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First published online May 23, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.121418 Plant Physiology 147:1288-1299 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
RNA Interference-Mediated Repression of Cell Wall Invertase Impairs Defense in Source Leaves of Tobacco[OA]Institut für Botanik, 48149 Muenster, Germany (J.E., I.S.-T., H.S., E.W., J.S.); and Institut für Biologie, 91058 Erlangen, Germany (S.S.)
The significance of cell wall invertase (cwINV) for plant defense was investigated by comparing wild-type tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) Samsun NN (SNN) with plants with RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated repression of cwINV (SNN::cwINV). In source leaves of SNN::cwINV, the activity of cwINV was repressed by about 90%. Sucrose export and apoplastic carbohydrate levels were significantly reduced, while photosynthesis and dark respiration exhibited little or no change. Activities of sucrose synthase and phosphofructokinase were depressed moderately, while ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase was diminished greatly. Yet, the content of cytosolic/vacuolar carbohydrates was not significantly lower, which correlated with the absence of phenotypic effects in SNN::cwINV under normal growing conditions. By contrast, defense-related processes in primary metabolism and hypersensitive cell death were impaired and delayed in correlation with repression of cwINV. The increase in cwINV observed in source leaves of the resistant wild type following infection with Phytophthora nicotianae was absent in SNN::cwINV. Also, defense-related callose deposition at cell-to-cell interfaces, the related decline in sugar export, and accumulation of apoplastic carbohydrates were reduced and delayed. Expression of pathogenesis-related proteins and increase in phenylalanine ammonia-lyase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activities were alleviated. Formation of hydrogen peroxide and development of hypersensitive lesions were weak and heterogeneous, and the pathogen was able to sporulate. We conclude that in photosynthetically active leaves of the apoplastic phloem loader, tobacco cwINV plays an essential role for acquisition of carbohydrates during plant-pathogen interactions and that the availability of these carbohydrates supports the onset of the hypersensitive reaction and ensures successful defense.
When plant cells are attacked by pathogens, a network of cellular reactions is initiated. These include generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), synthesis of pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins and phytoalexins, reorganization of the cytoskeleton, cell wall fortification, the hypersensitive reaction (HR), and cell death (Garcia-Brugger et al., 2006
There is increasing evidence that the availability of carbohydrates indeed affects the plant resistance against pathogens and that plants have evolved mechanisms to modulate their carbohydrate fluxes in response to infections. Increased levels of soluble carbohydrates support plant resistance against diseases (high-sugar resistance; Horsfall and Dimond, 1957 Acquisition of carbohydrates for defense may be a particular problem in fully developed photoautotrophic source leaves: Due to rapid sugar export, the level of soluble carbohydrates is usually low, and carbohydrate-consuming pathways important for defense, such as the glycolysis, respiration, oxidative pentose phosphate (OPPP), and shikimic acid pathways, are reduced. In this metabolic state, mesophyll cells may be not well suited for defense. Nonetheless, photosynthetically active leaves of resistant plants exhibit strong defense reactions, including HR.
Cell wall invertase (cwINV) is a sink-specific enzyme, normally found in various kinds of carbohydrate-consuming tissues, and its activity is usually low in source leaves (e.g. Sturm, 1999
It was shown previously that a rapid induction of cwINV is one of the early defense-related reactions in resistant tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) Samsun NN (SNN) source leaves after infection with Phytophthora nicotianae (Scharte et al., 2005
In the case of defense-related increase in cwINV activity in source leaves (e.g. Scharte et al., 2005 Yet, it still remains unclear whether cwINV activity and the related reprogramming of the carbon metabolism are indispensable elements of defense in leaves. To address this question, we generated transgenic tobacco plants (SNN::cwINV) in which the cwINV activity in source leaves is constitutively suppressed by an RNA interference (RNAi) construct. We investigate changes in the carbohydrate status, callose deposition, and HR/cell death in source leaves during an interaction with the oomycete P. nicotianae van Breda de Haan and compare them with the resistant wild-type tobacco SNN.
The oomycete P. nicotianae is a soil-borne, hemibiotrophic plant pathogen with a broad host range of over 70 tropical and temperate crops, predominately Solanaceae. In susceptible tobacco plants, it causes the Black Shank disease, which includes root rot, leaf wilting, stem blackening, and eventual death (for review, see Erwin and Ribeiro, 1996
Differential CwINV Deficiency in Tobacco Leaves Caused by RNAi-Mediated Silencing
There is only limited sequence information available concerning number and tissue-specificity of tobacco cwINV isoforms. To generate transgenic tobacco plants with reduced cwINV activity, we made use of an intron-spliced hairpin RNAi construct targeted to silence cwINV isoenzymes (LINs) LIN8 and LIN6 in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum; N. Kocal and S. Sonnewald, unpublished data). LIN8 and LIN6 share about 90% identity with the published cwINV isoforms from tobacco (Nt-CWI [Greiner et al., 1995 Thirty-five transgenic plants (SNN::cwINV) were obtained and screened for reduced cwINV activity in source leaves. One line showing the strongest inhibition was selected for further analyses, and homozygous plants of the T3 generation (selection of plants as described in "Materials and Methods") and their wild-type siblings were used in the disease assays and biochemical measurements of this study.
In SNN::cwINV, the activity of cwINV was significantly reduced: 50% in sink and about 90% in source leaves compared to the wild type (Fig. 1A
; Table I
). As shown by representative northern blots probed with Nt-CWI cDNA (Greiner et al., 1995
CwINV Repression Affects Primary Metabolism Photosynthesis was not affected, whereas the dark respiration was slightly increased in source leaves of the SNN::cwINV plants (Table II ). The activities of cytosolic and vacuolar invertase were not altered due to the repression of the cwINV (Table II), whereas Suc synthase (SUSY), the reversible Suc cleaving enzyme in the cytosol, and ATP-dependent phosphofructokinase (PFK), a key enzyme of the glycolysis, were significantly reduced (Fig. 1C). The G6PDH, important for the OPPP, was only slightly and not significantly depressed, whereas ADP-Glc pyrophosphorylase (AGPase), one key enzyme of governing starch synthesis, was significantly diminished by about 60% compared to the wild type (Fig. 1C).
Although activities of some enzymes of the primary metabolism were significantly reduced, the content of cytosolic/vacuolar carbohydrates was not significantly lower in source leaves of the transgenic plants (Table II). This correlated with the absence of phenotypic effects (e.g. size and quantity of roots, leaves, and seeds) in SNN::cwINV plants under normal growing conditions (data not shown).
In wild-type source leaves, the activity of cwINV increased in a biphasic manner immediately after infection with P. nicotianae (Fig. 2A ); a first maximum at 2 hpi was followed by a secondary increase (from 6 hpi on) of more than 150% compared to the noninfected control (Fig. 2A). This early increase in cwINV activity was completely absent in SNN::cwINV plants. A second increase occurred but was much weaker, not even reaching the absolute cwINV activity level of noninfected wild-type tissue (Fig. 2A, inset).
In the wild type, the content of apoplastic hexoses slightly increased during the first cwINV activity peak. At later stages of infection, it raised parallel to the secondary cwINV activity increase (Fig. 2B). In source leaves of SNN::cwINV, the apoplastic hexose content remained almost constant during the first hpi. It just rose at 9 hpi but never reached the absolute amount found in infected wild-type leaves (Fig. 2B, inset).
The formation of callose could be observed at the infection site of the resistant wild type as well as in plants with cwINV deficiency. But the frequency of callose depositions was clearly reduced in the transgenic line (Fig. 3A
). Initially, callose distinctively appeared at plasmodesmata of cell-to-cell contacts of spongy mesophyll cells. During the following hours callose spread over the whole cell wall of infected cells (Scharte et al., 2005
From the first hpi on, the export of Suc through the petiole in infected source leaves decreased in the wild type of more than 50% compared to noninfected control leaves (Fig. 3B). Simultaneously, the content of apoplastic Suc increased at the infection site (Fig. 3C). In SNN::cwINV plants, the Suc export rate remained relatively stable during the first 2 hpi followed by a slow decline (Fig. 3B). Accordingly, the content of apoplastic Suc remained constant. At about 4 hpi, it increased, but the absolute content was reduced compared to the infected wild type (Fig. 3C, inset).
Transcripts of the acidic, salicylate-inducible protein PR-1b (Herbers et al., 1996
Activities of G6PDH and Phe ammonia-lyase (PAL), key enzymes of the OPPP and shikimic pathways, exhibited a steep rise in the wild type and only moderately increased in SNN::cwINV plants (Fig. 4, B and C).
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) release was examined by confocal laser scanning microscopy (cLSM) probing the ROS-dependent oxidation of the nonfluorescent 2',7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate (H2DCF-DA), to the highly fluorescent 2',7'-dichlorofluorescein (DCF). The fluorescent signal has been demonstrated to be proportional to the production of ROS (Rat et al., 1997
Cell death was observed by cLSM using propidium iodide. Intense staining of nuclei by propidium iodide and extensive cell shrinkage (Fig. 5B) followed the release of H2O2. Between 9 and 12 hpi, nearly 50% of all spongy mesophyll cells at the infection site of the wild type were dead compared to 20% to 25% averaged over the infection site in SNN::cwINV plants (Fig. 5C). From 24 hpi on, hypersensitive lesions covered the whole infection area in wild-type leaves, indicating that all cells had undergone hypersensitive cell death. In contrast, the infection site of SNN::cwINV leaves exhibited only small spots of hypersensitive lesions (Fig. 5A). The rapidly induced hypersensitive cell death in wild-type leaves after infection with P. nicotianae limited the rate and extent of pathogen infection indicated by the absence of hyphal growth (not shown). By contrast, in SNN::cwINV plants, hyphal growth and growing sporangiophores could be detected using lactophenol trypan blue staining (Fig. 5D) in those parts of the infected leave tissue where hypersensitive cell death had not occurred.
This study focuses on the impact of cwINV on a successful establishment of plant defense in leaves. Therefore, it is most important that the cwINV activity of the transgenic tobacco plants (SNN::cwINV) is drastically reduced (about 90% in source and 50% in sink leaves; Fig. 1A; Table I) irrespective of which particular cwINV isoforms are repressed. It is also relevant that the activities of other intracellular invertases, vacuolar and cytosolic, are not affected (Table II).
CwINVs are encoded by a multigene family with a highly differential tissue-specific expression, mainly in the phloem conductive tissues (Sturm, 1999
The RNAi construct used in this study was originally designed to silence LIN8 and LIN6 in tomato (N. Kocal and S. Sonnewald, unpublished data). Both were shown to be expressed in leaves and other tissues upon stress-related stimuli and under conditions that require a high carbohydrate supply (Godt and Roitsch, 1997
Despite the reduced cwINV activity, plant growth and development of the transgenic plants seem to be normal under standard growing conditions. The relatively high residual cwINV activity in the sink leaves may enable the normal development of the transgenic plants. However, cwINV repression leads to significant alterations in the carbohydrate metabolism of source leaves. The activities of SUSY, PFK, and G6PDH were moderately reduced (Fig. 1C). SUSY is the key enzyme of symplastic Suc unloading (for review, see Koch, 2004
The most significant change in source leaves of SNN::cwINV was a 60% decline in the activity of AGPase. Despite this drastic repression in enzyme activity, the steady-state level of starch was only slightly diminished (Table II). Similar observations were made in Solanaceae-antisense mRNA transformants, where the starch level is little affected over a wide range and decreases only when the AGPase activity is repressed by more than 50% of the wild-type level. The levels of soluble sugars are also largely unaffected by the AGPase repression (Müller-Röber et al., 1992
The activity of cwINV in source leaves of resistant wild-type tobacco rapidly increased in a biphasic manner during an incompatible interaction with P. nicotianae. Elicitor studies showed that the increased invertase activity in the apoplast is of plant origin (Scharte et al., 2005
Major carbohydrate-consuming reactions are the generation of callose and ROS, immediately elicited after infection (Figs. 3A and 5A). The defense-induced callose deposition at cell-to-cell interfaces closes Suc export routes in tobacco leaves (Scharte et al., 2005
The release of ROS (Fig. 5A) is an additional carbohydrate-consuming reaction during plant defense. It is assumed that ROS generation by a plasmalemmal NADPH-oxidase is important for the initiation of HR. Depletion of NADPH by the oxidase reaction in turn activates the cytosolic G6PDH reaction (and subsequently the OPPP), which generates NADPH (Pugin et al., 1997
In addition to its function as metabolic fuel, reflux of sugars affects gene expression via sugar sensing. Hexokinases are known to sense soluble hexoses and initiate sugar-sensitive signaling pathways (Rolland et al., 2006
In infected SNN::cwINV leaves, both HR (ROS generation, lesion formation) and defense-related alterations in the carbohydrate status were diminished or decelerated. Apoplastic sugar levels remained low, and callose deposition and the inhibition of Suc export were delayed (Figs. 2 and 3). It is reasonable to assume that low sugar supply and reduced SUSY activity restrict callose synthesis and are responsible for the delay of defense-induced callose deposition. Other enzymes, which also could provide carbohydrates, do not compensate the reduced carbohydrate availability due to cwINV repression. For example, there was no enhanced activity of vacuolar and cytosolic invertases detectable in SNN::cwINV plants (Table II). The insufficient carbohydrate supply could also restrict ROS generation (by depletion of the cytosolic G6PDH reaction; see above) and, thus, the execution of programmed cell death in plants (Fig. 5). Additionally, weak changes in PR-Q, PR-1b, and RbcS expression in the transgenic line compared to wild-type leaves (Fig. 4A) actually indicate absent or insufficient sugar-sensing signals most likely due to the weaker induction of cwINV activity. As a result of all these diminished or decelerated defense-induced reactions, source leaves of SNN::cwINV are less tolerant to P. nicotianae, indicated by hyphal growth and growing sporangiophores in those cells where hypersensitive cell death did not occur (Fig. 5D). In compatible interactions, successful colonization of the host typically culminates in sporulation with the development of asexual sporangia on the plant surface or sexual oospores within the host tissues (Hardham, 2007
Summarizing, we propose that in leaves of SNN::cwINV plants, the carbohydrate supply required for a successful plant defense is reduced to low, sometimes critical levels. In this sense, the patchy appearance or complete absence of HR/cell death could be explained by an inhomogeneous distribution of carbohydrate allocation within the leaf. Sugar gradients occur, for example, between mesophyll cells adjacent to veins and more distant cells (for review, see Tomos and Sharrock, 2001
In plants, mechanisms have evolved to modulate carbohydrate levels in response to infections and to use carbohydrates as signals to initiate as well as to fuel defense reactions. Our results strongly support the hypothesis that insufficient carbohydrate supply can indeed delay, hinder, or even completely suppress hypersensitive cell death. Furthermore, the cwINV plays a key role in the acquisition of carbohydrates during plant defense. We show that in the case of the photosynthetically active apoplastic loader, tobacco cwINV acts as enzymatic resistance gene, as was described for genes encoding photorespiratory enzymes (Taler et al., 2004
It is possible that the significance of cwINV activity for defense is a special case of photosynthetically active, apoplastic loaders only. During the night when the sugar export rate is low (e.g. Gibon et al., 2004
RNAi-Plasmid Construction and Tobacco Transformation
The Gateway technology (Invitrogen) was used to generate an RNAi construct. Because we aimed at silencing closely related isoforms LIN8 (accession no. AF506007) and LIN6 (accession no. AF506005), primers were designed from the highly homologous sequence region of both sequences (bp 755–1,162 according to LIN8 sequence). In this region, both sequences share 81.9% sequence identity, which is thought to be sufficient to silence both isoforms by a single construct (Le et al., 2006
Homozygous lines of SNN::cwINV were selected by kanamycin resistance and invertase activity levels in the progeny of self-pollinated primary transformants. Thirty-five kanamycin-resistant transformants were screened for reduction in cwINV level by activity assays, compared to the wild type (data not shown), and then vegetatively multiplied in tissue culture. Seeds (T2 generation) resulting from self-pollination of the T1-transformants with the lowest cwINV activities were scored for kanamycin resistance on Murashige and Skoog medium containing 100 µg mL–1 kanamycin. Some of these chosen lines were not even fertile or the seeds did not germinate. T2 seed populations expressing the lowest levels of cwINV activity and exhibited 3:1 (resistant:susceptible) segregation for the kanamycin marker were chosen for further analysis. Vital lines homozygous for the transgene were then identified by allowing 10 kanamycin-resistant T2 progeny to self-pollinate and set seed and by screening for plants whose seeds (T3 generation) were 100% kanamycin resistant.
Seeds were germinated on Murashige and Skoog agar plates supplemented with 100 µg mL–1 kanamycin in the case of transformants. After 3 weeks, seedlings were transferred to soil. Soil-cultured plants (SNN and SNN::cwINV) were grown in a growth chamber at 24°C/22°C day/night temperature and a 14-h photoperiod (400 µmol quanta m–2 s–1). Eight- to 10-week-old homozygous transformants of the T3 generation and their wild-type siblings were exposed to the pathogen as described below.
Phytophthora nicotianae van Breda de Haan isolate 1828 (DSMZ) was cultivated at 24°C on clarified tomato agar as described by von Broembsen and Deacon (1996) To consider individual plant or developmental variations, the samples for control and infection site were taken from adjacent intercostal areas of the same source leaf, except for the measurements of the Suc efflux. Inoculation of the plants was always performed at the beginning of the photoperiod.
Total RNA was extracted according to Logemann et al. (1987)
To detect H2O2, the tissue was incubated for 10 min in 10 µM H2DCF-DA (Invitrogen). H2DCF-DA is a nonfluorescent cell-permanent dye that after oxidation with H2O2 becomes the fluorescent compound DCF. The fluorescent signal of DCF (excitation, 488 nm; emission, 535 nm) is proportional to ROS production (Rat et al., 1997
Callose was detected with aniline blue as described by Gómez-Gómez et al. (1999) Cell death studies were performed with 0.5 mg mL–1 propidium iodide. Cells with disrupted membranes allow propidium iodide to enter the cell and fluoresce, indicating cell death. The fluorescence is detected at 590 to 650 nm after excitation at 488 nm using a cLSM (TCS SP2 with inverse DMIRB-microscope, Leica).
To monitor hyphal growth, plant leaves and epidermal stripes were stained with lactophenol trypan blue as described previously (Takemoto et al., 2003
For measurements of cwINV activity and apoplastic carbohydrate content, preparation of the apoplastic fluid was carried out as described by Lohaus et al. (2001) To assay vacuolar and cytosolic invertase activity, plant material was homogenized in liquid nitrogen and resuspended in homogenization buffer (50 mM Tris, pH 6.9, 5 mM MgCl2, 15% [v/v] glycerol, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM EGTA, 5 mM dithiothreitol, and 0.1 mm phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride). The homogenate was centrifuged for 10 min at 10,000g and 4°C. The supernatant was removed and used for invertase activity measurements. For measurements of cytosolic/vacuolar carbohydrates, leaf pieces were ground in liquid nitrogen and homogenized with 3 M HClO4 after the extraction of the apoplastic fluid. The homogenate was centrifuged for 5 min at 10,000g at 4°C. The supernatant was neutralized with 3 M KHCO3 to pH 7.0. For starch determination, the pellet was washed with distilled water, resuspended in 5 M KOH, and incubated at 55°C overnight, followed by hydrolysis via amyloglucosidase in 7% (v/v) acetic acid, pH 4.6, for 3 h at 55°C.
Invertase activity was measured in a medium containing the respective extract, 100 mM Suc and either 50 mM sodium acetate at pH 4.9 or pH 4.6 for cwINV and vacuolar invertase or 50 mM HEPES-NaOH, pH 7.5, for alkaline invertase. The amount of liberated hexoses was measured according to the method of Kunst et al. (1984)
Carbohydrates in the apoplastic fluid or the perchloric extract were measured according to the method of Kunst et al. (1984)
The measurements of Suc efflux from petioles were performed according to Murillo et al. (2003)
Phe ammonia-lyase was determined according to Rongrong et al. (2006)
Photosynthetic electron transport and respiration measured as CO2 production in the dark were derived from a chlorophyll-a fluorescence-imaging system connected with a gas exchange system as described in Scharte et al. (2005)
Due to the high variability of the carbohydrate contents from plant to plant and over the day (well known from other studies e.g. Herbers et al., 2000 Differences described as significant were analyzed using the t test algorithm incorporated into Microsoft Excel (v9.0; Microsoft) that yielded a value below 5% (P < 0.05). Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession numbers AF506005 and AF506007.
We thank Yves Gibon and Phillip Bones for helpful assistance with some enzyme measurements, Karin Topp for technical assistance, Antje von Schaewen and Silvia Haferkamp for critical discussion, and Uwe Sonnewald and Thomas Rausch for providing RbcS, PR-Q, PR-1b, and invertase cDNAs, respectively. Received April 17, 2008; accepted May 19, 2008; published May 23, 2008.
The author responsible for 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: Judith Scharte (jschart{at}uni-muenster.de).
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.121418 * Corresponding author; e-mail jschart{at}uni-muenster.de.
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