl-Glc in Elicited BY
Tobacco Cells
The strong accumulation of conjugated BA in elicited cells
prompted us to examine more closely the nature of this conjugate. The
presence of BA conjugate(s) was first established by measuring an
increase in the amount of free BA after saponification of an extract of
elicited tobacco cells or TMV-infected tobacco leaves with 1 N NaOH at room temperature. Treatment of these extracts with -glucosidase from almond released the same amount of free BA as
base hydrolysis, indicating that the BA conjugate is probably benzoyl-Glc (data not shown). To further identify the conjugate, BY
tobacco cells were elicited in presence of 10 µM
piperonylic acid for 11 h and then fed
[14C]t-CA for 1 h. Thin-layer
chromatography (TLC) analysis of a methanolic extract of these
cells showed a strong incorporation of radioactivity into a compound
comigrating with an authentic standard of benzoyl-Glc. The compound
comigrating with benzoyl-Glc (RF = 0.7) was
eluted and further purified by C18 reversed-phase HPLC, where it
co-eluted again with chemically-synthesized benzoyl-Glc (retention
time = 22.8 min; Fig. 6A). UV
spectrum of the compound purified from tobacco cells (peak 1) and of
reference benzoyl-Glc were identical with max, 233.8 nm, and 275.1 nm (Fig. 6A). The compound corresponding to the HPLC peak 1 was also
subjected to hydrolysis with trifluoroacetic acid. After hydrolysis,
the sugar moiety was identified as Glc by TLC (data not shown).
Furthermore, the chemical structure of the BA conjugate was confirmed
by hydrolysis with -glucosidase of the compound eluting at 22.8 min.
After -glucosidase digestion, the peak at 22.8 min disappeared, and a new peak at 36 min became apparent (Fig. 6B). The retention time of
this product was identical to that of free BA as demonstrated by
cochromatography with authentic BA. The product released by -glucosidase also displayed the same UV spectrum as free BA with max, 229.1 nm, and 272.7 nm (Fig. 6B).

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Figure 6.
Identification of benzoyl-Glc in elicited BY
tobacco cells. Cell cultures were treated simultaneously with 50 nM -megaspermin and 10 µM piperonylic acid
for 12 h. [14C]t-CA (2.2 µmol, 4.5 mCi mmol 1) was added during the
last hour of elicitation. Methanolic extract of elicited cells was
separated by TLC and further purified by HPLC (see "Material and
Methods"). A, HPLC profile of the benzoyl-Glc fraction separated by
TLC. Peak 1 was identified as benzoyl-Glc on the basis of its retention
time and its UV spectrum. B, HPLC profile of the peak 1 after
hydrolysis with -glucosidase from almond. The aglycon was identified
as free BA on the basis of its retention time and its UV
spectrum.
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Together, these results demonstrate that BA is esterified to Glc
and that benzoyl-Glc is the major BA conjugate in elicited tobacco
cells because all the BA conjugate pool could be hydrolyzed by
-glucosidase, which specifically releases -linked terminal D-Glc.
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DISCUSSION |
Elevated levels of conjugated BA (100 µg
g 1 fresh weight) have been reported to occur in
healthy leaves of tobacco cv Xanthi-nc and the depletion of this large
BA conjugate pool observed after TMV inoculation of tobacco plants
incubated at 32°C, and then shifted to 24°C was shown to be
correlated with a rapid increase in free BA and SA levels (Yalpani et
al., 1993 ). This observation has led to the proposal that SA
accumulation does not necessarily require de novo BA synthesis from
t-CA and that free BA is the immediate precursor of SA
biosynthesis (Yalpani et al., 1993 ; Leon et al., 1995a ). Our aim was to
investigate the precise role of BA as a precursor of SA biosynthesis in
tobacco undergoing HR to TMV and in tobacco cell suspension cultures
elicited with -megaspermin, a system mimicking the natural HR in
plants (Baillieul et al., 1996 ).
In the present study, we detected the presence of a rather small
pre-existing pool of conjugated BA in healthy tobacco with levels
approximately 20-fold lower than those previously reported (Yalpani et
al., 1993 ). However, in cucumber and potato the BA pool was below the
limit of detection even after pathogen infection (Meuwly et al., 1995 ;
Coquoz et al., 1998 ). We can offer no clear explanation to such
discrepancies in the determination of BA levels in healthy tobacco
leaves, but the sole cinnamic acid derivative known to be naturally in
the range of 100 µg g 1 fresh weight in
tobacco is 5-caffeoyl quinic acid (Fritig et al., 1972 ; Tanguy and
Martin, 1972 ). It is known that levels of BA in plant materials are
difficult to determine accurately and unambiguously (Coquoz et al.,
1998 ). Moreover, we found that free BA was steam distillable and
was lost when reducing the samples to dryness in vacuo (see "Material
and Methods"). We have developed a specific separation method that
resolves BA from all other components of the plant extracts. This
method implies first a fractionation by TLC allowing the separation of
BA from co-eluting cinnamic acid derivatives in tobacco extracts and
second, an HPLC analysis using sensitive UV detection. With this
procedure, we were able to monitor for the first time the kinetics of
accumulation of free and conjugated BA (a) in tobacco expressing the HR
under natural conditions and (b) after treatment of cell cultures with an elicitor of defense responses (Figs. 1A and 2A). In both model systems, a massive build-up of conjugated forms of BA was induced, while free BA was scarcely increased, reflecting either a rapid conversion of the free form to conjugated forms or its low release from
the induced bound forms. Kinetics of SA accumulation paralleled those
of BA in the two model systems. In contrast to our results, dramatic
increase in free BA was reported in TMV-inoculated tobacco leaves
incubated at 32°C and then shifted to 24°C (Yalpani et al., 1993 ).
This difference may reflect the use of different experimental conditions, i.e. temperature shift versus natural conditions of HR
induction. BA accumulation was also more sustained in
-megaspermin-treated cells than in TMV-infected leaves, where
conjugated BA levels tend to decrease after 4 d. This difference
may result from a more pronounced extent of cell death in infected
leaves compared with elicited cells.
In vivo labeling studies with exogenously applied precursors have
implicated free BA as the direct precursor of SA in tobacco and
cucumber. Dorey et al. (1999) showed that application of DPI to
elicitor-treated tobacco cells prevented SA accumulation. Here, we
demonstrate that the inhibition of SA production after elicitation in
presence of DPI was strictly correlated with the accumulation of higher
BA levels, mainly as conjugated BA. Such loss of function experiments
strongly support a role for endogenous BA as SA precursor in planta.
Moreover, the mechanism by which DPI inhibits elicitor-induced SA
accumulation in tobacco cells has to be determined. DPI is a suicide
inhibitor of the mammalian NADPH oxidase (O'Donnell et al., 1993 )
producing superoxide anion that is subsequently dismutated to water.
Our results demonstrate that active oxygen species produced after
elicitation are necessary for the conversion of BA to SA. In support of
this is the fact that exogenous hydrogen peroxide, which induced the
accumulation of SA in tobacco, has been proposed to activate SA
biosynthesis by stimulating the BA2H activity converting BA to SA (Leon
et al., 1995a ). Another possibility is that the conversion of BA to SA
occurs via the iron-driven Fenton reaction producing hydroxyl radicals
that can attack aromatic molecules such as BA to generate hydroxylated
compounds (Gutteridge, 1987 ).
To assess the exact role of free BA in SA biosynthesis, we conducted in
vivo radiolabeling experiments using
[14C]t-CA as precursor in elicited
BY-2 tobacco cells. Previous studies have used labeled t-CA
or Phe as precursors to elucidate SA biosynthesis. However, feeding Phe
or t-CA to uninoculated tobacco did not result in SA
accumulation (Yalpani et al., 1993 ). It is possible that exogenous
t-CA is rapidly metabolized by esterification with Glc as in
elicitor-treated Phaseolus vulgaris cells (Edwards et al., 1990 ). In TMV-infected tobacco seedlings or infected cucumber plants,
no radioactivity was found in the putative SA biosynthetic intermediates after feeding
[14C]t-CA or
[14C]Phe (Yalpani et al., 1993 ; Meuwly et al.,
1995 ). In cucumber, addition of unlabeled p-coumarate was
found necessary to drive high amounts of
[14C]Phe toward the synthesis of SA rather than
to the lignin and phytoalexin precursors (Meuwly et al., 1995 ).
We have previously shown that piperonylic acid, a specific in
vitro inhibitor of cinnamate-4-hydroxylase, decreases the
formation of p-CO in elicited tobacco cells and the
accumulation of the 7-hydroxylated coumarin scopoletin in TMV-infected
tobacco leaves (Schalk et al., 1998 ). In the present study, treatment
of tobacco cells with piperonylic acid alone triggered a small but
significant increase of SA levels (0.25 ± 0.02 versus 0.12 ± 0.01 µg g 1 fresh weight in control cells),
showing that the metabolic flow in the SA pathway was very low in
nonelicited cells. In contrast, simultaneous addition of piperonylic
acid and t-CA resulted in a strong accumulation of SA
compared with cells treated with t-CA alone. This
demonstrates that the availability of t-CA, rather than the
conversion of BA to SA, is limiting for SA formation. This assumption
is reinforced by the fact that exogenous BA triggers the formation of
SA, whereas t-CA does not (Yalpani et al., 1993 ; Pierrel,
Atanassova, and Saindrenan, unpublished data). Rasmussen and
Dixon (1999) have also shown that the addition of t-CA to PAL-overexpressing cells resulted in higher levels of hydroxycinnamic acid derivatives with no modification of the SA pool. Piperonylic acid
thus reveals the importance of the distribution of the metabolic flow
between the C6-C3 and the C6-C1 pathways and provides the first tool
available for redirecting the main metabolic flow toward the synthesis
of SA.
Labeling experiments in the presence of piperonylic acid clearly
demonstrated the conversion of t-CA to BA and SA in elicited tobacco cells. However, the specific activity of free BA was much lower
compared with that of free SA in the presence of exogenous unlabeled
free BA (Fig. 5). This result does not follow the basic principles of
radioisotope labeling of intermediates in a biosynthetic pathway, which
predicts that the specific radioactivity of a precursor is higher than
the specific radioactivity of its product, because of the dilution of
the isotope within each intermediate pool, provided that the initial
radioactive precursor is fed by pulse labeling. On the contrary, our
data show that the conversion of [14C]t-CA to SA is not affected by
the addition of unlabeled BA. Recent experiments using
[13C]Phe in temperature-shift experiments with
TMV-inoculated tobacco leaf discs have also shown that SA was to some
extent more labeled than BA (Ribnicky et al., 1998 ). Hence, it appears
that in elicited tobacco cells, the free form of BA is probably not the
key intermediate in SA biosynthesis. However, other studies showed that
feeding BA to untreated tobacco resulted in an efficient conversion to SA (Yalpani et al., 1993 ). Therefore, our results suggest that in
elicited tobacco cells, SA is mainly produced from an alternative pathway that does not involve free BA.
A plausible explanation is that the metabolic pathway to SA proceeds
through conjugated form(s) of BA. This hypothesis is reinforced by the
fact that the specific activity of conjugated BA was in the same range
as the specific activity of free SA and was unaffected by the addition
of free BA.
The most likely hypothesis is that SA is synthesized via the formation
of CoA thioesters, in a mechanism analogous to the -oxidation of
fatty acids. In L. erythrorhizon, the enzymatic formation of
p-hydroxybenzoic acid from p-CO in cell-free
extracts is thought to proceed exclusively via
p-coumaroyl-CoA (Löscher and Heide, 1994 ). SA
biosynthesis via CoA thioesters would first involve the formation of
cinnamoyl-CoA. It is interesting that the conversion of cinnamoyl-CoA
to benzoyl-CoA has already been shown to occur in mammals (Mao et al.,
1994 ). In addition, benzoyl-CoA is an intermediate in the synthesis of
dianthramide phytoalexins in elicited cells of Dianthus
caryophillus (Reinhard and Matern, 1989 ). This benzoyl-CoA
thioester could represent in tobacco the immediate precursor of
salicyloyl-CoA, which in turn could be converted to SA by thioesterases
(Fig. 7).

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Figure 7.
Proposed pathways of SA biosynthesis in tobacco
involving CoA thioesters or Glc esters. Radioisotope dilution
experiments indicate that free BA is not the major intermediate of SA
biosynthesis. The metabolic pathway to SA may therefore proceed via
conjugated forms of BA. In the branch involving Glc esters,
salicyloyl-Glc ester might represent a biosynthetic intermediate,
whereas SA glucoside would be a storage form. GTase:
glucosyltransferase (UDP-Glc:cinnamic acid
glucosyltransferase).
|
|
We have identified the bulk of the pool of esterified BA as benzoyl-Glc
in elicited cells, but additional BA conjugates with a rapid turnover
and which do not accumulate may also exist in tobacco. The
glucosylation of BA may be regarded as a detoxication reaction
producing a less reactive form of storage. However, we cannot rule out
the possibility that Glc esters of cinnamic acid derivatives are
intermediates in SA biosynthesis, since earlier investigations with
Vanilla planifolia cell cultures showed that the formation
of vanillic acid proceeded via the formation of Glc esters of cinnamic
acids (Funk and Brodelius, 1990 ). Moreover, we have recently
characterized a tobacco glucosyltransferase rapidly induced during the
HR to TMV and acting on phenylpropanoid derivatives, particularly on
t-CA (Fraissinet-Tachet et al., 1998 ). Tanaka and Kojima
(1991) also reported the characterization of an enzyme from
Ipomoea batatas hydroxylating p-coumaroyl-Glc at the C-3 position. This makes possible that salicyloyl-Glc ester previously identified in tobacco (Edwards, 1994 ) is synthesized directly from
benzoyl-Glc (Fig. 7).
In conclusion, our data show that SA accumulation requires de novo BA
synthesis from t-CA and are in accordance with previous studies reporting that treatment with PAL inhibitors reduced the accumulation of SA in infected tobacco (Dorey et al., 1997 ),
Arabidopsis (Mauch-Mani and Slusarenko, 1996 ), and cucumber (Meuwly et
al., 1995 ). However, free BA is probably not the major intermediate in
SA biosynthesis, which may involve conjugated forms of BA. Future
studies will be directed at elucidating which BA conjugates, i.e. CoA
thioester or Glc ester represent activated intermediates in SA biosynthesis.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Biological Materials and Treatments
Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv Samsun NN) was
maintained in growth chambers at 25°C with a 16-h photoperiod. For
TMV infection, 4-week-old tobacco plants were inoculated by rubbing
fully expanded leaves with a virus suspension (0.2 µg
mL 1). At different times after treatment, leaf tissue was
harvested, quickly frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at 80°C
until analysis.
BY-cultured tobacco cells (derived from N. tabacum cv
Bright Yellow) were a gift of Professor Clarence Ryan (Institute of Biological Chemistry, Washington State University, Pullmann). Cells were grown at pH 5.8 in Murashige and Skoog medium
(Fraissinet-Tachet et al., 1998 ). Six-day-old BY cells were induced
with 50 nM -megaspermin, a proteinaceous HR-inducing
elicitor isolated from Phytophthora megasperma
(Baillieul et al., 1996 ). For inhibition experiments, 5 µM DPI was added 5 min before treatment with
-megaspermin.
For in vivo labeling experiments, the homogenous, synchronized tobacco
BY-2 cell suspension was used instead of BY cells. BY-2 cells were
maintained as described by Nagata et al. (1992) . Synchronization of the
cells was achieved according to Reichheld et al. (1995) with 3 mg
mL 1 aphidicolin and 1.5 mg mL 1 propyzamide.
Elicitor treatment of cell suspension cultures was performed 48 h
after aphidicolin treatment with 50 nM -megaspermin. Piperonylic acid (10-µM final concentration) was added at
the same time as -megaspermin. Eleven hours after elicitation in presence or in absence of piperonylic acid, BY-2 tobacco cells (20-mL
batches) were incubated with 2.2 µmol of
[14C]t-CA (4.5 mCi mmol 1).
After 1 h, the cells were washed with Murashige and Skoog medium, harvested, and frozen in liquid nitrogen. For radioisotope dilution experiments, unlabeled BA (100-µM final concentration)
was added at the same time as -megaspermin.
Chemicals
BA, t-CA, p-CO, DPI, and
piperonylic acid were from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Quentin Fallavier,
France). Benzoyl-Glc was a generous gift from Dr. Philippe
Desbordes (Aventis, Lyon, France) and was synthesized as described by
Klick and Herrmann (1988) . [7-14C]BA was obtained from
NEN (Zaventem, Belgium). [3-14C]t-CA was
from Isotopchim (Ganagobie-Peyruis, France). -megaspermin was kindly
provided by Dr. Serge Kauffmann (Institut de Biologie Moléculaire des Plantes-Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique, Strasbourg, France).
Extraction and HPLC Analysis of t-CA,
p-CO, BA, and SA
Plant material (2 g) was extracted with 4 mL of 90%
(v/v) MeOH. After centrifugation, the residue was extracted
again with 100% (v/v) MeOH. The combined extracts were reduced
to dryness under nitrogen instead of in vacuo because free BA was found
to be steam distillable. Indeed, the evaporation in vacuo to dryness of
a 90% (v/v) methanolic solution of radiolabeled BA showed that 95% of the radioisotope was recovered in the distillate.
[14C]BA (10 nCi, 17.5 mCi mmol 1) was added
to each sample before extraction as internal standard for correction of
losses. For each sample, the dried extract was resuspended in 1 mL of
water at 50°C. For free BA analysis, samples were acidified to 1 N HCl and extracted twice with 2 volumes of ether. For
determination of conjugated BA, extracts were saponified with 1 N NaOH for 30 min at room temperature. After neutralization and acidification, samples were extracted with ether and used for total
BA determination. Ether phases were dried under nitrogen. Conjugated BA
content was assigned as the difference between total and free BA.
Extracts were redissolved in 200 µL of ethyl acetate, and BA was
first separated by TLC on 0.25-mm silicagel plates developed in
toluene:acetic acid:water (6:7:3, v/v/v, upper phase). Compounds
comigrating with an authentic standard of BA (RF = 0.62) were eluted twice with 90% (v/v) MeOH at 50°C. The
methanolic solution was evaporated under nitrogen before HPLC analysis.
Radioactivity was determined by liquid scintillation counting of an
aliquot sample.
Total t-CA and p-CO were extracted
according to the same protocol except that the extract was submitted to
both alkaline and acid (2 N HCl final concentration, at
80°C during 40 min) hydrolyses. Free and total SA were extracted as
described by Baillieul et al. (1995) .
HPLC analysis of SA, BA, t-CA, and p-CO
was performed on a 5-µm C18 Nova Pak column (150 × 4 mm,
Waters, St. Quentin-en-Yvelines, France), using a gradient of
CH3CN in 25 mM
NaH2PO4, pH 3, at a flow rate of 1 mL
min 1. The gradient was 5% to 22% for 35 min and then
22% to 80% for 1 min. BA, t-CA, and
p-CO were detected by UV spectrophotometry at 229, 290, and 280 nm, respectively. SA was detected by fluorescence ( ex = 315 nm, em = 405 nm).
Identification of the compounds was based on co-chromatography with
authentic standards coupled to a photodiode array detector (maxplot
between 230 and 400 nm, Waters Millenium software). Compounds were
quantified by comparison with reference standards. For radiolabeling
experiments, fractions of 200 µL were collected and counted in a
liquid scintillation counter.
Identification of Benzoyl-Glc in BY Tobacco Cells
BY tobacco cells were simultaneously treated with 50 nM -megaspermin and 10 µM piperonylic acid
for 11 h and then fed [14C]t-CA for
1 h. Cells (20 g) were harvested by vacuum filtration and
extracted twice with 90% (v/v) MeOH. Aqueous MeOH was
evaporated under reduced pressure at 30°C. The dried residue was
resuspended in 100% (v/v) MeOH and analyzed by TLC on 0.25-mm
silicagel plates developed in n-butanol:acetic
acid:water (4:1:1, v/v/v). Radioactivity on TLC plates was visualized
with a Bio-Imager Analyzer (Fuji, Tokyo). Radioactive compounds
comigrating with an authentic standard of benzoyl-Glc
(RF = 0.7) were eluted from silicagel with 90% (v/v) MeOH at 50°C. After evaporation, compounds were
redissolved in 250 µL of 5% (v/v) acetonitrile in 25 mM NaH2PO4, pH 3. One aliquot was
applied on a 5-µm C18 Uptisphere HPLC column (150 × 4 mm,
Interchrom, Montluçon, France) and eluted in 25 mM
NaH2PO4, pH 3, with an increasing
CH3CN gradient (0-5 min, 5% [v/v] CH3CN; 5-40 min, 5%-22% [v/v] CH3CN; 41-46 min, 80%
[v/v] CH3CN at a flow rate of 1 mL min 1).
Benzoyl-Glc was detected by UV spectrophotometry at 229 nm. One aliquot
of the HPLC peak corresponding to the compound co-eluting with
reference benzoyl-Glc was hydrolyzed with 2 M
trifluoroacetic acid for 2 h at 100°C. The resulting sugars were
separated by TLC on 0.1-mm cellulose plates developed in
n-butanol:acetic acid:water (3:1:1, v/v/v) followed by
ethyl acetate:pyridine:water (10:4:3, v/v/v). Detection of sugar spots
with aniline hydrogen-phtalate was performed as described by Franke et
al. (1998) . Another aliquot of the HPLC peak was incubated for 2 h
at 37°C with 1 unit of -glucosidase from almond (Sigma-Aldrich) in
50 mM sodium acetate buffer, pH 5.5, and analyzed by HPLC
as described above.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We are grateful to Dr. S. Kauffmann for kindly providing the
-megaspermin elicitin. Dr. T. Heitz is thanked for critical reading
of the manuscript.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received April 3, 2000; modified June 21, 2000; accepted August 15, 2000.
1
This work was supported by the Aventis
fellowships as part of the Bioavenir program with the contribution of
the French Ministry of Education and Research (doctoral to M.-A.P. and
postdoctoral to R.A.) and by the French Ministry of Education and
Research (grant no. 97-5-11603 to J.C.).
2
These authors contributed equally to the paper.
3
Present address: ERS CNRS 6099, Batiment Botanique, 40, avenue du Recteur Pineau, 86022 Poitiers cedex, France.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail
patrick.saindrenan{at}ibmp-ulp.u-strasbg.fr; fax
33-3-88-61-44-42.
 |
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