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First published online November 5, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.130732 Plant Physiology 149:561-574 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
The Genetic Basis of Constitutive and Herbivore-Induced ESP-Independent Nitrile Formation in Arabidopsis1,[W],[OA]Institut für Pharmazeutische Biologie, Technische Universität Braunschweig, 38106 Braunschweig, Germany (M.B., A.L., R.M., A.P., U.W.); and Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, California 95616 (D.J.K.)
Glucosinolates are a group of thioglucosides that are components of an activated chemical defense found in the Brassicales. Plant tissue damage results in hydrolysis of glucosinolates by endogenous thioglucosidases known as myrosinases. Spontaneous rearrangement of the aglucone yields reactive isothiocyanates that are toxic to many organisms. In the presence of specifier proteins, alternative products, namely epithionitriles, simple nitriles, and thiocyanates with different biological activities, are formed at the expense of isothiocyanates. Recently, simple nitriles were recognized to serve distinct functions in plant-insect interactions. Here, we show that simple nitrile formation in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) ecotype Columbia-0 rosette leaves increases in response to herbivory and that this increase is independent of the known epithiospecifier protein (ESP). We combined phylogenetic analysis, a screen of Arabidopsis mutants, recombinant protein characterization, and expression quantitative trait locus mapping to identify a gene encoding a nitrile-specifier protein (NSP) responsible for constitutive and herbivore-induced simple nitrile formation in Columbia-0 rosette leaves. AtNSP1 is one of five Arabidopsis ESP homologues that promote simple nitrile, but not epithionitrile or thiocyanate, formation. Four of these homologues possess one or two lectin-like jacalin domains, which share a common ancestry with the jacalin domains of the putative Arabidopsis myrosinase-binding proteins MBP1 and MBP2. A sixth ESP homologue lacked specifier activity and likely represents the ancestor of the gene family with a different biochemical function. By illuminating the genetic and biochemical bases of simple nitrile formation, our study provides new insights into the evolution of metabolic diversity in a complex plant defense system.
Plants produce a multitude of secondary metabolites to survive in a complex biotic environment. These compounds function as toxins, repellents, and deterrents that defend plants against herbivores, antibiotics that are directed against pathogen attack, volatiles mediating tritrophic interactions, and signals that affect neighboring plants (Kessler and Baldwin, 2002
The glucosinolate-myrosinase system can generate chemical diversity using independent variation in both glucosinolate biosynthesis and glucosinolate hydrolysis (Kliebenstein et al., 2005
Plant and insect proteins known as specifier proteins promote the rearrangement of the aglucone released by myrosinase to products other than isothiocyanates, namely to simple nitriles, epithionitriles, and organic thiocyanates, without having hydrolytic activity on glucosinolates themselves (Tookey, 1973
Allelic variation at the ESP locus allows accessions of Arabidopsis to differ not only in their glucosinolate profiles but also in the types of hydrolysis products formed upon tissue disruption (Lambrix et al., 2001 Here, we report that in addition to basal levels of nitrile-forming activity, simple nitrile formation in Arabidopsis Col-0 rosette leaves is induced by herbivory and that this herbivore-induced simple nitrile formation is independent of ESP. Using phylogenetic analysis in conjunction with a screen of Arabidopsis T-DNA mutants, recombinant protein characterization, and expression quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping, we identify the genetic and biochemical basis of constitutive and herbivore-induced simple nitrile formation in rosette leaves. We provide evidence that a gene whose predicted product is annotated as a myrosinase-binding protein (MBP)-like protein encodes a protein that promotes simple nitrile, but not epithionitrile or thiocyanate, formation. This gene is one representative of five related Arabidopsis genes that encode specifier proteins with NSP activity.
Simple Nitrile Formation Is Induced upon Herbivory in Arabidopsis Col-0 Rosette Leaves
As simple nitriles serve as volatile signals in direct and indirect defense responses against P. rapae (De Vos et al., 2008
Sequence Analysis of Candidate Genes Encoding Proteins with Similarity to Arabidopsis ESP Based on the assumption that ESP-independent nitrile formation is due to a protein with similarity to ESP, we looked for candidate genes in the Arabidopsis genome. A BLASTN search using the Arabidopsis Ler ESP cDNA as a query identified six Arabidopsis genes encoding Kelch proteins with 50% to 60% amino acid sequence identity with ESP (Table I ). Analysis of the predicted protein structures revealed that the proteins are composed of four or five Kelch domains (Fig. 4 ). Kelch domains 3 and 4 of these proteins are up to nine amino acids shorter than the respective domains in ESP. In addition, four of the six predicted candidate proteins contain one or two lectin-related jacalin domains at their N terminus with 50% to 52% identity with putative Arabidopsis MBPs (At1g52040 and At1g52030; Fig. 4). Despite their annotation as MBP-like proteins, these four proteins appear to be chimeras composed of MBP- and ESP-like domains.
Arabidopsis At3g16400 Controls Constitutive and Herbivore-Induced Simple Nitrile Formation in Rosette Leaves To test if one of the six candidate genes was responsible for simple nitrile formation in Col-0 rosette leaves, we performed a systematic phytochemical and biochemical screening of publicly available T-DNA insertion lines and TILLING mutants of these six genes (Supplemental Table S1). Of these mutants, a line with a T-DNA insertion in the second exon of At3g16400 (SALK_072600) produced no or only trace amounts of simple nitriles of the endogenous glucosinolates in rosette leaf homogenates (Fig. 5 ). No significant changes in simple nitrile formation were detected in rosette leaf homogenates of mutant lines of the other five genes. While nitrile formation in Col-0 wild-type plants was herbivore inducible, herbivory by P. rapae larvae did not increase the proportion of nitriles formed upon leaf homogenization in SALK_072600 plants (Fig. 5). Reverse transcription (RT)-PCR detected At3g16400 transcript in rosette leaves of Col-0 wild-type plants but not in the SALK_072600 T-DNA mutant (Fig. 3). While feeding by P. rapae larvae on wild-type plants led to increased At3g16400 transcript levels in the damaged leaves, At3g16400 transcript levels were undetectable in the mutant line even upon herbivory (Fig. 3). Intact glucosinolate accumulation and myrosinase activity were unaltered in the SALK_072600 mutant line compared with Col-0 wild-type plants (Supplemental Table S2; Supplemental Fig. S1). Taken together, the SALK_072600 mutant data suggest that At3g16400 encodes a protein involved in constitutive and herbivore-induced simple nitrile formation in Arabidopsis rosette leaves.
At3g16400 Encodes a Nitrile-Specifier Protein (AtNSP1) To confirm that At3g16400 encodes a nitrile-specifier protein, the full-length At3g16400 cDNA was cloned from an Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center (ABRC) cDNA clone and expressed in Escherichia coli with an N-terminal Strep tag. The protein purified from bacterial extracts promoted the formation of the simple nitrile, but not the epithionitrile, upon myrosinase-catalyzed hydrolysis of allylglucosinolate (Fig. 6 ). Therefore, we designated the protein encoded by At3g16400 AtNSP1. Further biochemical characterization of the purified Strep-tagged protein showed that AtNSP1 also converts 4-methylsulfinylbutylglucosinolate, 4-methylthiobutylglucosinolate, and benzylglucosinolate to their corresponding simple nitriles in the presence of myrosinase (Supplemental Fig. S2). AtNSP1 did not promote thiocyanate or epithionitrile formation from any of the tested substrates.
As epithionitrile formation by ESP has been demonstrated to depend on the presence of iron in vitro, we tested the iron dependence of simple nitrile formation by AtNSP1 (Fig. 7 ; Supplemental Fig. S3) and checked if the addition of iron would lead to detectable epithionitrile formation. Addition of 0.01 to 0.5 mM Fe2+ increased the proportion of nitriles formed in NSP assays performed with allyl-, 4-methylthiobutyl-, 4-methylsulfinylbutyl-, and benzylglucosinolate. However, Fe2+ also increased the proportion of nitriles formed in control assays that did not contain AtNSP1. Fe3+ had no effect on the proportion of simple nitriles formed from allyl-, benzyl-, and 4-methylthiobutylglucosinolate in our assays containing AtNSP1. In respective control assays lacking specifier proteins, Fe3+ does not promote simple nitrile formation (Burow et al., 2006a
Four Homologues of AtNSP1 Have NSP, But Not ESP and TFP, Activity To test if the other five genes identified as candidate genes also encode specifier proteins, we expressed them in E. coli and tested for specifier activity using allylglucosinolate and benzylglucosinolate as substrates for the myrosinase reaction. For At3g16410, At3g16390, At2g33070, and At5g48180, we detected NSP, but not ESP and TFP, activity in crude extracts of bacteria expressing the respective proteins (Supplemental Fig. S4; data not shown). Thus, all of these genes encode nitrile specifier proteins, and we have named these proteins AtNSP2 (At2g33070), AtNSP3 (At3g16390), AtNSP4 (At3g16410), and AtNSP5 (At5g48180). Bacterial extracts harboring the At3g07720 expression construct contained the recombinant protein, as demonstrated by western-blot analysis. However, neither the crude extract nor the purified Strep-tagged protein for At3g07720 showed any specifier activity in our assays.
We previously analyzed simple nitrile formation during glucosinolate hydrolysis in mature rosettes of 400 lines of the Bay-0 x Sha recombinant inbred line (RIL) population (Wentzell et al., 2008
Plant Specifier Protein Phylogenetic Analysis To further refine the evolution of this family of specifier proteins, we obtained all protein sequences showing a significant BLASTP score across the length of the protein in comparison with Arabidopsis ESPs from the complete genomic sequences of several fungal, algal, bryophyte, and higher plant species that do not contain glucosinolates in addition to the known ESP and TFP sequences. An Arabidopsis gene responsible for simple nitrile formation should not be closely related to genes from nonglucosinolate species. As expected from the biochemical assays, we found that At3g16390, At3g16400, At3g16410, At2g33070, and At5g48180 are genes that do not have homologues in poplar (Populus species), rice (Oryza sativa), or grape (Vitis vinifera), species that do not contain glucosinolates (Fig. 9 ). In contrast, At3g07720 appears to be a single-copy gene in Arabidopsis that has homologues in all fungal, algal, bryophyte, and higher plant species tested (Fig. 9). This suggests that At3g07720 may encode the ancestral function from which the glucosinolate-related activity is derived.
Interestingly, AtNSP1 (At3g16400), AtNSP2 (At2g33070), AtNSP3 (At3g16390), and AtNSP4 (At3g16410) contain jacalin domains that are not present in AtNSP5 (At5g48180) or ESP or in the ancestral protein encoded by At3g07720 (Fig. 4). This suggests that the sequences encoding these jacalin domains were obtained from some other gene. Phylogenetic analysis with the jacalin domains showed that they appear to be derived from the putative MBPs (Fig. 10 ). Interestingly, At3g16410 seems to have obtained sequences for jacalin domains from two different sources (Fig. 10, compare At3g16410a and -b).
The chemical diversity of the glucosinolate-myrosinase system arises from variation in both glucosinolate biosynthesis and hydrolysis. As an example, a single protein amino acid, Met, is the precursor of more than 30 aliphatic glucosinolates within a single plant species, Arabidopsis (Reichelt et al., 2002
Our study demonstrates that Arabidopsis is equipped with an extensive protein machinery dedicated to simple nitrile formation. This is in agreement with the observation that simple nitriles are major glucosinolate hydrolysis products in certain organs and developmental stages of Arabidopsis (Wentzell and Kliebenstein, 2008
AtNSP1 through -5 are the first examples of plant proteins that promote simple nitrile formation but do not support epithionitrile formation from alkenylglucosinolates (Fig. 6; Supplemental Figs. S2 and S4). In contrast, ESP allows simple nitrile formation only from glucosinolates that cannot form epithionitriles due to their lack of a terminal double bond. During myrosinase-catalyzed hydrolysis in the presence of ESP, glucosinolates with a terminal double bond in their side chain undergo an intramolecular sulfur migration in which the thioglucosidic sulfur is transferred to the double bond, yielding a thiirane ring (Brocker and Benn, 1983
As the known ESPs, AtNSP1 through -5 are Kelch repeat proteins containing four or five Kelch domains (Fig. 4). In contrast to the ESPs and AtNSP5, four of the NSPs possess one (AtNSP1, AtNSP2, and AtNSP3) or two (AtNSP4) lectin-like jacalin domains at their N terminus with high amino acid sequence similarity to the putative Arabidopsis MBPs. Despite these remarkable structural differences, all five NSPs have simple nitrile-forming but no epithionitrile- or thiocyanate-forming activity. MBPs have long been associated with the glucosinolate-myrosinase system (Falk et al., 1995 As At3g07720 is the basal member of the family and lacks a jacalin domain, the presence of jacalin domains in AtNSP1 through -4 is likely the derived state. Interestingly, phylogenetic analysis suggests that these domains share a common ancestry with the jacalin domains present in the putative glucosinolate-related Arabidopsis MBPs, MBP1 and MBP2 (Fig. 10). This coordination of related jacalin domains in MBPs and NSPs raises interesting questions about how the glucosinolate-myrosinase system may have evolved. AtNSP4, however, has obtained its second jacalin domain from a different source. In terms of the functionality of the specifier proteins, phylogenetic analysis allows us to conclude that ESP activity is likely a derived function. This is because the ESPs are surrounded by proteins that we have shown to be NSPs (Fig. 9). The maintenance of NSPs is in agreement with the hypothesis that simple nitriles play a beneficial role for the plant. Interestingly, the ESP branch also includes a protein that promotes thiocyanate formation, TFP. This suggests that there has been a change in this branch of the tree that facilitated the evolution of ESP and TFP activities. The cloning of more ESPs and TFPs is required to validate that this group is the sole source of these derived proteins in plants and that there are no other origins of these activities. The identification of five ESP homologues that promote exclusively simple nitrile formation from structurally diverse glucosinolate substrates not only underlines the importance of this group of glucosinolate hydrolysis products but also illustrates the complexity of the glucosinolate-myrosinase system. While glucosinolates and myrosinases are preformed components of this system, temporal and spatial regulation of a multitude of proteins controlling the outcome of glucosinolate hydrolysis enables the plant to adjust its chemical defense in response to changes in the biotic environment. Our findings on the evolution of plant specifer proteins will inspire future studies on the coevolution of glucosinolate-containing plants and the organisms interacting with them at different trophic levels.
Plants and Insects Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants of the accession Col-0 were grown on soil in a controlled-environment chamber at 22°C, 60% to 70% relative humidity, and 300 µmol m–2 s–1 photosythetically active radiation. The photoperiod was 10 h. Seeds of the T-DNA insertion line SALK_072600 and all other mutant lines (Col-0 background; Supplemental Table S3) were obtained from the Nottingham Arabidopsis Stock Centre and grown on soil under the above conditions or germinated on Murashige and Skoog medium containing 0.9% (w/v) agar and 50 µg mL–1 kanamycin and transferred to soil after 14 d. A continuous rearing of Pieris rapae (Lepidoptera, Pieridae) was maintained on brussels sprout (Brassica oleracea gemmifera) plants in a controlled-environment chamber at 24°C, 60% relative humidity, and a photoperiod of 16 h.
Allylglucosinolate was purchased from AppliChem. All other intact glucosinolates were isolated as described previously (Thies, 1988
Crude plant extracts and ESP/NSP assays were extracted with dichloromethane and analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and by gas chromatography-flame ionization detection (GC-FID) using an Agilent 6890N series gas chromatograph with an HP5MS column (30 m x 0.25 mm x 0.25 µm; Wicom), splitless injection at 200°C (injection volume, 1 µL), and the temperature programs listed in Supplemental Table S3. MS, FID, and quantification by GC-FID were carried out as described previously (Lambrix et al., 2001
Crude plant extracts were prepared by grinding 150 to 500 mg (fresh weight) of rosette leaves with 50 mM MES buffer, pH 6.0, or 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5 (1 mL of buffer per gram). After incubation at room temperature for 5 min, samples were centrifuged at 10,000g and 4°C for 10 min. The supernatants were kept on ice until used as described below. Protein determination was done according to Bradford (1976)
Crude plant extracts (150–350 µL) to which 30 to 50 µL of benzonitrile (100 ng µL–1 in methanol) as an internal standard had been added were extracted with 2x 750 µL of dichloromethane, and the organic phases were combined, dried over Na2SO4, concentrated under an air stream, and analyzed by GC-FID and GC-MS as described above.
Myrosinase assays were conducted with 2 mM allylglucosinolate and 30 µL of plant extract in a total volume of 100 µL. After incubation at 37°C for 15 min, the reaction was stopped by boiling (95°C for 5 min). Glc concentrations were determined as described previously (Burow et al., 2006b
Rosette leaves (170–260 mg fresh weight) were ground in 300 µL of 50 mM MES buffer, pH 6.0. After addition of 700 µL of MES buffer and incubation with 10 to 40 µL of 10 mM allylglucosinolate at room temperature for 5 min, 50 µL of benzonitrile (100 ng µL–1 in methanol) was added as an internal standard (Wentzell and Kliebenstein, 2008
Preparation of samples for glucosinolate determination as desulfoglucosinolates was as described previously (Burow et al., 2006b
P. rapae larvae (second and third instar) were placed on rosettes of 6-week-old Arabidopsis Col-0 wild-type or SALK_072600 plants (one larva per plant). Plants were covered with plastic bread bags to prevent insects from escaping and placed in a controlled-environment chamber (14 h of light/10 h of dark, 22°C, 60% relative humidity). Untreated control plants were kept in bags under the same conditions. After 24 h, leaves were harvested for expression analysis by RT-PCR and for analysis of glucosinolate hydrolysis products. From herbivore-treated plants, damaged and undamaged leaves were harvested separately.
To identify candidate genes encoding a nitrile-specifier protein in Arabidopsis Col-0, we used the Arabidopsis (Ler) ESP full-length cDNA (1,026 bp; GenBank accession no. AF416787) as a query to search the Arabidopsis genome using the BLASTN algorithm (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast/Blast.cgi). Full-length sequences with 35% or greater identity with the ESP cDNA were translated in silico, and protein structures were predicted using InterProScan (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/InterProScan/; European Bioinformatics Institute). Genes encoding Kelch repeat proteins were chosen for further analyses.
Genomic DNA was isolated from frozen leaf material using the plantdna-OLS-Kit (OMNI Life Science) according to the manufacturer's instructions. PCR was conducted with Taq polymerase (OMNI Life Science) in 25 µL of PCR buffer containing 1 unit of enzyme, 200 ng of genomic DNA, 200 µM deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs), and 20 pmol of each primer (gene-specific primer for At3g16400, 5'-CCTACTTGTGCTATGGGATGTGAG-3'; T-DNA left border primer, 5'-CGTGGACCGCTTGCTGC-3') as detailed in Supplemental Table S4. PCR results were analyzed on 1% agarose gels, and the amplified fragment was verified by sequencing.
Total RNA was isolated from frozen plant tissues using ribozol-OLS (OMNI Life Science) as directed and quantified spectrophotometrically. To ensure that data points within the linear range of the RT-PCR were obtained, first-strand cDNA synthesis was performed on three different amounts of RNA (0.1, 0.3, and 1.0 µg). RT reactions were carried out with the totalscript-OLS kit (OMNI Life Science) as directed and purified using the Wizard SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up System (Promega). PCR was done in a total volume of 25 µL of PCR buffer containing 1 unit of omnitaq-OLS (OMNI Life Science), 0.5 µL of the RT reaction, 200 µM dNTPs, and 10 pmol of each primer (Supplemental Table S5) as detailed in Supplemental Table S4. Twenty microliters of the PCR product was analyzed on 1.5% agarose gels. The 604-bp fragment amplified with the AtNSP1 primers was cloned and verified by sequencing.
Total RNA was isolated from rosette leaves using the RNeasy Plant Mini kit (Qiagen) and from 7-d-old seedlings using the plant RNA-OLS kit (OMNI Life Science) as directed. cDNA synthesis was done using SuperScript III reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen) and oligo(dT)12–18 primers (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's directions. The full-length cDNAs of At3g07720 (990 bp) and At5g48180 (981 bp) were cloned from seedling cDNA, and those of At2g33070 (1,416 bp) and At3g16390 (1,404 bp) were cloned from leaf cDNA. The full-length cDNAs of At3g16400 (1,413 bp) and At3g16410 (1,860 bp) were amplified from the ABRC cDNA clones U09267 and S81471, respectively (ABRC DNA Stock Center). Primers are listed in Supplemental Table S6. The Arabidopsis Ler ESP cDNA was amplified from a previously described ESP construct in the pCRT7/CT-TOPO vector (Invitrogen; Burow et al., 2006a
Escherichia coli strain BL21(DE3)pLysS (Invitrogen) was transformed with the empty expression vector [modified pET52(b)+] or one of the expression constructs. Single colonies selected on Luria-Bertani medium supplemented with 100 µg mL–1 ampicillin and 34 µg mL–1 chloramphenicol were used to inoculate 10 mL of terrific broth medium containing the same antibiotics. After growth at 18°C and 220 rpm for 62 h, 6 mL of the precultures was transferred to 1 L of terrific broth medium with antibiotics. The cultures were grown and extracted as described (Burow et al., 2006a
Crude bacterial extracts or fractions from protein purifications were separated on 12% Tris/SDS-PAGE gels and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes. Strep-tagged proteins were detected using an anti-Strep tag antibody (Strep-Tactin alkaline phosphatase conjugate; IBA) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Enzyme assays were carried out in 500 µL of 50 mM MES buffer, pH 6.0, with 150 µL of bacterial extracts or 1 unit of purified recombinant protein (unless otherwise stated). Glucosinolates were added to the assay mixtures to a final concentration of 1 mM (4-methylthiobutyl- and benzylglucosinolate), 2 mM (allylglucosinolate), or 3 mM (4-methylsulfinylbutylglucosinolate). The reaction was started by the addition of 4 units of myrosinase purified from white mustard (Sinapis alba) seeds (Burow et al., 2006a
Transcript accumulation values for At3g14210 and At3g16390/400/410 were obtained from previous analysis of the Bay-0 x Sha population (West et al., 2007
We used BLASTP to query plant, fungal, bryophyte, and algal whole genome sequences with the full-length ESP amino acid sequence. To include a gene as a potential ESP homologue, it had to have a BLASTP score of at least e–45 with similarity across the full ESP sequence. The contiguous Kelch domains of the proteins were subjected to ClustalX phylogenetic analysis using neighbor joining with 1,000 bootstraps. To compare the evolutionary history of the jacalin domains present in the Arabidopsis specifier proteins, we identified all homologous proteins encoded in the rice (Oryza sativa) and poplar (Populus species) genomes as described above using the jacalin domain from Arabidopsis MBP1 (At1g52040). We limited our analysis to these three genomes because of the large number of jacalin homologues. We then conducted ClustalX phylogenetic analysis using neighbor joining with 1,000 bootstraps. The tree was visualized in Treeview as an unrooted tree, given the fact that we do not know the direction of evolution or if it is monodirectional for these families. Instead, we focused on relatedness of the sequences. Maximum likelihood trees were similar in structure.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Claudine Theuring for isolating glucosinolate substrates, Anita Backenköhler and Loretta Heise for excellent technical assistance, and the ABRC and Nottingham Arabidopsis Stock Centre for providing EST clones and seed stocks, respectively. Received October 2, 2008; accepted October 31, 2008; published November 5, 2008.
1 This work was supported by the German Research Foundation, Priority Program 1152, Evolution of Metabolic Diversity (grant no. WI2668/2–1 to U.W.), and the National Science Foundation (grant nos. DBI 0642481 and MCB 0323759 to D.J.K.).
2 Present address: Plant Biochemistry Laboratory, Department of Plant Biology and Biotechnology, and VKR Research Center for Pro-Active Plants, Faculty of Life Sciences, Copenhagen University, Thorvaldsensvej 40, DK–1871 Frederiksberg C, Denmark. 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: Ute Wittstock (u.wittstock{at}tu-bs.de).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.130732 * Corresponding author; e-mail u.wittstock{at}tu-bs.de.
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