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First published online May 12, 2006; 10.1104/pp.106.076869 Plant Physiology 141:1056-1067 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists
Necrosis- and Ethylene-Inducing Peptide from Fusarium oxysporum Induces a Complex Cascade of Transcripts Associated with Signal Transduction and Cell Death in Arabidopsis[W]U.S. Department of Agriculture/Agricultural Research Service, Beltsville Agricultural Research Center, Beltsville, Maryland 20705 (H.B., M.S.K., R.C.S., B.A.B.); and Department of Wood Science and Engineering, Chonnam University, Gwangju, Korea 500757 (H.-J.B.)
Treatment of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) with a necrosis- and ethylene-inducing peptide (Nep1) from Fusarium oxysporum inhibited both root and cotyledon growth and triggered cell death, thereby generating necrotic spots. Nep1-like proteins are produced by divergent microbes, many of which are plant pathogens. Nep1 in the plant was localized to the cell wall and cytosol based on immunolocalization results. The ratio of chlorophyll a fluorescence (F685 nm/F730 nm) significantly decreased after 75-min treatment with Nep1 in comparison to the control. This suggested that a short-term compensation of photosynthesis occurred in response to localized damage to cells. The concentrations of most water-soluble metabolites analyzed were reduced in Arabidopsis seedlings after 6 h of Nep1 treatment, indicating that the integrity of cellular membranes had failed. Microarray results showed that short-term treatment with Nep1 altered expression of numerous genes encoding proteins putatively localized to organelles, especially the chloroplast and mitochondria. Short-term treatment with Nep1 induced multiple classes of genes involved in reactive oxygen species production, signal transduction, ethylene biosynthesis, membrane modification, apoptosis, and stress. Quantitative PCR was used to confirm the induction of genes localized in the chloroplast, mitochondria, and plasma membrane, and genes responsive to calcium/calmodulin complexes, ethylene, jasmonate, ethylene biosynthesis, WRKY, and cell death. The majority of Nep1-induced genes has been associated with general stress responses but has not been critically linked to resistance to plant disease. These results are consistent with Nep1 facilitating cell death as a component of diseases caused by necrotrophic plant pathogens.
The fungal plant pathogen Fusarium oxysporum produces necrosis- and ethylene-inducing peptide (Nep1), a 24-kD necrosis and ethylene-inducing peptide (Bailey, 1995
Plant responses to Nep1 include induction of pathogen-related (PR) genes, changes in K+ and H+ channel fluxes, callose apposition, accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and ethylene, altered cell respiration, the hypersensitive response, and localized cell death (Jennings et al., 2001 The objective of this study was to characterize the responses of Arabidopsis to Nep1 with respect to changes in plant growth, ultrastructural modifications, metabolite levels, and transcription profiles. Only a handful of genes that respond to Nep1 treatment have been identified to date, even though the effects of Nep1 on plants can be dramatic. In this investigation, high-throughput screening based on DNA microarray technology was used to identify Nep1 responsive genes in Arabidopsis. In addition, chlorophyll a fluorescence imaging was employed as a nondestructive method to assess plant vigor subsequent to Nep1 treatment. Molecular and biochemical analyses of the response of Arabidopsis to Nep1 should enhance our understanding of the signaling networks that are involved in plant responses to Nep1 and NLPs, a family of proteins of increasing importance in many different plant microbe interactions.
Nep1 Inhibits Seedling Growth and Root Development
To assess the effects of Nep1 on plant growth, Arabidopsis seedlings were grown for 5 d on agarose plates containing 1x Murashige and Skoog (MS) basal salts supplemented with 1% Suc. When Arabidopsis seedlings were treated with Nep1, the growth of roots and cotyledons was inhibited in comparison to control plants (Figs. 1
and 2
). Necrotic spots were visible on cotyledons of Nep1-treated seedlings (Fig. 1A, inset), particularly in association with stomata (Fig. 1C). The formation of necrotic spots was also observed on cotyledons of dark-grown seedlings (Fig. 1J). Nep1 treatment inhibited the formation of root hairs and damaged root tips both under dark and light conditions (Fig. 1, E, G, and L). White deposits were detected in roots of Nep1-treated seedlings, suggesting that callose formation had occurred (Fig. 1, E and L). Nep1 treatment altered the shape of cells on the root surfaces resulting in distorted root growth. When grown under light, cotyledon development and hypocotyl elongation were inhibited 79% and 55% by Nep1 treatment, respectively (Fig. 2). The inhibitory effects of Nep1 on root growth were severe (92% inhibition), and the inhibition was greater in light-grown than in dark-grown seedlings (Fig. 1, A and H). However, there was negligible inhibition of cotyledon development and hypocotyl elongation in response to Nep1 using dark-grown seedlings (Fig. 1H). Nep1 penetrates plant tissues via openings such as stomata, hydathodes, or wounds (Bailey et al., 2000
Nep1 Treatment Damages Membranes and Chloroplast Ultrastructure
Ultrastructural changes in response to Nep1 treatment were examined in 5-d-old seedlings using transmission electron microscopy. While control plants developed normal chloroplasts (Fig. 3A
) chloroplasts in Nep1-treated cotyledons were filled with plastoglobuli and unstacked thylakoid membrane structures (Fig. 3B). Nep1 damage to other organelles was not observed. Keates et al. (2003)
Nep1 Causes Large-Scale Leakage of Cell Metabolites
Changes of metabolites in Arabidopsis seedlings were analyzed with gas chromatography coupled to a mass selective detector. For these measurements, 7-d-old seedlings were grown in liquid culture and Nep1 treatments were for 0, 1, and 6 h. As shown in Table I
, most metabolite concentrations were markedly decreased in the 6-h Nep1-treated samples compared to the controls. Conversely, Arabidopsis metabolites were little affected by Nep1 following 1 h of treatment. These results suggest that Nep1 treatment caused a general leakage of the metabolites after 6 h of treatment, which may be due to membrane damage (i.e. depolarization). The treatment of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) cell suspensions with an ethylene biosynthesis-inducing endoxylanase also caused plasma membrane depolarization resulting in the leakage of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate (ACC) into the growing medium (Bailey et al., 1992
Although we were looking for increases in specific metabolites to help us identify metabolic pathways for future studies related to Nep1 action, the vast majority of metabolites decreased in concentration after Nep1 treatment. The concentration of myoinositol increased in response to 6 h of Nep1 treatment (59% increase). This was likely due to uptake from the liquid media, because myoinositol is present in the MS basal salts mixture used here. There was no evidence of transcriptional induction involved in inositol biosynthesis in the microarray results. Alternatively, it is possible inositol is synthesized in response to Nep1 treatment as biosynthesis of membrane and cell wall components collapse. Inositol has important roles in membrane biogenesis, signaling, and plant growth (for review, see Stevenson et al., 2000 After 48 h of exposure to Nep1 in liquid culture, the treated Arabidopsis seedlings were transferred to a petri dish containing moist filter paper that was sealed, placed in the dark for 1 d, and subsequently transferred to light as described in "Materials and Methods." Although necrotic spots were observed after 1 d in the light, the Nep1-treated seedlings completely recovered in the absence of further treatment. In comparison, isolated necrotic spots were not detected in seedlings continuously exposed to Nep1 in liquid culture, and all seedlings died after 1 week of exposure to Nep1.
Images of chlorophyll a fluorescence emissions at 685 and 730 nm were measured from the adaxial surfaces of 7-d-old Arabidopsis cotyledons grown in liquid culture treated with either Nep1 or 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU; Sigma). Fluorescence emission in the red and far-red regions of the spectrum (F685 and F730) in plants emanates from protein-bound chlorophyll a molecules in the photosynthetic apparatus (Bailey-Serres and Chang, 2005
Total chlorophyll (a + b) and carotenoid concentrations (x + c) were not altered by Nep1 treatment (data not shown). However, the chlorophyll a/b ratio was lower in the 6-h Nep1-treated seedlings (2.79 ± 0.12) than in the controls (3.59 ± 0.15). Ninety percent of chlorophyll b is bound to the antennae protein light-harvesting complex II (LHCII), while 90% of chlorophyll a is bound to chlorophyll-protein complexes other than LHCII, such as the PSII core complex (Kura-Hotta et al., 1986
Changes in transcript levels in Arabidopsis seedlings in response to Nep1 treatment were measured by DNA microarray analysis using Affymetrix ATH1 chips. Thirty minutes after treatment with Nep1, the steady-state level of 458 transcripts was up-regulated, and 26 transcripts were down-regulated by more than 2-fold. Transcripts showing more than 2-fold induction and all of the repressed transcripts are listed in Supplemental Table I. Genes showing altered expression levels were divided into eight functional categories for the up-regulated transcripts, and six for the down-regulated categories (Fig. 5 ). Gene ontologies were from the microarray elements with additional information from http://www.arabidopsis.org. Among the transcripts up-regulated by Nep1 treatment, the most abundant categories consisted of genes involved in catalytic activities (32%) and genes involved in DNA-/RNA-binding activities (31%). Nep1 treatment induced large groups of transcripts encoding proteins associated with the endomembrane system (91 transcripts), plastids (72 transcripts), mitochondria (45 transcripts), and nucleus (24 transcripts). The largest categories of down-regulated genes were transcription regulators (27%) and genes with unknown functions (27%).
Nep1 Induces Genes Involved in the Production of ROS and Signal Transduction
Nep1 treatment induces the production of ROS (Jennings et al., 2001
Short-term treatment with Nep1 induced transcripts for ROS sensing and signaling processes associated with stress responses. These included the calcium-binding elongation factor (EF) hand family proteins, (putative) calmodulin (CAM), CAM-binding and (putative) CAM-related proteins, cytochrome P450 family protein, WRKY family transcription factors, and Ser/Thr protein kinase (PK19). There are at least three putative ROS sensing mechanisms: (1) receptor proteins, (2) redox-sensitive transcription factors, and (3) direct inhibition of phosphatases by ROS (for review, see Mittler et al., 2004
In plants, the change of [Ca2+]cyt levels are monitored by at least four major families: (1) CAM, (2) CaM-like proteins, (3) Ca2+-dependent protein kinases, and (4) other Ca2+-binding proteins without EF hands (helix-loop-helix structure). In our study, 18 transcripts involved in calcium sensing were up-regulated by Nep1 treatment: calcium-binding EF hand family proteins, (putative) CAM, CAM-binding, (putative) CAM-related proteins, and Ca2+-ATPases. The induction of a transcript encoding CAM-related protein (CmCAL-1) was also reported in spotted knapweed and dandelion within 15 min in response to Nep1 (Keates et al., 2003
Calcium/CAM complexes are involved in senescence that in turn is mediated by ethylene, free radical formation, lipoxygenase, and phospholipase A2 (for review, see Mittler et al., 2004
Receptor proteins have been shown to detect ROS, which results in the influx of Ca2+ and the activation of phospholipase C/D (PLC/PLD) activity leading to the release of phosphatidic acid, possibly leading to the activation of the protein kinase OXI1 (Rentel et al., 2004
Nine WRKY genes were induced by Nep1 treatment, while WRKY65 was repressed moderately (55% reduction). Keates et al. (2003)
Nep1 treatment induced four transcripts encoding cytochrome P450 proteins. Keates et al. (2003)
As shown previously (Bailey, 1995
We also observed that Nep1 treatment induced genes expressed during senescence or that have been shown to respond to jasmonic acid (JA). These included lipoxygenases (plastidic LOX3, At1g17420, 58-fold induction; putative plastidic LOX, At1g72520, 22-fold induction), 12-oxophytodienoate reductase (At1g76690, 2.4-fold induction), and allene oxide cyclase (AOC2, At3g25780, 6.3-fold induction). In Arabidopsis, JA is produced during leaf senescence, and the genes mentioned above were strongly induced either during leaf senescence (He et al., 2002
Nep1 treatment also induced genes involved in protein turnover. For example, four transcripts of an ATPase associated with diverse cellular activity (AAA)-type proteins were highly up-regulated by Nep1 (up to 37-fold induction). The AAA-type ATPases, which are subunits of the 26S proteasome (Fu et al., 1999
Nep1 treatment induced three known and 20 putative transcripts encoding disease resistance associated proteins (up to 26-fold induction). Recognition of pathogens by plant resistance (R) genes can trigger resistance responses in plants. The majority of R genes contain a nucleotide-binding site and a Leu-rich repeat domain (for review, see Gregory et al., 2003
Two genes of a
One transcript encoding an immediate-early fungal elicitor family protein (At3g02840) was highly up-regulated by Nep1 treatment (64-fold induction). This protein in Arabidopsis shares 40% identity with a parsley (Petroselinum crispum) immediate-early fungal elicitor protein CMPG1 (AAK69402), which was identified as a fast-responding gene to pathogen-derived elicitor, Pep25 oligopeptide elicitor from P. sojae (Kirsch et al., 1997
Three transcripts encoding putative OMTs (At1g21100, At1g21110, and At1g21120) that catalyze the transfer of a methyl group to the oxygen atom of an acceptor molecule were highly induced by Nep1 (6.5-, 16-, and 13.9-fold induction, respectively). These sequences share 42% and 46% amino acid identity with tobacco COMT I and II (caffeic acid OMT). Isoforms of tobacco COMT are divided into two distinct classes (Jaeck et al., 1996
The ATH1 array results subsequently were verified with QPCR using representative genes from Figure 5 and in Supplemental Table II: CAM (13), mitochondria (46), chloroplast (710), membrane (1114), apoptosis (1517), jasmonate (18 and 19), SA (2022), ethylene (2325), and WRKY (26 and 27). Transcripts of CLH1 encoding chlorophyllase 1 (At1g19670), which did not respond to Nep1 treatments, also were quantified using QPCR. This result agreed with the observation that chlorophyll content was unchanged in Arabidopsis after Nep1 treatment.
In each instance, transcription induction ratios from the QPCR data verified the microarray results (Fig. 6
). However, the mean QPCR response was 4.0-fold greater than that of the ATH1 microarray. This finding is typical of hybridization-based methods versus QPCR (Holland, 2002
Nep1 Induces Cell Death Using microarray analysis, we detected the induction of genes involved in ROS production and signal transduction, ethylene biosynthesis, membrane modification, stress, and cell death. In addition, genes whose products are targeted to specific organelles and membrane structures were rapidly induced by Nep1 treatment. The majority of genes that responded to Nep1 treatment were associated with general stress responses but were not critically linked to resistance to plant disease. These results are consistent with Nep1 facilitating cell death as a component of diseases caused by necrotrophic plant pathogens.
Results presented here characterize the broad array of plant genes that respond to Nep1 treatment. Plant recognition of microbial elicitors and the resulting signal transduction involves the ion channels (Ca2+, anionic, and K+), NADPH oxidase, phospholipases, and many yet unidentified proteins. The activation of many of these proteins triggers secondary messengers including [Ca2+]cyt accumulation, cytosolic pH decrease, ROS accumulation, plasma membrane depolarization, and changes in metabolism, which ultimately lead to plant defense and/or cell death. The involvement of all of these systems in the Nep1 response is indicated based on the altered gene expression observed here. Multiple genes encoding ACS, a control point for ethylene biosynthesis, along with genes involving JA biosynthesis are rapidly induced in response to Nep1 treatment. As plant hormones, ethylene and JA may serve as secondary signals inducing signal transduction cascades (Bleecker and Kende, 2000
Plant Materials: Agarose-Grown Seedlings
To study the effects of Nep1 on plant growth, sterilized Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; L. Henyh [Columbia ecotype]) seeds were mixed with Nep1 (20 µg mL1 plus 0.001% [v/v] Silwet-L77) from Fusarium oxysporium in 0.3% agarose, 1% Suc, 1x MS media, 1x vitamin B5, and 0.1 mM MES. Nep1 was isolated and purified from the culture filtrates of F. oxysporum f. sp. erythroxyli grown for 6 d in Czapek-Dox broth with 1% (w/v) casamino acids (Bailey, 1995 Silwet (0.001% [v/v]) was used only when seedlings were grown in the media containing agarose. We developed the agarose plate system that reduced required amounts of Silwet to minimize the potential for Silwet-induced responses in the developing seedlings. In general, less surfactant required more Nep1 to achieve the same response due to reduced penetration of the tissues. We used a relatively high amount of Nep1 (20 µg mL1) to ensure that strong responses were generated during the treatment. Control samples were similar except that the Nep1 solution was omitted. The final solution was adjusted to pH 5.7 with NaOH and plated onto empty petri dishes (4 mL for 100-mm plates). Seeds were surface sterilized with one-third strength commercial bleach for 10 min. The sterilized seeds were rinsed five times with sterile, deionized water prior to plating. Seedlings were grown in growth chambers at 22°C for 5 d under fluorescent lights providing 150 ± 10 µmol m2 s1 photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) with 16 h light or under dark condition. Growth parameters were measured by flattening 5-d-old seedlings with a coverslip and tracing the outline with a Nikon SMZ 1500 microscope and a Nikon Digital camera DXM1200. Area and length were calculated with a 1-mm2 standard with ASSESS (Image Analysis Software for Plant Disease Quantification; The American Phytopathological Society).
Arabidopsis seedlings were harvested and rinsed after treatment with Nep1 as described above. Fixing, embedding, sectioning, and staining were performed as described in Bae et al. (2005b)
For metabolite analysis, fluorescence imaging, and the DNA microarray and QPCR analyses, approximately 100 sterilized seeds were transferred to sterile 125-mL Erlenmeyer flasks containing 20 mL of 1x MS basal salts supplemented with 1x vitamin B5 in 0.1 mM MES-NaOH, pH 5.7, buffer. Seedlings were grown in controlled environment chambers as described above except that the flasks were continuously agitated with a rotary shaker for 7 d. Seedlings were grown at 22°C for 7 d under fluorescent lights providing 150 ± 10 µmol m2 s1 PAR with 24-h days. One-week-old seedlings were exposed to Nep1 (10 µg mL1) without Silwet. We applied 10 µg mL1 of Nep1 instead of 20 µg mL1, because Nep1 has better accessibility to seedlings in liquid culture compared to agarose media to the point that Silwet was not required, which allowed us to reduce the required amount of Nep1. Seedlings were harvested after treatment, filtered through Whatman number 1 filter paper (Whatman), rinsed thoroughly with deionized water, and were immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen.
Soluble metabolites from Arabidopsis seedlings were extracted and measured by gas chromatography coupled to a mass selective detector essentially as described by Roessner et al. (2000)
Chlorophyll a fluorescence images of sample materials at 685 and 730 nm along with 685/730-nm ratio images were obtained using a hyperspectral fluorescence imaging system (Kim et al., 2001a
To study the Nep1 responsive genes in Arabidopsis, experiments were performed with the Affymetrix GeneChip Arabidopsis ATH1 genome array (www//affymetrix.com;catalogno.900385), which contains more than 22,500 probe sets representing approximately 24,000 genes. Probe arrays are spotted onto a glass array, and the glass substrate was coated with linkers containing photolabile protecting groups, which were removed by illumination. By repeating the masking and illumination, a specific set of oligonucleotide probes is synthesized in a selected location.
Two independent biological replications were conducted using two independent samples and two microarrays. For these experiments whole Arabidopsis seedlings were grown in liquid culture for 7 d as described above. Samples were harvested 30 min after treatment with Nep1 (10 µg mL1) or sterilized, deionized water that was used as a control. The harvested samples were ground to a fine powder under liquid nitrogen using a mortar and pestle. Total RNA was extracted using an RNeasy Mini kit (Qiagen) as described by the manufacturer and then purified with a RNeasy MinElute Cleanup kit (Qiagen). Samples for hybridization were labeled according to protocols developed by the vendor (http://www.affymetrix.com/support/technical/index.affx). Labeling, hybridization of biotinylated cRNA, and imaging procedures were performed using standard Affymetrix protocols (Affymetrix GeneChip Expression Analysis technical manual) in the University of Maryland DNA Microarray Core Facility located in Rockville, Maryland (http://www.umbi.umd.edu/
Selected Nep1 responsive Arabidopsis transcripts identified by DNA microarray analysis were further examined using QPCR. For these experiments, 7-d-old seedlings were grown in liquid culture and treated with Nep1 or the appropriate control for 0, 30, and 180 min. Total RNA was extracted with the RNeasy Mini kit according to the manufacturer's recommendation except that an extra DNase I treatment was used. One microgram of each RNA sample was used to generate first-strand cDNA using SuperScript III RNase H reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen) with an oligo(dT)20 primer. The synthesized first-strand cDNA was diluted 10-fold and used as a template for QPCR. QPCR analysis with selected primer sets was performed using an Mx3000P QPCR system and Brilliant SYBR Green QPCR Master mix (Stratagene). Primers for selected genes were designed to be 23 to 27 mers with a melting temperature of 60°C ± 3°C using the Primer 3 program of Biology WorkBench (http://workbench.sdsc.edu/). Most products generated were 200 to 250 bp, although a few were shorter. Primer sequences are available in Supplemental Table II. A dissociation (melting) curve was run for each gene at the end of the amplification reaction to determine whether genes other than the gene of interest were amplified in the PCR reaction.
Reactions contained 12.5 µL of 2x Brilliant SYBR Green QPCR Master mix, 5 µL of 10-fold diluted cDNA, and 2,500 nM of each gene-specific primer and diluted reference dye (final concentration = 300 nM) in a final volume of 25 µL. A master mix of cDNA, 2x SYBR Green QPCR Master mix, and reference dye was prepared to reduce pipetting errors and to ensure the same amount of reagent in each well. A threshold of 0.1 was manually defined to obtain a threshold cycle (CT) value, which is the cycle number that is required for the SYBR Green fluorescent signal (
Translation elongation factor 1- Received January 9, 2006; returned for revision April 25, 2006; accepted May 2, 2006.
The author responsible for the distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Hanhong Bae (rbae{at}asrr.arsusda.gov).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.076869. * Corresponding author; e-mail rbae{at}asrr.arsusda.gov; fax 3015041998.
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