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Plant Physiol, November 2001, Vol. 127, pp. 1089-1101
The Role of NDR1 in Avirulence Gene-Directed
Signaling and Control of Programmed Cell Death in
Arabidopsis1
Allan D.
Shapiro* and
Chu
Zhang
Delaware Agricultural Experiment Station, Department of Plant and
Soil Sciences, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, University
of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19717-1303
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ABSTRACT |
Arabidopsis plants containing the ndr1-1 mutation
are incapable of mounting a hypersensitive response to bacteria
carrying avrRpt2, but show an exaggerated cell death
response to bacteria carrying avrB (Century et al.,
1995). We show here that ndr1-1 plants are severely
impaired in induction of systemic acquired resistance and
PR1-driven transcription of a reporter gene in response
to Pseudomonas syringae strains carrying
avrRpt2 but not in response to P.
syringae carrying avrB. The
ndr1-1 mutation also impaired salicylic acid (SA)
accumulation in response to treatments that produced reactive oxygen
species (ROS) and impaired induction of systemic acquired resistance in
response to in situ production of ROS. Hydrogen peroxide accumulated in
wild-type Arabidopsis leaves beginning 4 to 7 h postinoculation
with P. syringae carrying either avrRpt2
or avrB. In ndr1-1 plants, P. syringae carrying avrRpt2 elicited no detectable
hydrogen peroxide production. Hydrogen peroxide production in response
to bacteria carrying avrB was similar to that of
Columbia in kinetics but of lesser intensity at early time points.
These data are interpreted to indicate that NDR1 links
ROS generation to SA production and that the phenotypic consequences of
the ndr1-1 mutation are caused by a reduced ability to
accumulate SA upon pathogen infection.
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INTRODUCTION |
Exquisite specificity is a hallmark
of gene-for-gene disease resistance. Individual plant lines carry a
specific complement of disease resistance (R) genes. Plants
resist infection only if the pathogen carries a specific avirulence
(avr) gene that is the matched cognate of one of these plant
R genes. Mutant plants with nonfunctional alleles of a
particular R gene fail to recognize a pathogen carrying the
corresponding avr gene, and disease ensues (Parker et al.,
2000 ; Staskawicz, 2001 ). With bacterial pathogens, this specificity of
molecular recognition in at least some cases is associated with direct
binding of the plant R gene product to the bacterial avr gene product
(Scofield et al., 1996 ; Tang et al., 1996 ). Recognition takes place
inside the plant cell (Gopalan et al., 1996 ; Leister et al., 1996 )
following export of the avr gene product from the bacteria via a type
III secretion system (Pirhonen et al., 1996 ; Mudgett and
Staskawicz, 1998 ).
In contrast to the specificity of upstream molecular recognition
processes, downstream plant responses to pathogen infection often bear
strong similarities despite being elicited by vastly different types of
pathogen. Gene-for-gene disease resistance is usually accompanied by
rapid cell death (the hypersensitive response [HR]; Klement, 1982 ) in
plant cells that are in direct contact with pathogen (Turner and
Novacky, 1974 ). Uninoculated regions of the plant are induced to
display an immunity to further pathogen challenge termed systemic
acquired resistance (SAR). SAR protects plants from a broad spectrum of
pathogens including those very different from the original (Ryals et
al., 1994 ). A set of genes termed "pathogenesis related"
(PR) are induced both locally and systemically (Lotan and
Fluhr, 1990 ). Some PR gene products have been shown to possess
antimicrobial activity (van Loon, 1997 ).
Previous analysis of disease resistance signaling has identified
two second messengers: reactive oxygen species (ROS) and salicylic acid
(SA). An NADPH oxidase activity related to that of mammalian
neutrophils is thought to produce superoxide in an oxidative burst
early in the response to pathogen (Doke and Ohashi, 1988 ; Mehdy, 1994 ).
Both enzymatic and nonenzymatic steps subsequently will convert the
superoxide to other types of ROS (Sutherland, 1991 ). It is not known
which type of ROS is critical for disease resistance. However, exposing
plants to treatments such as UV light or ozone that generate multiple
types of ROS induces most facets of the resistance response (Levine et
al., 1994 ; Yalpani et al., 1994 ; Green and Fluhr, 1995 ; Sharma et al.,
1996 ).
SA is found in plants mostly as a -glucoside (Enyedi et al., 1992 ;
Malamy et al., 1992 ). Coincident with the disease resistance response,
levels of free SA, and subsequently the conjugated forms of SA, rise
dramatically (Yalpani et al., 1993 ). Transgenic plants engineered with
nahG, a gene that encodes salicylate hydroxylase that
degrades SA, show enhanced pathogen growth and impaired induction of
SAR and PR genes (Gaffney et al., 1993 ; Delaney et al.,
1994 ). Transgenic nahG plants show impaired gene-for-gene
resistance to disease caused by some pathogens (Gaffney et al., 1993 ),
but not others (Brading et al., 2000 ). Arabidopsis nahG
plants do not show an HR to bacteria carrying avrRpt2 but do
show an HR to bacteria carrying avrRpm1 (Rate et al., 1999 ).
Both bacterial strains are avirulent on the Columbia parental line.
It is thought that SA acts downstream of ROS production because the
ability of exogenous ROS to induce resistance responses is dependent on
SA accumulation (Bi et al., 1995 ; Neuenschwander et al., 1995 ).
However, SA also appears to potentiate both ROS production and cell
death in the response of cultured soybean cell suspensions to avirulent
Pseudomonas syringae in what has been termed
"agonist-dependent gain control" (Shirasu et al., 1997 ). Other
experiments in Arabidopsis also support a role for SA in potentiating
defense responses (Weymann et al., 1995 ; Mauch-Mani and
Slusarenko, 1996 ; for discussion, see Shapiro, 2000 ). Nitric oxide has also been implicated in disease resistance signaling (Delledonne et al., 1998 ; Durner et al., 1998 ), and mammalian precedents suggest that it could function synergistically with ROS
(Halliwell et al., 1999 ).
Mutations in NDR1 compromise resistance to numerous strains
of P. syringae and Peronospora parasitica. Mutant
ndr1 plants exhibit an exaggerated cell death response upon
inoculation with bacteria carrying avrB, avrRpm1,
or avrPphB despite being unable to restrict multiplication
of these bacteria or resist disease caused by these bacteria. It is
interesting that the HR of ndr1 mutant plants is strain
specific in that bacteria carrying avrRpt2 do not elicit an
HR (Century et al., 1995 ). NDR1 encodes a small, highly
basic, putative integral membrane protein (Century et al., 1997 ).
Transcription of NDR1 is induced by pathogen infection at
very early time points. However, the sequence has not revealed a
precise biochemical activity for NDR1.
Arabidopsis mutants are a valuable tool for understanding which of the
myriad of responses correlated with gene-for-gene disease resistance
make significant contributions to limiting pathogen growth and
preventing disease (Shapiro, 2000 ). The strain specificity of the
effects of the ndr1 mutations on the HR led us to examine the strain specificity of other responses correlated with gene-for-gene disease resistance. These data suggest that the ndr1-1
mutation blocks ROS-dependent SA accumulation. This hypothesis is
further supported by results of experiments using in situ ROS
generation. This reduced ability to accumulate SA appears to
impair agonist-dependent gain control of the HR. These effects explain
the phenotypic consequences of the ndr1-1 mutation.
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RESULTS |
PR1-Driven Transcription in ndr1-1 versus
Columbia
The following approach was taken to determine the strain
specificity of ndr1 effects on responses correlated with
gene-for-gene disease resistance: P. syringae bacteria
carrying avrB were chosen as a representative of the class
of bacteria that gave an exaggerated cell death response (Century et
al., 1995 ). These strains were compared with P. syringae
carrying avrRpt2 for their effects on ndr1-1 and
Columbia plants. The avr genes were carried on the same
stable plasmid vector. When informative, multiple bacterial strain
backgrounds were used in an experiment. The strain backgrounds P. syringae pv tomato DC3000 (DC3000) and P. syringae pv
maculicola 4326 (P.s.m. 4326) are pathogenic
strains that multiply in Arabidopsis leaves. P. syringae pv
glycinea Race 5 (P.s.g. Race 5) is a soybean pathogen that does not multiply in Arabidopsis leaves or cause disease
on Arabidopsis (Century et al., 1995 ). The ndr1-1 allele was
chosen for these experiments because it was known to be a null allele
(Century et al., 1997 ).
First, we investigated whether ndr1-1 mutant plants showed
differences from Columbia in PR gene transcription in
response to bacteria carrying avrRpt2 or avrB.
The PR1 gene is the most tightly regulated of the
Arabidopsis PR genes (Uknes et al., 1992 ). A transgenic line
carrying the -glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene under the
control of the PR1 gene promoter in a Columbia background
was generated (see "Materials and Methods"). This line showed high
uniform GUS expression in response to the same conditions that induce
transcription of the native PR1 gene (Uknes et al., 1992 ).
This transgene was crossed into the ndr1-1 background. These
lines were designated Col-0:PR1/GUS and
ndr1-1:PR1/GUS.
These lines were used to investigate PR1-driven
transcription in response to bacterial inoculation. Leaves of either
Col-0:PR1/GUS or ndr1-1:PR1/GUS plants were hand
inoculated with 1 × 106 bacteria
mL 1, carrying avrRpt2, avrB, or the
empty pVSP61 vector. Blank inoculations were performed using 10 mM MgCl2. Bacteria-induced
GUS activity was assessed using a fluorogenic substrate (see
"Materials and Methods"). The data are presented in Figure
1.

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Figure 1.
Bacteria-induced PR1-driven
transcription in ndr1-1 versus Columbia. 1 × 106 bacteria mL 1 were
hand inoculated into leaves of Arabidopsis carrying a transgene
expressing GUS under control of the PR1 promoter in either
the Columbia or the ndr1-1 background. Each bar represents a
mean of data from 11 to 12 leaves. All data are expressed in arbitrary
fluorescence units. Data are normalized in that an identically sized
leaf area was sampled in each case. Differences between means were
assessed for statistical significance using Student's t
tests. Lowercase letters indicate which differences between means were
judged significant at the P < 0.01 level. These
comparisons were made separately for the two experimental time points.
PR1-driven transcription induced by DC3000·avrB
was significantly greater than that induced by
DC3000·avrRpt2 on ndr1-1 plants at both time
points if significance was judged at the P < 0.05 level (not pictured).
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The most striking result from this experiment was that
ndr1-1:PR1/GUS plants inoculated with bacteria carrying
avrRpt2 showed negligible GUS activity. This impairment
relative to Columbia plants was seen at both time points. Replicate
experiments with P.s.g. Race 5 strains gave similar results
(data not shown). All differences were judged significant at the
P < 0.01 level using Student's t tests.
Experiments using bacteria carrying avrB had very different
results. DC3000·avrB elicited comparable GUS activity in
the two lines at the 2-d time point, although the
ndr1-1:PR1/GUS response was significantly lower (Student's
t test, P < 0.01) at the 1-d time point.
Replicate experiments with P.s.g. Race 5 strains failed to
show significant differences due to the ndr1-1 mutation at either time point (data not shown). Thus, the bacterial strains that
did not elicit an HR on ndr1-1 plants caused negligible
induction of PR1-driven transcription, whereas the bacterial
strains that could give a vigorous cell death response on
ndr1-1 induced PR1-driven transcription.
The behavior of the strains carrying the empty vector was also worthy
of note. DC3000·pVSP61 induced only low-level GUS activity in
Col-0:PR1/GUS plants at the 1-d time point, but high level activity by the 2-d time point. The data from both time points appear
to show impairment in the response of the ndr1-1:PR1/GUS line. Differences between the Arabidopsis lines were significant at the
P < 0.01 (Student's t test) level only
with the data from the 2-d time point. P.s.g. Race
5·pVSP61 induced only low-level GUS activity in both lines at both
time points (data not shown).
Biological Induction of SAR in ndr1-1 versus
Columbia
Next, we investigated the relative ability of the two bacterial
strains to induce SAR on ndr1-1 and Columbia plants. SAR can be assessed in Arabidopsis as the ability of a primary inoculation with
bacteria to inhibit multiplication of bacteria introduced later as a
secondary challenge (Cameron et al., 1994 ). P. syringae do
not move systemically in Arabidopsis; therefore, excision of primary
inoculated leaves prior to secondary challenge allows monitoring growth
of only the challenge bacteria.
The data from one representative set of experiments is shown in Figure
2. In all cases, data from plants that
had received a primary inoculation with bacteria (squares) is shown in
comparison with data from plants where 10 mM
MgCl2 was used as a blank primary inoculation
(circles). SAR was judged to be occurring if comparisons of means
showed, at minimum, significant differences (Student's t
test, P < 0.1) at either the d-2 or day-4 time point
in all replicates of the experiment. Growth of challenge bacteria in plants that received blank primary inoculations was statistically indistinguishable (Student's t test, P > 0.5) from growth of challenge bacteria in plants which did not receive
any primary inoculation (data not shown).

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Figure 2.
Biological induction of SAR in ndr1-1
versus Columbia. Columbia plants (solid lines) or ndr1-1
plants (dashed lines) were inoculated with bacteria (squares for data
points) or a MgCl2 blank (circles for data
points) 2 d prior to inoculation with P. syringae pv
tomato DC3000 carrying only the empty pVSP61 vector. Primary inoculated
leaves were excised prior to secondary inoculation. Data points
represent means of triplicate determinations of in planta bacterial
growth at specified time points. A, P.s. tomato DC3000
carrying avrRpt2 used for primary inoculation with bacteria.
B, P.s. tomato DC3000 carrying avrB used for
primary inoculation with bacteria. C, P.s. tomato DC3000
carrying empty vector used for primary inoculation with bacteria.
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As evidenced by comparison of the solid lines in Figure 2A,
DC3000·avrRpt2 elicited a strong SAR response on Columbia
plants. Inoculation with this bacterial strain led to a 1.5 to 3 order of magnitude suppression of growth of the challenge bacteria. In
contrast, inoculation of ndr1-1 mutant plants with this
strain did not lead to SAR (compare dashed lines in Fig. 2A).
Inoculation of ndr1-1 mutant plants with
DC3000·avrB elicited a SAR response comparable in
magnitude to that shown by Columbia plants at the 2-d time point (Fig.
2B). The ndr1-1 response appears to be partially impaired
relative to Columbia at the 4-d time point. In conclusion, the
bacterial strain that does not elicit a HR on ndr1 mutant
plants also does not elicit SAR on ndr1-1. However, the
bacterial strain that elicited an exaggerated cell death response on
ndr1 mutant plants elicited SAR on ndr1-1, albeit to a lesser degree than on Columbia plants. The same qualitative trends
are seen if the experiment is performed using bacterial strains of a
P.s.g. Race 5 background rather than DC3000-based strains in
the primary inoculations (data not shown). All experiments shown in
Figure 2 were repeated an additional one to three times with consistent results.
Figure 2C shows results of experiments in which the bacterial strain
used in the primary inoculations carried only the empty pVSP61 vector
without a cloned avr gene. Comparison of the solid lines
Figure 2C indicates that the virulent bacterial strain
(DC3000·pVSP61) elicited a strong SAR response on Columbia,
comparable in magnitude with that elicited by
DC3000·avrRpt2. A reduced SAR response was shown by
ndr1-1 mutant plants (compare dashed lines). We conclude that SAR elicited by the virulent bacterial strain is partially NDR1-dependent.
In all experiments shown in Figure 2, DC3000·pVSP61 multiplies to a
greater extent in ndr1-1 plants than in Columbia,
irrespective of whether SAR has been induced. This behavior has been
previously documented and is correlated with increased severity of
disease symptoms (Century et al., 1995 ). Similar results have been
obtained with npr1 and eds mutants (Cao et al.,
1994 ; Rogers and Ausubel, 1997 ; Volko et al., 1998 ).
Bacteria-Induced Hydrogen Peroxide Production in
ndr1-1 versus Columbia
Arabidopsis ndr1-1 plants did not show the HR,
PR1-driven transcription, or SAR in response to bacteria
carrying avrRpt2. These responses were elicited by bacteria
carrying avrB. Therefore, signaling molecules implicated in
eliciting these responses were investigated. Arabidopsis leaf tissue
has been reported to release large amounts of ROS upon homogenization
(Wolfe et al., 2000 ). We have confirmed using several published tissue
homogenate methods for hydrogen peroxide quantitation that requisite
signal-to-noise and reproducibility was not obtainable from these
methods (data not shown). Instead, we have employed a recently
published in vivo method for hydrogen peroxide quantitation (Wolfe et
al., 2000 ). Leaves are infiltrated with
2',7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate (DCFH-DA), excised,
exposed to 365 nm of UV light, and photographed. The use of UV light
does not induce artifactual ROS production. The wavelength of UV light
used to excite the dichlorofluorescein (DCF) is of much lower energy
than that known to induce ROS production, this treatment lasts only 1 min, and photography is performed immediately afterward. This dye
fluoresces only upon oxidation to DCF, and is known to be oxidized in
Arabidopsis responding to P. syringae bacteria primarily by
hydrogen peroxide (Bass et al., 1983 ; Wolfe et al., 2000 ). DCF
fluorescence thus serves as a semiquantitative assay of hydrogen
peroxide levels. Evidence has been presented that both DCF and DCFH
will leak back into the apoplast following ester hydrolysis in the
cytoplasm (Wolfe et al., 2000 , and references therein). We have
confirmed these observations via confocal microscopy (data not shown).
As such, this assay does not distinguish between intracellular and extracellular pools of hydrogen peroxide.
Time courses of increase in DCF fluorescence are presented in Figure
3. The low background fluorescence seen
following inoculation with bacteria carrying the empty pVSP61 vector
was exclusively red chlorophyll fluorescence. A similar background was
seen on noninoculated half-leaves. As documented in Table
I, green, DCF fluorescence was first seen
in Columbia leaves at 4 to 7 h postinoculation, depending on
bacterial strain. The first signs of the macroscopic HR were seen 2 to
4 h later with bacteria carrying avrB, but as much as
9 h later with bacteria carrying avrRpt2. The intensity of DCF signal at time points prior to onset of the macroscopically visible HR was greater in Columbia plants inoculated with bacteria carrying avrB than in those inoculated with bacteria
carrying avrRpt2. This conclusion was confirmed in
replicates of the experiment shown in Figure 3 where this comparison
was made between leaves photographed at the identical time (data not
shown). Differences were very large with the DC3000 or the
P.s.m. 4326 backgrounds but were somewhat less pronounced
with the P.s.g. Race 5 background.

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Figure 3.
Biological induction of hydrogen peroxide
accumulation in ndr1-1 versus Columbia. Columbia or
ndr1-1 plants were inoculated with P. syringae pv
tomato DC3000 carrying a plasmid-borne copy of avrRpt2,
avrB, or only the empty pVSP61 vector. DCFH-DA was
inoculated 15 to 30 min prior to excising of the leaves at the
indicated time points for brief exposure to 365 nm of UV light followed
immediately by photography.
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Table I.
Kinetics of bacteria-induced hydrogen peroxide
accumulation and the HR in ndr1-1 versus Columbia
Units are time in hours for all data.
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By contrast, bacteria carrying avrRpt2 elicited no
detectable signal above background in ndr1-1 mutant plants.
DCF fluorescence of ndr1-1 mutant plants in response to
bacteria carrying avrB was similar to that of Columbia in
kinetics but of lesser intensity at early time points.
Bacteria-Induced SA Accumulation in ndr1-1 versus
Columbia
Next, we investigated SA levels in pathogen-infected
ndr1-1 versus Columbia plants. Preliminary attempts to use
DC3000-based strains allowed measurements of SA levels up to 70 µg of
total SA per gram fresh weight at 42 h postinoculation. All data
precisely mirrored the HR phenotypes in that the highest levels of SA
were seen only when programmed cell death was occurring (data not
shown). However, there were obvious pathogen-induced changes in leaf
water content during the experiment, even at the low levels of inoculum employed, with both virulent and avirulent strains of bacteria. Normalization based on fresh weight thus would not have allowed accurate comparisons between time points.
To obtain the most informative data possible, we switched to the
Psg Race 5-based strains. Because these strains are not
Arabidopsis pathogens, disturbances to leaf water content were
minimized. An inoculum of 1 × 106 bacteria
mL 1 was used throughout (this is sufficiently
low to minimize HR-related loss of water content), and time points were
taken at time zero, 12 h postinfiltration, and 42 h
postinfiltration. Means of data from three replicate experiments are
presented in Figure 4. Columbia plants
accumulate both free and total SA in response to all treatments. An
unexpectedly large response was seen to treatment with the MgCl2 blank and non-pathogen strain carrying only
the empty vector (see below for explanation). Nonetheless, the
accumulation of total SA was significantly greater in response to
bacteria carrying either avr gene as compared with the other
treatments. Two-way analyses of variance were used with data from the
42-h time point. Differences in means were found to be significant for
comparisons of avrRpt2 versus empty vector
(P < 0.001), avrB versus empty vector
(P < 0.1), avrRpt2 versus blank (P < 0.01), and avrB versus blank (P < 0.1).

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Figure 4.
Bacteria-induced SA accumulation in
ndr1-1 versus Columbia. 1 × 106
bacteria mL 1 of P.s.g. Race 5 carrying the specified avirulence gene were inoculated into leaves of
Columbia or ndr1-1 plants. Means of free (A) and total (B)
SA determinations for identical time points from three separate
experiments are presented. Lowercase letters indicate statistically
significant differences between these means (ANOVA, P < 0.1 or in some cases greater significance). These comparisons were
made separately for each time point.
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It is striking that ndr1-1 mutant plants showed greatly
reduced accumulation of both free and total SA at the 12-h time point relative to Columbia in response to all treatments. This impairment in
SA accumulation was also seen at the 42-h time point in response to
treatment with either the MgCl2 blank or the
non-pathogen strain carrying only the empty vector. However, by the
42-h time point, accumulation of free SA in response to bacteria
carrying either avr gene was comparable in ndr1-1
mutant plants with that in Columbia plants. Accumulation of total SA at
42 h in response to avirulent bacteria was less in
ndr1-1 mutant plants than in Columbia. However, impairment
in the response to avirulent bacteria was not seen to the same extent
as impairment in the response to the MgCl2 blank
or to the non-pathogen strain carrying only the empty vector. The
differences seen at this time point in ndr1-1 mutant plants between the responses to bacteria carrying avrRpt2 versus
avrB were not statistically significant (ANOVA,
P > 0.2).
UV-C Induction of SA Accumulation in ndr1-1 versus
Columbia
The production of SA in response to vacuum infiltration with the
MgCl2 blank would be explained if the treatment,
which involves exposure to anoxic conditions followed by rapid air
reperfusion, generated oxygen radicals. The impairment of
ndr1-1 plants in this response would then suggest that the
ndr1 block lies downstream of ROS production and upstream of
SA production. However, we could not detect hydrogen peroxide
production induced by vacuum infiltration using the DCF-DA method (data
not shown), most likely because it was low-level. The DCF-DA method can
detect integral accumulation of hydrogen peroxide over time. It would
be of greater sensitivity in experiments using a continuous inducer of
signaling such as bacteria than in this experiment.
Therefore, to test this hypothesis and validate these conclusions, we
used 254 nm of UV-C light as a noninvasive way to generate ROS in
planta (Yalpani et al., 1994 ; Green and Fluhr, 1995 ). Plants were
exposed to UV-C light for 10 min. Leaf samples were taken and processed
for SA quantitation. To maximize precision with respect to time
of sampling to facilitate comparisons, only single tissue samples were
taken for each data point. The sampling process for a single time point
was completed in less than 10 min.
The results of the experiment are presented in Figure
5. Columbia plants showed increases in SA
levels at the 6-h time point. Slight increases in total SA beyond that
attributable to free SA were also seen at this time point. SA levels
continued to increase with time. In contrast, SA levels in
ndr1-1 mutant plants showed only a minor increase.
Replicates of this experiment yielded similar results. These results
support the placement of the ndr1-1 block between ROS
generation and SA production. Obtaining the same qualitative results
with both UV-C and anoxia/rapid air reperfusion supports the contention
that it is ROS and not some other consequence of these treatments that
is responsible for these effects.

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Figure 5.
UV-C-elicited SA production in ndr1-1
versus Columbia. Tissue was harvested from ndr1-1 (circles
for data points) or Columbia (squares for data points) plants at the
indicated times following a 10 min of exposure to UV-C light. Free (A)
and total (B) SA content of the samples were quantitated. To achieve
maximum precision with respect to time of sampling, only one sample was
taken for each time point. As such, no error bars are shown. Similar
results were obtained in replicate experiments.
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UV-C Induction of SAR in ndr1-1 versus Columbia
If NDR1 indeed acts to link ROS production to SA
production, ndr1-1 plants should also be impaired in UV-C
induction of SAR. We tested this prediction by treating
ndr1-1 and Columbia plants with UV-C under identical
conditions to those described above. Two days post-treatment, these
plants and control ndr1-1 and Columbia plants that did not
receive any treatment were inoculated with DC3000·pVSP61, and
bacterial growth curves were performed. The data are presented in
Figure 6. SAR was clearly induced by the UV-C treatment in Columbia plants (compare solid lines). In contrast, SAR was not induced by UV-C in ndr1-1 mutant plants (compare
dashed lines). The slightly greater growth of bacteria in untreated
ndr1-1 relative to untreated Columbia is consistent with
previously documented results (Century et al., 1995 ) as discussed
above.

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Figure 6.
UV-C induction of SAR in ndr1-1 versus
Columbia. Columbia plants (solid lines) or ndr1-1 plants
(dashed lines) were exposed to UV-C light for 10 min (circles for data
points) or left untreated (squares for data points) 2 d prior to
inoculation with P. syringae pv tomato DC3000 carrying only
the empty pVSP61 vector. Data points represent means of triplicate
determinations of in planta bacterial growth at specified times. This
experiment was repeated three times with similar results.
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Benzo(1,2,3)-Thiadiazole-7-Carbothioic Acid
S-Methyl Ester (BTH) Induction of SAR in
ndr1-1 versus Columbia
If the ndr1-1 block is upstream of SA production,
exogenous application of a SA analog should elicit SAR regardless of
whether the plants are mutated in the NDR1 gene. BTH is
metabolized in planta into a structural analog of SA and elicits
effects similar to application of exogenous SA (Lawton et al., 1996 ).
BTH treatment of plants does not induce SA production in either
Columbia or ndr1-1 (data not shown).
The response of ndr1-1 and Columbia plants to BTH was
compared. Plants were vacuum infiltrated with either 0.12 mM BTH or water. Two days later, these plants and
control plants that did not receive any treatment were inoculated with
DC3000·pVSP61, and bacterial growth curves were performed. The data
are presented in Figure 7. Columbia
(solid lines) and ndr1-1 (dashed lines) plants both
displayed BTH-induced SAR (compare curves where data points are
diamonds or squares with curves where data points are circles). Three
replicate experiments gave consistent results (data not shown). These
results are consistent with the ndr1 block being upstream of
the action of BTH.

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Figure 7.
BTH induction of SAR in ndr1-1 versus
Columbia. Columbia plants (solid lines) or ndr1-1 plants
(dashed lines) were infiltrated with BTH (circles for data points) or a
water blank (squares for data points) or were not treated (diamonds for
data points). Two days later, plants were inoculated with P. syringae pv tomato DC3000 carrying only the empty pVSP61 vector.
Data points represent means of triplicate determinations of in planta
bacterial growth at specified times. This experiment was performed
three times with similar results.
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Columbia plants also displayed SAR in response to vacuum infiltration
with a water blank (compare solid line with squares for data points
with solid line with diamonds). The ndr1-1 plants were
completely impaired in infiltration-induced SAR (compare dashed line
with squares for data points with dashed line with diamonds). This
result is consistent with the results presented in Figure 6 showing
impairment of UV-C-induced SAR in ndr1-1 mutant plants.
These results are also consistent with the impairment of vacuum
infiltration-induced SA production in ndr1-1 mutant plants
(Fig. 4).
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DISCUSSION |
A model for disease resistance signal transduction is shown in
Figure 8. Bacteria carrying
avrRpt2 do not elicit PR gene transcription or
SAR on ndr1-1 mutant plants, whereas bacteria carrying
avrB can elicit both, albeit not as strongly as on wild-type
plants. Yet, SA levels induced by these bacteria were shown to be
reduced to similar levels in the ndr1-1 mutant. These
results imply that at least two pathways contribute to PR
gene transcription and SAR. One branch shown in Figure 8 is the
well-characterized SA-dependent pathway that depends on the
NPR1 gene (Cao et al., 1994 ; Delaney et al., 1995 ;
Glazebrook et al., 1996 ; Shah et al., 1997 ). We have shown a
correlation between which bacterial strains elicit cell death and which
elicit PR gene transcription and SAR on ndr1-1 plants. This correlation suggests that the other branch is directly dependent either on cell death or on something closely correlated with
the cell death response. The two branches can make independent contributions to PR gene transcription as shown by the
induction of PR gene transcription in npr1 mutant
plants by bacteria carrying avrRpt2 (Glazebrook et al.,
1996 ; Shah et al., 1997 ). The two branches make a synergistic
contribution to SAR as shown by the inability of npr1-1
plants to manifest SAR in response to avirulent, HR-inducing bacteria
(Cao et al., 1994 ). However, SAR and PR gene expression can
be induced by stimulation of only the NDR1/NPR1 branch (e.g. by exogenous SA or BTH).

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Figure 8.
Model for disease resistance signal transduction.
The dashed line leading from avr/R gene-dependent
primary signal to reactive oxygen production is meant to indicate that
this pathway is quantitatively much less significant than the cell
death-induced reactive oxygen production. SA potentiation of cell death
is represented with a symbol for a rheostat. Although pictured as being
distinct, "triggering factor" could be nitric oxide, reactive
oxygen, both, or something different. The SA-dependent negative
feedback loop's precise target is not known.
NDR1-independent pathways for SA production discussed in the
text are not pictured.
|
|
Multiple lines of evidence indicate that NDR1 functions
downstream of ROS production and upstream of SA production. Mutant ndr1-1 plants are impaired in SA production elicited by
bacteria or by producing ROS in situ in response to either UV-C light
or anoxia/rapid air reperfusion. Mutant ndr1-1 plants are
also impaired in induction of SAR by bacteria or ROS but not in
induction of SAR by BTH. However, ndr1-1 plants can still
make SA as evidenced by comparable uninduced SA levels to wild-type
plants and by the delayed rise in SA levels seen 42 h
post-inoculation with P.s.g. Race 5 carrying avrB
or avrRpt2. Because ndr1-1 is a null allele, NDR1-independent pathways for SA synthesis must exist.
Bacteria carrying avrRpt2 did not elicit hydrogen peroxide
production on ndr1-1 mutant plants as assayed by DCF
fluorescence. In contrast, bacteria carrying avrB did elicit
DCF fluorescence in ndr1-1 mutant plants, albeit at levels
lower than in Columbia plants at early time points. SA levels
paradoxically were comparable on ndr1-1 mutant plants
regardless of which avr gene was carried by the bacteria.
Because ROS increases are known to lead to SA production, these results
taken together argue strongly that the DCF fluorescence assay is not
measuring an early oxidative burst.
We propose instead that most of the DCF fluorescence is due to hydrogen
peroxide produced close to the time of cell death in primary responding
cells or in cells surrounding the dying cells. We suspect that the
first cell death events occur prior to the first macroscopically
visible signs of the HR. The first cell death events probably occur
either at the time of onset of detectable DCF fluorescence or just
after this time. Wolfe et al. (2000) have documented low-level cell
death assayed as decreases in chlorophyll fluorescence beginning at
times comparable with those for the onset of DCF fluorescence in
Columbia plants inoculated with DC3000·avrRpt2. Most plant
cells, however, did not die until several hours later. The first
detectable cell death events in the HR elicited by P. syringae pv. phaseolicola on an incompatible lettuce
cultivar preceded macroscopic evidence of tissue collapse by 5 h
(Bestwick, 1995 ).
The kinetics presented in Table I are consistent with this
interpretation. The initial time of onset of DCF fluorescence is
similar in most cases. However, bacteria eliciting slower increases in
DCF fluorescence also elicit more delayed HRs. We suggest that the lack
of DCF fluorescence in ndr1-1 mutant plants inoculated with
bacteria carrying avrRpt2 is a consequence rather than a cause of the absence of programmed cell death.
If this interpretation of the data is correct, then the effects of the
ndr1-1 mutation are explicable as a manifestation of agonist-dependent gain control. SA would function in gain control by
lowering the threshold of a "triggering factor" required to see
programmed cell death. Gain control might occur both in primary responding cells and in more distal cells because there is evidence that hydrogen peroxide, SA, and perhaps other signals can be
transported intercellularly (Levine et al., 1994 ; Mölders et al.,
1996 ).
We conclude based on data presented herein that this HR-inducing
"triggering factor" accumulates to a higher level in response to
bacteria carrying avrB than in response to those carrying
avrRpt2. We have demonstrated a similar degree of impairment
of SA production by ndr1-1 plants in response to bacteria
carrying avrB or avrRpt2. This similar level of
impairment could set the threshold value for the triggering factor at a
level that the HR is seen in response to bacteria carrying
avrB but not those carrying avrRpt2. This mechanism could also explain the ability of the nahG
transgene to prevent the HR caused by bacteria carrying
avrRpt2 but not that caused by bacteria carrying
avrRpm1 (Rate et al., 1999 ). SA levels would be irrelevant
to the plant's "decision" to mount a HR if the primary signal is
sufficiently strong.
We cannot rule out the possibility that there are differences in very
low-level, early production of hydrogen peroxide that would not be
detectable with the DCF assay. It is formally possible that it is a
signal produced as a consequence of very low-level ROS accumulation
that is potentiated by SA to lead to programmed cell death.
Nonetheless, we favor an alternative model that something other than
hydrogen peroxide is the "triggering factor" that must reach a
critical threshold value. One possibility for what this factor might be
is nitric oxide. It is also possible that both ROS and nitric oxide
(and perhaps other signals) contribute to the plant cell's decision to
undergo programmed cell death (McDowell and Dangl, 2000 ).
An alternative explanation for the differences we have documented
between signaling induced by bacteria carrying avrRpt2 as opposed to avrB is suggested by recent results concerning
the virulence function of avrRpt2 (Chen et al., 2000 ). It
has been suggested that avrRpt2 in its role as a virulence
factor can suppress defense responses. Could the signaling impairments
seen with ndr1-1 plants in response to bacteria carrying
avrRpt2 be because of exaggeration of suppression of defense responses?
A strong prediction of this alternative explanation would be that
defense responses of ndr1-1 plants elicited by bacteria carrying avrRpt2 would be impaired to a greater extent at
higher levels of bacterial inoculum. In fact, the opposite is seen.
When ndr1-1 plants are inoculated with 1 × 109 cfu mL 1
P.s.g. Race 5·avrRpt2, an HR is seen (Shapiro,
2000 ). Inoculation of ndr1-1 plants with this concentration
P.s.g. Race 5 carrying only the empty vector elicited no
response, validating the use of this assay (Shapiro, 2000 ). We feel
these results are consistent with ndr1-1 phenotypes in
response to bacteria carrying avrRpt2 being caused by
limited production of a "triggering factor" and inconsistent with
an explanation based on more efficacious suppression of defense responses.
HRs seen in response to bacteria carrying avrB,
avrRpm1, avrPphB, or avrRps4 are more
severe on ndr1-1 mutant plants than on Columbia plants
(Century et al., 1995 ; Shapiro, 2000 ). Yet, we have shown that
ndr1-1 is a loss-of-function mutation with respect to
ROS-induced SA production. This more vigorous cell death response might
be explained if the ndr1 mutation delayed or prevented
induction of a feedback loop that negatively regulated the HR. This
delay might be a consequence of the documented delay in SA accumulation
(Fig. 4). Evidence has been presented for SA-dependent negative
feedback (Cao et al., 1994 ). Whether the negative feedback loop
identified in this study is identical to that which is responsible for
regulating cell death is not certain.
The model in Figure 8 presents a framework for generating testable
hypotheses concerning the action of these and other disease resistance
signaling genes for which mutants are available. We expect that further
work will clarify the uncertain aspects of this model and that the
model will be a useful guide to using these signaling genes in attempts
to engineer plant disease resistance.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacteria and Plant Growth
Pseudomonas syringae, Agrobacterium
tumefaciens, and Escherichia coli strains
were cultured according to published methods (Whalen et al., 1991 ).
Arabidopsis was grown in an MTR-30 growth chamber (Conviron, Winnipeg,
MN) set for 8 h of light, 16 h of darkness, at 22°C, with
70% relative humidity for experiments involving bacterial growth
curves or SA quantitation. For all other purposes, Arabidopsis growth
was as described by Whalen et al. (1991) . Columbia seed used in
experiments was obtained from self-fertilized plants grown from seeds
from the same lot used as the parental in the mutagenesis from which
ndr1-1 was isolated.
Construction of Col-0:PR1/GUS
The PR1 cDNA (Uknes et al., 1992 ) was used as a probe to isolate
the hybridizing yeast artificial chromosome yUP12F7. A
sub-library was made in the A. tumefaciens cosmid vector
pCLD04541 (Jones et al., 1992 ) using published methods (Bent et
al., 1994 ). The PR1 cDNA was used again as a probe of colony
lifts to identify a cosmid that included 3.2 kb of DNA 5' to the
PR1 coding region. This DNA was amplified with
Pyrococcus furiosus polymerase using the T7
forward primer, which annealed to the vector immediately adjacent to
the insert DNA, and a reverse primer designed from the known PR1
sequence (5'-CGAGAATAGCCAGTAGAATTCCTTTTTCTAAG-3'). The reverse
primer introduced an EcoRI site and removed the
PR1 start codon. The PCR product was cut with
XbaI and EcoRI and ligated into the
polylinker of pBluescript KS+ between the XbaI and
EcoRI sites. The entire upstream region except the
proximal 104 bp just upstream of the original start codon was then
replaced with DNA from the cosmid (which had never been subject to PCR)
to make pADS3.
The 3.2 kb of DNA 5' to the PR1 coding region
(hereafter, the PR1 promoter) was next subcloned
upstream of the E. coli GUS gene and the
nopaline synthase terminator (NOS). An
EcoRI linker was blunt-end ligated into the
ClaI site of pSLJ4K1 (Jones et al., 1992 ) to make
pADS5. GUS and NOS were then excised together from pADS5 as an
EcoRI/HindIII fragment and ligated
between the EcoRI and HindIII sites of
pCLD04541 (Jones et al., 1992 ) to make pADS6. The
SacI/EcoRI fragment of pADS3 was then
cloned between the SacI and EcoRI sites
of pADS6 to make pADS7.
pADS7 was conjugated into A. tumefaciens strain GV3101
(Schell and Koncz, 1986 ) via triparental mating using the helper
plasmid pRK2013 (Ditta et al., 1980 ). Plant transformation was
performed using vacuum infiltration (Bechtold et al., 1993 ; Bent
et al., 1994 ). Forty-three independent transgenic lines were
isolated. A line homozygous for a single locus (two copies of the
transgene integrated head-to-head as determined by Southern blotting)
insertion, which showed strong GUS induction under all conditions
predicted by northern analysis of PR1 expression (Uknes
et al., 1992 ) and in all tissues, was chosen. This line was designated
Col-0:PR1/GUS.
Construction of ndr1-1:PR1/GUS
Col-0:PR1/GUS was used as the male parent in a
cross to ndr1-1. A line homozygous for both the
ndr1-1 mutation and the transgene was identified in the
F2. This line displayed lack of an HR in response to
DC3000·avrRpt2 and an exaggerated HR in response to DC3000·avrRpm1 (Century et al., 1995 ). Southern-blot
analysis showed the presence of only the ndr1-1 allele
at the NDR1 locus [ndr1-1 contains a
1.2-kb deletion (Century et al., 1997 )]. This line also showed
nonsegregation of kanamycin resistance (the selectable marker
associated with the transgene) in the F3.
Assay of GUS Activity
GUS activity was assessed by standard procedures (Jefferson,
1987 ). Single 0.125-cm2 punches of leaf tissue were taken
using a number one cork borer and used for GUS assay with the
fluorogenic substrate 4-methyl umbelliferyl
-D-glucuronide (Rose Scientific, Edmonton, AB). Data is shown from leaves harvested either 1 or 2 d
postinoculation. Reactions were incubated precisely 2 h at 37°C
and then quenched. The data is presented as the raw fluorescence units
obtained via excitation at 365 nm and measuring emission at 450 nm
using a fluorescence microplate reader (Dynex, Chantilly, Virginia). No attempt was made to derive rates of GUS production because preliminary experiments showed increases with time to be nonlinear. All values were
within the linear range of the instrumentation and corresponded to the
range within which fluorescence increases in direct proportion to
concentration of pure methyl-umbelliferone.
Inoculation of Plants and in Planta Bacterial Growth
Curves
Hand inoculation of plants utilized 1-mL tuberculin syringes to
inject approximately 10 µL per cm2 into leaf tissue
through wounds made at one site per half-leaf with a 22-G needle.
Vacuum infiltration was according to published methods (Whalen et al.,
1991 ). In planta bacterial growth curves were performed according to
published methods (Whalen et al., 1991 ), except that the initial
inoculum was 5 × 104 bacteria mL 1 and
the plating of bacteria was done on nutrient yeast growth agar
plates supplemented with rifampicin, kanamycin, and cycloheximide. Independent replicates of growth curves gave differences of equivalent statistical significance to those pictured.
Hydrogen Peroxide Quantitation
Hydrogen peroxide quantitation was according to a published
procedure (Wolfe et al., 2000 ) except that hand infiltration rather than vacuum infiltration was used to inject the dye into plant leaves
15 to 30 min prior to excising the leaves. 2 × 107
bacteria mL 1 was used in inoculations of DC3000- or
P.s.m. 4326-based strains. 1 × 108
bacteria mL 1 was used in inoculations of
P.s.g. Race 5-based strains. These concentrations had
previously been established as optimal for assay of the HR (Century et
al., 1995 , 1997 ). These levels of inoculum were also used in primary
inoculations for SAR experiments.
Following bacterial inoculations, plants were transferred to a Percival
Ar-75 growth chamber set for continuous light prior to assay of DCF
fluorescence or observation of the HR. Leaves appeared totally dry 15 min postinoculation. Leaf excision did not result in a DCF signal;
however, fluorescence was occasionally seen surrounding the inoculation
site needle hole. Severely wilted or dead areas of leaves in the
process of mounting a HR often could not be infiltrated with dye and
appeared dark. Leaves displaying a confluent HR (from late time points
in experiments using bacteria carrying avrB) could not
be infiltrated with dye and thus are not pictured. Treatment with 0.12 mM SA or 0.12 mM BTH did not elicit DCF
fluorescence (data not shown). All treatments were performed on
triplicate leaves, and each entire experiment was repeated three to
five times.
Confocal microscopy was used to establish that DCFH-DA entered the
plant cytoplasm and that increases in fluorescence seen postinoculation
were at least partially intracellular. Use of DCFH-DA diacetoxy methyl
ester, a derivative of DCFH-DA that did not enter the cytoplasm and
remained in the apoplast, led to kinetics of increase in fluorescence
that were indistinguishable from those using DCFH-DA (data not shown).
These results are consistent with hydrogen peroxide being generated
initially in the apoplast with subsequent rapid movement into the cytoplasm.
SA Quantitation
Vacuum infiltration of bacteria was as described for growth
curves except that the level of inoculum was 1 × 106
bacteria mL 1. Control experiments were performed to rule
out the possibility that vacuum infiltration-induced SA production was
caused by inadvertent inoculation with bacteria or fungi normally
present on the leaf surface. In these experiments, benomyl was first
dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (at 10 mg mL 1) and
subsequently diluted 100-fold into 10 mM MgCl2.
Rifampicin (100 µg mL 1) was dissolved directly in 10 mM MgCl2, and the solution was 0.2 µm
filtered. Inclusion of either benomyl or rifampicin did not affect the
level of vacuum infiltration-induced SA production (data not shown).
SA extraction was according to standard procedures (Gaffney et al.,
1993 ). Ortho-anisic acid was used as an internal standard (Meuwly and
Métraux, 1993 ). Chromatography was performed essentially according to published procedures (Gaffney et al., 1993 ). Two injections were made per sample, one to quantitate SA and one to
quantitate ortho-anisic acid. SA detection was by excitation at 303 nm
and monitoring emission at 437 nm. Detection of ortho-anisic acid was
by excitation at 298 nm and monitoring emission at 350 nm. Detection
used an LS30 fluorimeter (Perkin-Elmer, Norwalk, CT) connected in-line
to the HPLC (Rainin, Woburn, MA).
UV-C and BTH/SA Treatment of Plants
UV-C (254 nm) treatments were for 10 min using a model UVGL-58
lamp (UV Products, Upland, CA) immobilized 24 cm above the plants in a
closed, dark cabinet. BTH was introduced using vacuum infiltration for
SAR induction experiments. BTH was introduced by hand infiltration in
the control experiments documenting the lack of induction of hydrogen
peroxide or SA production. SA was introduced by hand infiltration. BTH
(0.12 mM; or SA, introduced as the sodium salt) in
double-distilled water was used in all cases.
Statistics
Significance of differences between means in both SAR
experiments and PR1-driven GUS activity determinations
was determined using Student's t tests. Values of
P were read from a t table. Differences
between SA levels were assessed for significance using a two-way
analysis of variance where either NDR1 allele
(ndr1-1 or NDR1) or bacterial strain used
was considered a fixed effect and experiment number was treated as a
random factor.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Bernard Vernooij for his SA quantitation protocol; Kirk
Czymmek for help with confocal microscopy and photography; John Ryals
for the PR1 cDNA in Bluescript; Jeff Dangl for the Columbia parental
seed; Sydney Kustu for use of her HPLC; Joseph Clarke and Kay Lawton
for useful suggestions concerning the model for signal transduction;
Peter P. Repetti for help with the BTH experiments; and Brian J. Staskawicz, Peter P. Repetti, and Cathy K. Worley for useful
discussions and comments on drafts of this manuscript.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received January 30, 2001; returned for revision May 15, 2001; accepted July 24, 2001.
1
This project was initiated when A.D.S. was a
National Institutes of Health postdoctoral fellow in the lab of Brian
J. Staskawicz (University of California, Berkeley). This work was
subsequently supported by the University of Delaware (start-up funds to
A.D.S.) and by the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources,
University of Delaware (predoctoral research assistantship to C.Z.).
This is paper no. 1,694 in the Journal Series of the Delaware
Agricultural Experiment Station.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail ashapiro{at}udel.edu; fax
302-831-3409.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.010096.
 |
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