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First published online July 25, 2002; 10.1104/pp.001974 Plant Physiol, August 2002, Vol. 129, pp. 1892-1898
Inhibition of Phospholipase D
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ABSTRACT |
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N-Acylethanolamines (NAEs) are endogenous
lipids in plants produced from the phospholipid precursor,
N-acylphosphatidylethanolamine, by phospholipase D
(PLD). Here, we show that seven types of plant NAEs differing in acyl
chain length and degree of unsaturation were potent inhibitors of the
well-characterized, plant-specific isoform of PLD
PLD
. It is
notable that PLD
, unlike other PLD isoforms, has been shown not to
catalyze the formation of NAEs from
N-acylphosphatidylethanolamine. In general, inhibition
of PLD
activity by NAEs increased with decreasing acyl chain length and decreasing degree of unsaturation, such that
N-lauroylethanolamine and
N-myristoylethanolamine were most potent with
IC50s at submicromolar concentrations for the recombinant
castor bean (Ricinus communis) PLD
expressed in
Escherichia coli and for partially purified cabbage
(Brassica oleracea) PLD
. NAEs did not inhibit PLD
from Streptomyces chromofuscus, and exhibited only
moderate, mixed effects for two other recombinant plant PLD isoforms.
Consistent with the inhibitory biochemical effects on PLD
in vitro,
N-lauroylethanolamine, but not lauric acid, selectively
inhibited abscisic acid-induced closure of stomata in epidermal
peels of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv Xanthi) and
Commelina communis at low micromolar concentrations. Together, these results provide a new class of biochemical inhibitors to assist in the evaluation of PLD
physiological function(s), and
they suggest a novel, lipid mediator role for endogenously produced
NAEs in plant cells.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Hydrolysis of membrane phospholipids
by phospholipase D2 (PLD, EC 3.1.4.4) activity in
plants has been known for decades (Hanahan and Chaikoff, 1947
);
however, its precise physiological roles in plants are only beginning
to be understood (for review, see Chapman et al., 1998
; Munnik et al.,
1998
; Wang, 2001b
). Recent evidence at the molecular level
indicates that there are at least four functional isoforms of PLD in
higher plants, designated
,
,
, and
, and their biochemical
properties differ substantially (Wang, 2001a
). PLD
catalyzes the
well-characterized transphosphatidylation activity, which requires
millimolar concentrations of Ca2+ for optimal
activity. At least two isoforms (
and
) appear to be optimally
activated by micromolar concentrations of Ca2+
and binding of inositol-containing phospholipids (Pappan et al., 1997
),
and these exhibit phospholipid substrate selectivity that differ
markedly from that of PLD
(Pappan et al., 1998
). The recently described PLD
activity is membrane associated and activated by free
oleic acid (Wang and Wang, 2001
).
Evidence for the physiological function of PLD
points to a role in
the degradation/reorganization of subcellular membranes, as well as a
role in signal transduction (for review, see Chapman et al., 1998
).
This membrane degradation is manifested at the cellular level by loss
of compartmentation leading to cell death, such as in
phytohormone-initiated, PLD-mediated senescence (Thompson, 1988
; Fan et
al., 1997
). The unregulated activity of PLD
in plant cells, then,
potentially would lead to membrane damage and loss of cellular
function, and cells likely have mechanisms in place to regulate PLD
activity. In addition, a signal transduction role for the PLD
isoform has been implicated from studies in several plant systems in
which PLD
mediates, in part, the cellular responses to abscisic
acid (ABA; Fan et al., 1997
; Ritchie and Gilroy, 1998
; Jacob et
al., 1999
; Frank et al., 2000
; Sang et al., 2001
).
Recent evidence in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) cells
indicated that a novel class of lipids,
N-acylethanolamines (NAEs), was released from the
membrane phospholipid,
N-acylphosphatidylethanolamine (NAPE), in a signal-mediated
fashion (Chapman et al., 1998
; Tripathy et al., 1999
). A PLD-type
activity was identified that hydrolyzed NAPE to NAE in vitro (Chapman
et al., 1998
), and a subsequent biochemical survey of PLD catalytic
properties of recombinant isoforms (Pappan et al., 1998
) suggested that
the activity in tobacco microsomes likely was attributed to the
or
isoforms. Moreover, although PLD
hydrolyzed virtually all other
phospholipids, it did not catalyze the formation of NAEs from NAPE.
Ethanolamine-containing lipids appear to be particularly important in
modulating the activity of PLDs. High levels of
phosphatidylethanolamine (80 mol%) are important in general for
optimal PLD activity in vitro (Wang, 2001a
). Furthermore,
lysophosphatidyl-ethanolamine (LPE) was recently shown to be inhibitory
toward cabbage (Brassica oleracea) PLD
(Ryu et al.,
1997
). These data, as well as the varied and potent biological
activities ascribed to NAEs in animal systems (Di Marzo, 1998
),
prompted us to hypothesize that plant NAEs might act as lipid mediators
to modulate PLD
activity.
Here, we report that seven NAE molecular species inhibited PLD
activity, and those types of NAEs recently identified in
elicitor-treated plant cells (Chapman et al., 1998
; Tripathy et al.,
1999
), N-lauroylethanolamine (NAE 12:0) and
N-myristoylethanolamine (NAE 14:0), were the most potent, with IC50 estimates in the nanomolar
range. Treatment of epidermal cell layers of tobacco and
Commelina communis with NAE 12:0 abrogated the
ABA-induced closure of stomatal guard cells, a process mediated by
PLD
(Jacob et al., 1999
; Sang et al., 2001
). Together, our
results suggest a novel lipid-mediator role for NAEs in higher plants
as a potential endogenous inhibitor of PLD
, and they suggest that
products of PLD
or
(NAEs) can regulate the activity of PLD
in
plant cells. This may represent a mechanism for protecting cell
membranes from unregulated PLD
-mediated phospholipid degradation,
and for attenuating ABA signaling pathways.
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RESULTS |
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NAE and PLD
Activity
NAE types identified previously in various plant species (Chapman
et al., 1998
, 1999
) were synthesized from ethanolamine and the
respective acyl chlorides, and were 95% to 99% pure as judged by
thin-layer chromatography (TLC) and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Chapman et al., 1999
). All NAE types inhibited the activity of castor bean (Ricinus communis) PLD
expressed in Escherichia coli cells (Figs.
1 and 2). All NAEs were effective
inhibitors at high concentrations (200 µM),
similar to the concentrations reported
for LPE (Ryu et al., 1997
). In general, the long-chain, unsaturated
NAEs demonstrated less inhibitory effects on castor bean PLD
than
did saturated or shorter chain types (Fig. 1). In the presence of 50 to
200 µM NAE 12:0 or NAE 14:0, the castor bean
PLD
was completely inactive (not shown). As a consequence, submicromolar to low micromolar concentrations of these NAEs were tested for their inhibitory effects on recombinant castor bean PLD
(Fig. 2). The inhibitory effects of NAE 12:0 and NAE 14:0 on PLD
activity were similar and were evident at submicromolar concentrations.
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Table I summarizes the
IC50 values for all of the NAEs tested with
recombinant castor bean PLD
. In general, the concentration range of
inhibition was dependent on NAE chain length and degree of unsaturation
and varied through several orders of magnitude, with medium-chain,
saturated NAEs being the most potent (IC50 values
in the nanomolar range), and long-chain, polyunsaturated NAEs being the
least potent (IC50 values in the micromolar
range). For example, the inhibitor concentration of NAEs that reduced the maximal PLD activity by 50% ranged from approximately 0.15 µM for NAE 12:0 to approximately 80 µM for
NAE 18:3, which accounts for a 500-fold difference in inhibition by the
different NAE types. Together, these results clearly demonstrate that
NAEs (especially NAE 12:0 and NAE 14:0) are potent inhibitors of plant
PLD
in vitro.
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To evaluate the extent of NAE inhibition on PLD from different species,
we examined the effects of NAE on partially purified cabbage PLD
and
a commercial preparation of Streptomyces chromofuscus PLD.
The cabbage PLD
, like the castor bean PLD
, does not catalyze the
hydrolysis of NAPE in vitro (see Pappan et al., 1998
), whereas the
S. chromofuscus enzyme does (Schmid et al., 1986
), yet both are optimally active toward many phospholipid classes at
mM amounts of Ca2+. Figure
3 shows that NAE 12:0 and NAE 14:0 at
submicromolar to low micromolar amounts were potent inhibitors of
cabbage PLD
in a manner similar to the castor bean enzyme, but these
NAEs had no effect on the activity of S. chromofuscus PLD.
In separate control experiments, exogenous myristic acid up to 10 µM did not influence the activity of the
cabbage or the castor bean PLD
(data not shown). Other workers have
demonstrated that ethanolamine itself has no inhibitory effect on PLD
(Ryu et al., 1997
), suggesting that the inhibitory effect of NAE is
conferred by a structural specificity of the entire molecule, and may
be an inherent property of plant PLD
isoforms.
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Substrate concentration experiments with increasing amounts of PC in
the presence of NAE 14:0 supported conclusions that NAE inhibits the
activity of PLD
(Fig. 4). NAE 14:0, in
a concentration-dependent manner, inhibited cabbage PLD activity at all
substrate (PC) concentrations examined. Although kinetics of
membrane-associated enzymes like PLD are complex and should be
interpreted with caution (Carmen et al., 1995
), inhibition of PLD
by
NAE is not likely to be competitive because inhibition is not reversed
at high substrate concentrations. The data indicate that the apparent
Vmax of PLD with PC substrate was reduced
by a factor of three in the presence of 1 µM
NAE 14:0. The apparent Km of PLD toward PC
was decreased somewhat by adding NAE 14:0, suggesting that NAE
increases the affinity of PLD for PC substrate (or perhaps more
accurately, affinity for substrate-containing liposomes). It is
possible that NAE promotes a membrane surface-associated, inactive
state of the enzyme, but the precise mechanism by which NAE acts to
inhibit PLD activity must await detailed kinetic analyses and
structural information for PLD enzymes.
|
Two other plant PLDs, Arabidopsis PLD
and
, were evaluated for
their influence by NAE (Fig. 5). Both of
these enzymes produce NAE from the phospholipid precursor NAPE in
vitro. NAE 12:0 did not influence the transmethylation of PC by PLD
,
whereas NAE 12:0 (at 10 µM) inhibited PLD
by about
50%, albeit not as potently as PLD
. NAE 14:0 appeared to stimulate
somewhat the activity of PLD
, whereas it had no significant effect
on PLD
activity.
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NAE inhibition of PLD
in vitro raised the possibility that NAE could
act as a lipid mediator to regulate PLD
activity in vivo. We
predicted that exogenously supplied NAE would delay or prevent
ABA-induced closure of stomatal guard cells, a process clearly shown by
transgenic approaches to involve PLD
(Sang et al., 2001
) in vivo.
Stomatal apertures, measured at the midpoint between two adjacent guard
cells, were significantly greater in epidermal peels of tobacco leaves
treated with NAE (1 or 10 µM) and ABA (10 µM) compared with those treated with ABA alone, after 30 min (P < 0.0001) and 60 min (P < 0.0001; Table II). Effects were more
pronounced at higher concentrations of NAE. Results were generally
similar for measurements made with C. communis guard
cells under the same conditions (Table
III). The inhibitory effect seemed
specific to NAE 12:0 because lauric acid (a 12-carbon free fatty acid)
did not prevent the ABA-induced stomatal closure (P > 0.4; Table IV).
This was consistent with what was observed in vitro where free fatty
acid had no effect on PLD
activity. Hence, NAE 12:0, in two plant
species, appeared to inhibit ABA-induced stomatal closure, consistent
with inhibition at the biochemical level of PLD
.
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DISCUSSION |
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Previous studies where PLD isoforms were expressed in E. coli to examine the activity toward NAPE indicated a key
difference of the PLD
/
isoforms compared with PLD
(Pappan et
al., 1998
). Only PLD
and
isoforms were able to catalyze the
formation of NAE from NAPE in vitro, whereas PLD
was inactive toward
this substrate. NAEs were formed in tobacco cell suspensions, and a PLD
activity was identified in microsomes that catalyzed the formation of
NAE from NAPE in vitro (Chapman et al., 1998
). As a consequence, we
proposed that activation of PLD
or
, but not
, was responsible for the metabolic release of NAEs from tobacco cell suspensions. These
NAEs were identified structurally as NAE 12:0 and NAE 14:0, and NAE
formation was subsequently shown to occur in leaves of intact tobacco
plants (Tripathy et al., 1999
). Inhibition of PLD
by endogenous
metabolites of PLD
(or
) may provide new insights into the
complex regulation of lipid signaling in plants by this diverse and
growing class of phospholipases.
Several inhibitors of mammalian PLD have been identified. These
inhibitors include fodrin (Lukowski et al., 1996
), synaptojanin (Kim et
al., 1996
), and clathrin assembly protein (Lee et al., 1997
), as well
as several lipids including ceramide (Venable et al., 1996
),
alkylphosphate esters (Dittrich et al., 1996
), and lysophosphatidyl-Ser
(Kawabe et al., 1998
). An intriguing observation indicated that
oleate-dependent PLD from rat brain was inhibited by several acidic
phospholipids, of which polyphosphatidylinositol-bisphosphate (PIP2) was the most effective inhibitor (Kanfer
et al., 1996
). By contrast, the PIP2-stimulated
PLD was inhibited by oleate (Hammond et al., 1995
). This unique
interaction in which an activator for one PLD isoform is an inhibitor
of another gives an example of possible PLD regulation and
"crosstalk" between different PLD isozymes in eukaryotic cells. The
hydrolysis of NAPE by PLD
and
to form NAE and its inhibition of
PLD
may be a similar form of regulation between the different PLD
isozymes that is distinctive to plant cells because animal systems do
not appear to have a PLD
ortholog (Wang, 2001b
).
LPE was shown recently to inhibit plant PLD
and to have a profound
effect on the physiological symptoms associated with postharvest senescence of flowers and fruits (Ryu et al., 1997
). It is interesting that there are two key differences between LPE and NAE inhibition of
PLD
. First, LPE inhibition of PLD (like akylphosphate ester inhibition of mammalian PLD; Dittrich et al., 1996
) increased with
increasing chain length and unsaturation, opposite to NAE (Figs. 1 and
2; Table I). Although the conditions that favor LPE formation in plants
remain to be elucidated, and the amounts and types of endogenous LPE in
plant tissues are uncertain, the similar down-regulation of PLD
by
these structurally diverse ethanolamine-containing lipids is of
interest. LPE and NAE are derived from different phospholipid
precursors and are produced by different phospholipase classes, which
implies that plant cells may possess two alternative mechanisms for
accomplishing the same purpose of down-regulating PLD
activity in
vivo. The second notable difference is in the concentration range for
inhibition. LPE 18:1 was the most potent inhibitor of cabbage PLD
,
and this was in the range of 10 to 200 µM (Ryu et al.,
1997
). NAE 12:0 and NAE 14:0 were the most potent inhibitors of castor
bean and cabbage PLD
activity, and this was in the range of 0.1 to 1 µM (Figs. 2 and 3), two orders of magnitude lower than
LPE and within the concentration range of NAEs measured in vivo in
plant tissues (for summary, see Chapman, 2000
).
PLD has been implicated by others in the signal transduction pathway of
guard cells in response to ABA (Jacob et al., 1999
; Sang et al.,
2001
). Recent transgenic approaches with plants devoid of PLD
activity clearly demonstrated that abrogation of PLD
activity
delayed the ABA-induced closure of stomata and resulted in profound
physiological effects in plants exposed to drought stress (Sang et al.,
2001
). Our results are consistent with these findings and they indicate
that selective biochemical inhibition of PLD
by NAEs results in an
interference with ABA-induced stomatal closure (Tables II-IV). In
addition, our results continue to point to a general role for PLD
in
ABA signaling as has been inferred from studies with a number of plants
systems (Fan et al., 1997
; Ryu et al., 1997
; Ritchie and Gilroy, 1998
;
El Maarouf, 1999
; Jacob et al., 1999
; Frank et al., 2000
).
Membrane-permeable NAEs should provide a new biochemical tool for the
dissection of PLD
physiological function(s) in plants. Moreover, the
results presented here suggest that PLD
may be at least one
molecular target for endogenously produced NAEs in higher plants.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Chemicals
Dioleoyl-[214C-oleoyl]glycero-3-phosphorylcholine
(57 mCi mmol
1) was purchased from NEN Life Sciences
(Boston). Soybean PC, PIP2, phosphatidylethanolamine(dioleoyl), acyl chlorides, ampicillin, abscisic acid (±, cis/trans), lauric acid, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, cabbage (Brassica oleracea) PLD Type V,
Streptomyces chromofuscus PLD, bovine serum albumin,
Coomassie Brilliant Blue, and isopropyl
-D-thiogalactoside were from Sigma Chemical. All other reagents were purchased from Fisher Scientific (Pittsburgh) unless otherwise specified.
Synthesis of NAEs
NAEs were synthesized by the addition of 25 mg of acyl chloride
in 2.5 mL of dichloromethane to 2.5 mL of ethanolamine according to
Devane et al. (1992)
. The reaction was allowed to proceed for 15 min at
room temperature with gentle swirling. The reaction was stopped by the
addition of 10 mL of ultrapure water. The organic layer was collected
and washed two additional times with 10 mL of ultrapure water. Samples
were dried under a stream of N2, resuspended in methanol as
stock solutions, purified by preparative TLC as necessary, and stored
at
20°C. NAE yield and purity were determined by gas
chromatography-mass spectrometry (Chapman et al., 1999
).
Expression of PLD in Escherichia coli
The recombinant castor bean (Ricinus communis)
PLD
and Arabidopsis PLD
and
in pBluescript (SK
) were
provided by Dr. X. Wang (Kansas State University, Manhattan). PLDs were
expressed in E. coli (JM109) cells and were assayed in
cell-free lysates essentially as described by Pappan et al. (1997)
. In
brief, PLDs were induced by the addition of 2 mM isopropyl
-D-thiogalactoside to E. coli
cultures (25 mL), which were then grown overnight at 30°C. Cells were
harvested by centrifugation and were washed with 50 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 8, 150 mM NaCl, 0.25 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and 2 mM EDTA. Cells
were ruptured by sonication, and lysates were centrifuged at
10,000g for 5 min. Supernatants were assayed for PLD
activity and protein content.
PLD Activity Assays and NAE Inhibition Studies
PLD isoforms were assayed under two different sets of conditions
previously determined to yield optimal activity for the respective recombinant proteins and to distinguish between the biochemical requirements for the PLDs (Pappan et al., 1998
; Wang, 2001a
). PLD
activity was measured in high calcium,
PIP2-independent conditions, whereas PLD
and
were
assayed in the presence of micromolar calcium, and in the presence of
PIP2. For castor bean and cabbage PLD
(and for
Streptomyces chromofuscus PLD), hydrolysis of
radiolabeled PC was used to assess enzyme activity. For PLD
and
isoforms, transphosphatidylation of radiolabeled PC in the presence of
1% (v/v) ethanol was used to estimate the relative PLD activity of these isoforms. Enzyme reactions for PLD
were in 100 mM
MES (pH 6.5), 25 mM CaCl2, 0.5 mM
SDS, and 0.4 mM lipid vesicles (soybean PC plus 0.02 µCi
dioleoyl [sn2-oleoyl [1-14C] PC). Enzyme
reactions for PLD
and
were in 100 mM MES (pH 7.0),
0.05 mM CaCl2, 80 mM KCl, and 0.4 mM lipid vesicles (16 nmol 14C-PC same as
above, 112 nmol dioleoylPE, and 6 nmol PIP2) in a final
volume of 0.15 mL. The various NAE types were introduced into the
reaction with other lipids, or from stock solutions in 67% (v/v) DMSO
that were diluted to the appropriate final concentration (see below).
Controls with appropriate final amounts of DMSO did not differ
appreciably in activity from those without DMSO (final DMSO
concentration was generally less than 0.1%, v/v). PLD reactions were
initiated by the addition of enzyme and were stopped with boiling
isopropanol. Lipids were extracted into CHCl3, and
radioactivity was quantified by radiometric scanning of lipid classes
separated on TLC plates and/or by liquid-scintillation counting as
described previously (Pappan et al., 1998
). Protein content was
estimated according to Bradford (1976)
using bovine serum albumin as a standard.
Measurements of Stomatal Pore Diameter
Epidermal cell layers were peeled with forceps from the lower
epidermis of leaves of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv
Xanthi) and of Commelina communis. Tobacco plants were
greenhouse grown (16-h daylength, supplemented with high-intensity
sodium lamps when warranted), and leaves (fourth emerged leaf, not
fully expanded) were harvested from 6- to 10-week-old plants. C.
communis plants were purchased from a local garden center and
acclimated for 2 weeks to the same greenhouse conditions as tobacco
prior to harvest of stems with newly emerged leaves. Plant material was
harvested and placed in distilled water for 1 h under white light
(125 µmol m
2 s
1) in a growth chamber.
Epidermal layers were peeled from turgid leaves and were floated on 0.5 mL of 5 mM MES-KOH (pH 6.1), 22 mM KCl, and 1 mM CaCl2 for 1 to 2 h under the same light
conditions (Sang et al., 2001
).
Epidermal layers with uniformly opened stomata were transferred randomly to the above buffer alone (including 0.067% [v/v] DMSO as a control), buffer plus ABA (0.02 mM, ± cis/trans), or buffer plus ABA (0.02 mM) and NAE 12:0 (0.001 or 0.01 mM). In some experiments, lauric acid (a 12:0 free fatty acid) at 0.01 mM was used to compare with NAE 12:0. Lipids were dissolved as 10 mM stock solutions in 67% (v/v) DMSO (warmed to 45°C prior to each experiment), and were diluted to appropriate final concentrations just before each experiment. Likewise, ABA was dissolved as a 10 mM stock solution in 10% (v/v) DMSO, and was diluted to the appropriate final concentration just before each experiment.
Two to three peels (approximately 0.5-1 cm2 each) were routinely floated on 0.5 mL of experimental solution on large glass cover slips in petri dishes under light conditions above. Images were taken at appropriate time intervals of random locations over each preparation (7-15 independent views for each time point) using an inverted microscope (Diaphot TMD, 20× objective lens, 0.4 numerical aperture; Nikon, Melville, NY) fitted with a CCD camera (model C2400 75i; Hamamatsu, Hamamatsu City, Japan). Stomatal diameters, including guard cell walls, were calculated after the experiments from calibrated digital images using morphometric imaging software (Metamorph 4.6r3; Universal Imaging, West Chester, PA). For tobacco, about 10 stomata could be visualized in each view, and for C. communis, about three stomata were visible in each view. This approach allowed for rapid, efficient evaluation of large numbers of stomata in each treatment at each time point with epidermal preparations harvested and treated under identical conditions. Subsequent statistical comparisons (unpaired t test) of mean pore diameter were performed with software (SigmaPlot version 6.0; SPSS, Chicago or Kaleidograph version 3.5; Synergy Software, Reading, PA). For some experiments, epidermal peels were placed in the dark for the duration of the experiment as an additional control to verify that guard cells were responding appropriately.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Dr. Elison Blancaflor (Samuel R. Noble Foundation) for advice regarding microscopic evaluation of stomata, and the Samuel R. Noble Foundation for use of greenhouse and microscopy facilities. We also thank Dr. Xuemin Wang (Kansas State University) for recombinant PLDs and advice regarding protein expression and characterization. Ms. Jane Hodson (University of North Texas) assisted with statistical analyses of stomatal data, and Mr. Rhidaya Shrestha (University of North Texas) provided assistance with graphics.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Received January 4, 2002; returned for revision March 6, 2002; accepted April 8, 2002.
1 This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture-National Research Initiative Competitive Grants Program (agreement no. 99-35304-8002).
* Corresponding author; e-mail chapman{at}unt.edu; fax 940-565-4136.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.001974.
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LITERATURE CITED |
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retards abscisic acid- and ethylene-promoted senescence of postharvest Arabidopsis leaves.
Plant Cell
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Arch Biochem Biophys
353: 131-140[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
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Plant J
28: 1-11[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]This article has been cited by other articles:
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