|
|
||||||||
|
First published online February 11, 2009; 10.1104/pp.108.132928 Plant Physiology 149:1690-1700 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Silencing the Hydroxyproline-Rich Glycopeptide Systemin Precursor in Two Accessions of Nicotiana attenuata Alters Flower Morphology and Rates of Self-Pollination1,[W],[OA]Department of Molecular Ecology, Max-Planck-Institute for Chemical Ecology, D–07745 Jena, Germany
Systemins and their hydroxyproline-rich glycopeptide systemin (ppHS) subfamily members are known to mediate antiherbivore defenses in some solanaceous taxa but not others; functions other than in defense remain largely unexplored. Nicotiana attenuata's ppHS is known not to function in herbivore defense. NappHS transcripts are abundant in flowers, particularly in pistils, and when two N. attenuata accessions from Utah and Arizona were transformed to silence NappHS by RNAi (IRsys), seed capsule production and seed number per capsule were reduced in both accessions. These reductions in reproductive performance could not be attributed to impaired pollen or ovule viability; hand-pollination of all IRsys lines of both accessions restored seed production per capsule to levels found in wild-type plants. Rather, changes in flower morphology that decreased the efficiency of self-pollination are likely responsible: IRsys plants of both accessions have flowers with pistils that protrude beyond their anthers. Because these changes in flower morphology are reminiscent of CORONATINE-INSENSITIVE1-silenced N. attenuata plants, we measured jasmonates (JAs) and their biosynthetic transcripts in different floral developmental stages, and found levels of JA-isoleucine (Ile)/leucine and threonine deaminase transcripts, which are abundant in wild-type pistils, to be significantly reduced in IRsys buds and flowers. Threonine deaminase supplies Ile for JA-Ile biosynthesis, and we propose that ppHS mediates JA signaling during flower development and thereby changes flower morphology. These results suggest that the function of ppHS family members in N. attenuata may have diversified to modulate flower morphology and thereby outcrossing rates in response to biotic or abiotic stresses.
Signaling peptides that activate plant defense genes are defined as members of the systemin family (Pearce and Ryan, 2003
HypSys peptides isolated from attacked tobacco leaves were shown to elicit the tobacco trypsin inhibitor, a paralog of the tomato protease inhibitor II, when applied to the cut petioles of tobacco leaves (Pearce et al., 2001
Nicotiana attenuata, a wild diploid tobacco, is native to the southwestern deserts of the United States, with populations across Utah, Arizona, and California. The plant is self compatible, and is known to exhibit adaptive morphological and chemical phenotypic plasticity in response to biotic and abiotic factors, including the JA-mediated production of defense metabolites such as nicotine or TPIs in response to herbivore attack (Baldwin, 2001
N. attenuata contains a homolog of the Hyp-rich systemin glycopeptide precursor found in cultivated tobacco. But N. attenuata plants of the UT accession that were silenced for their ability to express the HypSys precursor gene (NappHS) by RNAi did not differ from wild-type plants in their ability to produce TPIs or other JA-mediated antiherbivore defenses (Berger and Baldwin, 2007
PpHS Does Not Mediate Antiherbivore Defense Responses in AZ Plants
We expanded our previous analysis of NappHS's role in mediating N. attenuata's antiherbivore responses to plants of the AZ accession. We detected no change in NappHS transcripts in leaves treated with oral secretions of Manduca sexta or systemic leaves, AZ wild-type plants (Supplemental Fig. S1A). We generated two independently transformed lines each harboring a single insertion of the transformation vector (Supplemental Fig. S1B) and confirmed the reduction in ppHS transcripts by real-time quantitative (q)PCR analysis (Supplemental Fig. S1C), and that they were diploid by flow cytometry. IRsys lines contained only 1.2% of the ppHS transcripts of AZ wild-type plants. Interestingly, the transformed plants, with low endogenous ppHS levels, contained the same amount of nicotine as nontransformed plants (Supplemental Fig. S1D; ANOVA, F2,9 = 0.414, P > 0.45) and they were not impaired in the wound-induced increase in nicotine accumulation (Supplemental Fig. S1D; ANOVA, F2,12 = 1.925, P > 0.0812). Similar observations were found in ppHS-silenced plants of the UT accession (Berger and Baldwin, 2007
To examine whether the NappHS gene influences the growth performance of N. attenuata, we measured stalk lengths of AZ and UT accessions and their respective silenced lines and found no significant difference between wild-type and IRsys lines (AZ, Supplemental Fig. S2A, left section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,26 = 2.585, P > 0.05; UT, Supplemental Fig. S2A, right section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,27 = 0.047, P > 0.05). Only plants from AZ IRsys line 2 differed in their stalk lengths from AZ wild-type plants on days 4 (ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,26 = 4.424, P = 0.0133) and 6 (ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,26 = 5.375, P = 0.0033).
Plants of the AZ IRsys and UT IRsys lines did not differ significantly in the timing of the appearance of the first flowers, compared to their respective wild-type (AZ, Supplemental Fig. S2A, arrows; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,27 = 5.424, P > 0.05; UT, Supplemental Fig. S2A, arrows; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,27 = 3.580, P > 0.05) plants. In addition, the number of flowers per plant in AZ wild-type and IRsys lines was the same (Supplemental Fig. S2B, left section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,26 = 0.118, P > 0.05); this was also true for the UT accession (Supplemental Fig. S2B, right section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,27 = 3.022, P > 0.05). Reductions in aboveground biomass were correlated with low endogenous NappHS levels in AZ (Supplemental Fig. S2C, left section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,45 = 10.037, P
A plant's reproductive success and therefore its fitness are strongly correlated with its seed capsule production. To determine whether silencing the NappHS gene has fitness consequences for N. attenuata, we counted the number of seed capsules per plant. We found conspicuously lower numbers of seed capsules in NappHS-silenced lines of both accessions compared to their respective wild type: AZ (Fig. 1A
, top, left section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,52 = 92.379, P < 0.0001) and UT (Fig. 1A, top, right section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,39 = 16.403, P
To determine if low seed numbers per capsule were due to deficiencies in pollen or ovule viability, we emasculated flowers and pollinated them by hand with pollen of the respective genotype. Hand-pollination restored seed production of IRsys plants to wild-type levels in both accessions: AZ (Fig. 1B, left section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,29 = 2.338, P > 0.05) and UT (Fig. 1B, right section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,23 = 0.7180, P > 0.05). We also examined the viability of the pollen by staining it with fluorescine diacetate and found no differences in pollen viability among any of the genotypes (Supplemental Fig. S3).
Since reduced seed capsule and seed numbers in IRsys plants of both accessions was not due to reduced flower numbers or nonviable pollen or ovules, the differences may simply be the result of pollen limitation, which was equalized when emasculated flowers were hand-pollinated. We observed that IRsys plants silenced in NappHS produce flowers with stigmas that protruded beyond the stamen (Fig. 2A ). In contrast, in wild-type flowers of both accessions, the stigma is almost in the same plane as the stamen when the flower opens and the anthers dehisce, or even below it. Approximately 90% of the flowers in NappHS-silenced lines showed an elongated stigma, whereas only 24% (AZ) and 26% (UT) of the wild-type plants did (Supplemental Fig. S4; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, P < 0.0001).
We found significant differences in the IRsys flowers of both accessions when measuring the distance between the stigma and the anther of the longest filament (Fig. 2C; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, P < 0.0001). In contrast, the stigma of wild-type flowers was on the same level or below the anther of the longest filament in AZ flowers (wild type: –0.120 ± 0.025 mm; IRsys line 1: 0.145 ± 0.015 mm; IRsys line 2: 0.096 ± 0.020 mm) and in UT flowers (wild type: –0.062 ± 0.017 mm; IRsys line 1: 0.128 ± 0.015 mm; IRsys line 2: 0.099 ± 0.014 mm). As this difference could be due to either elongation of the stigma or shortening of the filaments, we measured the total length of pistil and stamen in all genotypes. We found longer pistils in the silenced lines of both accessions AZ (Fig. 2B, left section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,33 = 53.519, P < 0.0001) and UT (Fig. 2B, right section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,30 = 5.035, P 0.0109) compared to their respective wild type. Stamens were not significantly shorter from wild type in either ppHS-silenced line (Fig. 2C, right section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, P > 0.05). Finally, we found significantly longer stamens in the AZ IRsys line 2 (Fig. 2C, left section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, P 0.0036). Interestingly, pistils of both accessions had the highest abundance of NappHS transcripts compared to stamens and corollas (Fig. 2D, left and right sections) of the same flower. As Figure 2D demonstrates, NappHS transcripts were significantly reduced in all flower parts of all transformed lines.
Many developmental processes are described to be orchestrated by JAs. Since there is evidence that the tomato systemin peptide is involved in amplifying a JA-based mobile wound signal, the question arose: Is the flower phenotype in the IRsys lines also mediated by JAs? To address this question, we measured the JA and JA-Ile/Leu concentration in three different developmental stages of the flowers. All developmental stages of IRsys flowers contained less JA-Ile/Leu than their respective wild types (Fig. 3, A–C
). This was true for three developmental stages of reproductive meristems: small buds (5–10 mm) of AZ IRsys lines (Fig. 3A, left section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,12 = 9.975, P
JA contents decreased even more drastically. Whereas small amounts were detectable in small buds (1,000 ng g–1 fresh mass in AZ and 800 ng g–1 fresh mass in UT; Fig. 3D), fully opened flowers contained only minute amounts of JA (Fig. 3F). The JA content of bud and flower tissue in all the transgenic lines was significantly lower than that of the bud and flower tissue in UT wild-type plants: small buds (Fig. 3D, right section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,12 = 13.589, P 0.0030), older buds (Fig. 3E, right section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,14 = 6.769, P 0.0063), and flowers (Fig. 3F, right section; ANOVA, F2,12 = 6.773, P 0.030). Significantly lower JA levels than in AZ wild type were detected in small buds (Fig. 3D, left section; Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test ANOVA, F2,12 = 8.465, P 0.0334) and in flowers (Fig. 3F, left section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,11 = 9.758, P 0.0051) but not in medium-sized buds (Fig. 3E, left section; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, F2,14 = 1.014, P > 0.05) of AZ transgenic lines. Interestingly, the accumulation of ppHS transcripts during flower development did not vary significantly (Supplemental Fig. S5).
Since flower development is under the regulation of many interacting hormones such as abscisic acid (ABA), auxins, and ethylene, we measured these hormones as well. ABA's role in flower senescence is known, and that ABA treatment increased ppHS transcripts in cultivated tobacco has been described (Rocha-Granados et al., 2005
To understand how silencing ppHS influences JA accumulation in flowers, we isolated RNA from stamens, pistil, and corolla and measured relative transcript abundances of NaAOS, NaLOX3, NaJAR4, NaJAR6, and NaTD using real-time qPCR. NaAOS, the gene that encodes the allene oxidase synthase, and NaLOX3, the gene that encodes a lipoxygenase, are known to directly influence JA accumulation. The relative transcript abundance of both genes was not lower in stamens, pistils, and corollas of IRsys flowers compared to wild-type flowers (Supplemental Fig. S9A, NaLOX3; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, P > 0.05; and NaAOS; ANOVA, Bonferroni-corrected post-hoc test, P > 0.05), indicating that the absence of ppHS in N. attenuata flowers does not impair the transcriptional regulation of enzymes involved in JA production. Since we found significantly lower levels of JA-Ile/Leu in buds and flowers of IRsys plants in AZ and UT, we measured transcript levels of NaTD and NaJAR4/NaJAR6. Thr deaminase (TD) is involved in the synthesis of Ile, and NaJAR4/NaJAR6 genes encode enzymes responsible for conjugating JA and Ile (Kang et al., 2006
Both systemins and HypSys belong to a functionally defined gene family whose members are supposed to amplify defense signaling pathways. Known functional similarities between systemin and HypSys peptides or their precursors are not reflected in their phylogenetic relationships (Supplemental Fig. S11). Interestingly, the phylogenetically more similar HypSys peptides appear to be more functionally diverse than the more distantly related tomato systemin and the cultivated tobacco HypSys, as evidenced by studies in tomato, cultivated tobacco, and petunia. Recently, HypSys peptides in tomato and cultivated tobacco were found to activate defense genes in response to wounding and herbivore attack (Pearce et al., 2001
Due to the apparent rapid diversification of function among HypSys homologs, we hypothesized that NappHS may have lost its defensive function in UT recently and extended our analysis to include a different accession, AZ, which unlike UT is unable to produce TPIs. Because TPIs are not present in AZ and because nicotine is a representative JA-induced defense compound that is present in both AZ and UT (Glawe et al., 2003
If NappHS is not involved in the defense responses of N. attenuata, why are NappHS transcripts expressed in aboveground tissue, and why are they particularly abundant in flowers (Berger and Baldwin, 2007
How NappHS contributes to seed capsule production in N. attenuata needs to be clarified. Our growth data excluded differences in vegetative biomass as a possible reason for the observed differences in seed capsule production (Supplemental Fig. S2, A and B). Dysfunctions in fertility could be ruled out as hand-pollination experiments revealed that neither reduced pollen nor ovule viability could account for the reduced reproductive performance of IRsys plants (Supplemental Fig. S3; Fig. 1B). Since hand-pollination restored the numbers of seeds produced in IRsys plants to those of wild-type plants, we inferred that silencing NappHS reduces the self-pollination frequency under glasshouse conditions and consequently reduces seed yield. It seems likely that reduced self-pollination rates are the reason for the observed yield losses rather than an inhibition in the maturation of male and female flower organs, as seen in other flower mutants impaired in fruit and seed production. For example, the jasmonic acid-insensitive-1 (jai-1) tomato mutant showed no growth phenotype, but was impaired in fruit and seed production similar to IRsys plants. Reciprocal crossing experiments with wild-type tomato and jai-1 plants clearly revealed that the sterility of this mutant was based on dysfunctions in the female reproductive organs (Li et al., 2001
N. attenuata flowers characteristically contain a pistil surrounded by five stamens: a long pair of stamens at the mouth of the corolla, a shorter pair of stamens, and a single stamen shorter than the others (Goodspeed et al., 1954
Changes in flower morphology are commonly described in plants impaired or mutated in JA signaling (Sanders et al., 2000
Interestingly, JA levels decrease precipitously during flower development in both AZ and UT accessions, while JA-Ile levels decrease only modestly (Fig. 3), suggesting that JA-Ile/Leu or other JA conjugates play a more important role in N. attenuata flower development than JA itself. Similar findings in tomato cv Moneymaker buds and flowers, which contain more JA-Ile than JA (Hause et al., 2000
Changes in the JA profiles of IRsys flowers are mirrored in the abundance of transcripts of JA, JA-Ile/Leu biosynthetic genes, and TD. TD catalyzes the formation of
Another hypothesis why JA complementation failed to restore the wild-type phenotype is that JAs only influence a particular aspect of the IRsys flower phenotype and that other, not-yet-identified factors play a role as well. Another phytohormone could be one of these factors. Hormones known to play central roles in flower development are ethylene (e.g. Vanaltvorst and Bovy, 1995
The role of ethylene in pistil growth regulation was recently highlighted by Hibi et al. (2007) However the phenotype cannot be fully explained by a decrease only in JAs, even though it seems that they play a central role in interacting with ppHS, and more research is required to understand how NappHS regulates pistil length.
The question remains as to why IRsys flowers possess longer pistils. Changes in style length in cultivated tomato flowers were recently attributed to a mutation of the promoter of Style2.1, a gene that encodes a putative transcription factor regulating cell elongation in developing styles. Style2.1 was identified by quantitative trait loci mapping as a major factor for flower development and the changes in style length lead to a switch from cross-pollination to self-pollination (Chen et al., 2007
Plant Material and Growing Conditions
Nicotiana attenuata Torr. Ex. Wats. seeds from a Utah population originally collected near Santa Clara, Utah, and inbred for 14 or 15 generations were used to conduct experiments and to generate transformed lines from this accession (UT). Seeds of the Arizona accession (AZ) were collected from a 20-plant population near Flagstaff, Arizona (Glawe et al., 2003
Cloning and sequencing the NapreproHypSys gene (NappHS; GenBank accession no. AY456270) and the generation of IRsys lines for the Utah accession (line 1: A-04-366-11; line 2: A-04-464-1) are described by Berger and Baldwin (2007)
To determine the number of transformation vector insertions in the transformed lines of the AZ accession, isolated genomic DNA was hybridized with a PCR fragment of the hptII gene, the selection marker used on the transformation vector (pRESC). The PCR product for both probes was eluted from the gel using a Geneclean kit (BIO 101; Vista), labeled with [32]P using a random prime labeling kit (RediPrime II; Amersham-Pharmacia), and purified on G50 columns (Amersham-Pharmacia). After overnight hybridization, blots were washed one time with 2x sodium chloride/sodium phosphate/EDTA at 62°C and three times with 2x chloride/sodium phosphate/EDTA/2% SDS, and analyzed with a phosphor-imager (model FLA-3000; Fuji Photo Film Co.).
To quantify transcripts in leaves and flower tissue (stamens, corolla, and pistil) and at different developmental flower stages, total RNA was extracted using TRI Reagent (Sigma) according to the protocol of Chomczynski and Sacchi (1987)
For real-time quantification of the transcripts, cDNA was prepared from 200 ng total RNA with MultiScribe reverse transcriptase (Applied Biosystems). The gene-specific primers and probes for NappHS, NaLOX3, NaAOS, NaJAR4, NaJAR6, and NaTD mRNA expression detection by qPCR are provided in Supplemental Table S1. The assays using a double-dye-labeled probe were performed on an ABI PRISM 7700 Sequence Detection system (qPCR Core kit; Eurogentec). The expression of each gene was normalized to the expression of the endogenous control gene actin. Northern-blot analysis of ppHS transcripts in AZ wild-type plants was conducted as described by Berger and Baldwin (2007)
Stalk length measurements in elongating 4-week-old plants were made over a period of 2 weeks to evaluate growth. First flowering, flower number, and lifetime seed capsule numbers were determined as estimates of fitness. Freshly opened flowers were counted in 40-d-old plants and total seed capsule number was counted after irrigation was stopped. Aboveground tissue was collected and dried at 60°C, and biomass was determined. To determine the seeds per capsule of self-pollinated plants, the first four to five ripe seed capsules of each genotype were collected and dried, and seeds were counted. In an additional setup, flowers with nondehisced anthers of each genotype were emasculated with forceps, and 1 d later the opened flowers were pollinated by hand with pollen of the same genotype. After seed capsules had ripened, the number of seeds per capsule was counted. Pollen grains from each genotype were stained with fluoresceine diacetate to determine their viability. A fluorescine diacetate stock (60 mg dissolved in 30 mL acetone) was added to a 10% (w/v) Suc solution until it turned milky. A drop of this solution was placed onto a glass slide, and dehisced anthers were dipped into this solution before being incubated for 5 min. Viable pollen was visualized under a fluorescence microscope. Fully opened flowers from each genotype were dissected with a scalpel, and the distances between the anther of the longest filament and the stigma, as well as the total length of each stamen and the pistil, were measured with a caliper.
Approximately 150 mg tissue from five small buds (5–10 mm), green buds (30–40 mm), or fully opened flowers of each accession and genotype were harvested. The flash-frozen tissue was homogenized and extracted in FastPrep tubes containing 0.9 g of FastPrep Matrix (BIO 101), and 1 mL ethyl acetate containing methanolic 200 ng mL–1 [13C2]JA and 200 ng mL–1 [D6]ABA was added as the internal standards. JA-Ile concentrations were calculated based on an external standard dilution series of JA-Ile. The FastPrep tubes were shaken two times at 6.0 m s–1 for 45 s. Samples were centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 20 min at 4°C and the supernatant was collected. The extraction step was repeated with 1 mL ethyl acetate. Both supernatants were combined and evaporated in a SpeedVac concentrator. The dried samples were dissolved in 500 µL MeOH (70%) and centrifuged for 10 min at 13,000 rpm at 4°C. Analysis of the samples was performed using a Varian 1200L Triple-Quadrupole-LC-MS (Varian) as described by Wang et al. (2007)
To measure IAA, approximately 100 to 200 mg of frozen bud tissue was ground in liquid nitrogen, 500 µL of 1-propanol/water/concentrated HCL (2:1:0.002, vol/vol/vol) with IAA-D5 as the internal standard. The samples were agitated at a Thermomixer (Eppendorf), for 30 min at 4°C, 1 mL CH2CL2 was added followed by an agitation for 30 min. Samples were centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 5 min, the lower layer was concentrated in a vacuum concentrator (Eppendorf), and resolubilized in 100 µL MeOH. Hormone extracts (10 µL aliquot) were analyzed by reverse-phase HPLC coupled to tandem mass spectrometry as described by Wu et al. (2007)
Ethylene emissions were measured in hand-pollinated and self-pollinated flowers. Buds with unopened anthers were emasculated the evening before the measurement, labeled, and hand-pollinated the next morning. Hand-pollinated flowers were immediately transferred to 100 mL cuvettes, and ethylene was allowed to accumulate in the headspace for 5 h or as otherwise indicated. For the ethylene measurement of self-pollinated flowers all open flowers were removed from the plant, and buds of the same developmental stage as those used for hand-pollination were labeled the evening before. Opened flowers were transferred to the cuvettes the next morning. Stop-flow measurements were taken continuously and noninvasively in real time with a photoacoustic spectrometer (INVIVO) as described by von Dahl et al. (2007)
After AZ and AZ IRsys leaves of the same position (defined as +2) were wounded with a pattern wheel, 20 µL deionized water was applied three times in a row, every 30 min. The nicotine content in unwounded control plants and in wounded AZ and AZ IRsys plants was determined as described by Keinänen et al. (2001)
Flash-frozen flowers and buds (approximately 200 mg) were homogenized in 2 volumes of extraction buffer (100 mM Tris buffer, pH 9, 100 mM KCl, and 10 mM β-mercaptoethanol) and centrifuged at 15,000g for 15 min at 48°C. TD activity was assayed by incubating the enzyme with substrate and determining the quantity of
A Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of ProSys and ProHypSys, as well as of the deduced Sys and HypSys sequences from Capsicum annuum (Ca ProSys: AF000375), Nicotiana attenuata (NaProHypSys: AY456270), Nicotiana tabacum (NtProHypSys-A: AY033148, NtProHypSys-B: AY033149), Petunia hybrida (PhProHypSys: EF552428), Solanum lycopersicum (SlProHypSys: AY292201; SlProSys: M84801), Solanum nigrum (SnProSys: AF000375), and Solanum tuberosum (StProSys_1: AF000373, StProSys_2: AF000374) was conducted. Amino acid sequences were aligned with ClustalW. Target peptides and alignment gaps were excluded. The tree was constructed with MrBayes v 3.1.2 (Huelsenbeck and Ronquist, 2001
Data were analyzed with Statview 5.0 (SAS Institute). Data were transformed if they did not meet the assumption of homoschedacity.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Dr. Klaus Gase for generating the transformation vector, Susan Kutschbach and Antje Wissgott for transforming the plants, Dr. Tamara Krügel for guidance in the flower pollination experiment, Markus Benderoth for invaluable help on the phylogenetic analysis, Eva Rothe and Dr. Matthias Schöttner for technical assistance in phytohormone analysis, and Emily Wheeler for editorial assistance. Received December 22, 2008; accepted January 29, 2009; published February 11, 2009.
1 This work was supported by the Max Planck Society. 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: Ian T. Baldwin (baldwin{at}ice.mpg.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.108.132928 * Corresponding author; e-mail baldwin{at}ice.mpg.de.
Al-Hammadi ASA, Sreelakshmi Y, Negi S, Siddiqi I, Sharma R (2003) The polycotyledon mutant of tomato shows enhanced polar auxin transport. Plant Physiol 133: 113–125 Baldwin IT (2001) An ecologically motivated analysis of plant-herbivore interactions in 20 native tobacco. Plant Physiol 127: 1449–1458 Berger B, Baldwin IT (2007) The hydroxyproline-rich glycopeptide systemin precursor NapreproHypSys does not play a central role in Nicotiana attenuata's anti-herbivore defense responses. Plant Cell Environ 30: 1450–1464[Medline] Bubner B, Gase K, Berger B, Link D, Baldwin IT (2006) Occurrence of tetraploidy in Nicotiana attenuata plants after Agrobacterium-mediated transformation is genotype specific but independent of polysomaty of explant tissue. Plant Cell Rep 25: 668–675[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Cecchetti V, Pomponi M, Altamura MM, Pezzotti M, Marsilio S, D'Angeli S, Tornielli GB, Costantino P, Cardarelli M (2004) Expression of rolB in tobacco flowers affects the coordinated processes of anther dehiscence and style elongation. Plant J 38: 512–525[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Chen KY, Cong B, Wing R, Vrebalov J, Tanksley SD (2007) Changes in regulation of a transcription factor lead to autogamy in cultivated tomatoes. Science 318: 643–645 Chomczynski P, Sacchi N (1987) Single-step method of RNA isolation by acid guanidinium thiocyanate phenol chloroform extraction. Anal Biochem 162: 156–159[Web of Science][Medline] Glawe G, Zavala JA, Kessler A, van Dam NM, Baldwin IT (2003) Ecological costs and benefits correlated with trypsin protease inhibitor production in Nicotiana attenuata. Ecology 84: 79–90[CrossRef][Web of Science] Goodspeed TH, Wheeler HM Hutchinson (1954) Taxonomy of Nicotiana. In TH Harper, ed, The Genus Nicotiana, Vol 16. Chronica Botanica, Waltham, MA, pp 427–430 Guo HW, Ecker JR (2003) Plant responses to ethylene gas are mediated by SCF (EBF1/EBF2)-dependent proteolysis of EIN3 transcription factor. Cell 115: 667–677[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Hause B, Stenzel I, Miersch O, Maucher H, Kramell R, Ziegler J, Wasternack C (2000) Tissue-specific oxylipin signature of tomato flowers: allene oxide cyclase is highly expressed in distinct flower organs and vascular bundles. Plant J 24: 113–126[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Hibi T, Kosugi S, Iwai T, Kawata M, Seo S, Mitsuhara I, Ohashi Y (2007) Involvement of EIN3 homologues in basic PR gene expression and flower development in tobacco plants. J Exp Bot 58: 3671–3678 Hong JC, Nagao RT, Key JL (1987) Characterization and sequence-analysis of a developmentally regulated putative cell-wall protein gene isolated from soybean. J Biol Chem 262: 8367–8376 Huelsenbeck JP, Ronquist F (2001) MRBAYES: Bayesian inference of phylogenetic trees. Bioinformatics 17: 754–755 Ishiguro S, Kawai-Oda A, Ueda J, Nishida I, Okada K (2001) The DEFECTIVE IN ANTHER DEHISCENCE1 gene encodes a novel phospholipase A1 catalyzing the initial step of jasmonic acid biosynthesis, which synchronizes pollen maturation, anther dehiscence, and flower opening in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell 13: 2191–2209 Kang JH (2006) The roles of threonine deaminase in Nicotiana attenuata. PhD thesis. Friedrich-Schiller-Universität, Jena, Germany Kang JH, Wang L, Giri A, Baldwin IT (2006) Silencing threonine deaminase and JAR4 in Nicotiana attenuata impairs jasmonic acid-isoleucine-mediated defenses against Manduca sexta. Plant Cell 18: 3303–3320 Keinänen M, Oldham NJ, Baldwin IT (2001) Rapid HPLC screening of jasmonate-induced increases in tobacco alkaloids, phenolics, and diterpene glycosides in Nicotiana attenuata. J Agric Food Chem 49: 3553–3558[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Krügel T, Lim M, Gase K, Halitschke R, Baldwin IT (2002) Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of Nicotiana attenuata, a model ecological expression system. Chemoecology 12: 177–183[CrossRef][Web of Science] Li L, Li CY, Howe GA (2001) Genetic analysis of wound signaling in tomato: evidence for a dual role of jasmonic acid in defense and female fertility. Plant Physiol 127: 1414–1417 Mandaokar A, Kumar VD, Amway M, Browse J (2003) Microarray and differential display identify genes involved in jasmonate-dependent anther development. Plant Mol Biol 52: 775–786[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] McGurl B, Pearce G, Orozco-Cárdenas M, Ryan CA (1992) Structure, expression, and antisense inhibition of the systemin precursor gene. Science 255: 1570–1573 Naderi M, Caplan A, Berger PH (1997) Phenotypic characterization of a tobacco mutant impaired in auxin polar transport. Plant Cell Rep 17: 32–38[CrossRef][Web of Science] Nagpal P, Ellis C, Weber H, Ploense S, Barkawi L, Guilfoyle T, Hagen G, Alonso J, Cohen J, Farmer E, et al (2005) Auxin response factors ARF6 and ARF8 promote jasmonic acid production and flower maturation. Development 132: 4107–4118 Narváez-Vásquez J, Orozco-Cárdenas M, Ryan C (2007) Systemic wound signaling in tomato leaves is cooperatively regulated by systemin and hydroxyproline-rich glycopeptide signals. Plant Mol Biol 65: 711–718[CrossRef][Medline] Oka M, Ueda J, Miyamoto K, Okada K (1998) Activities of auxin polar transport in inflorescence axes of flower mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana: relevance to flower formation and growth. J Plant Res 111: 407–410[CrossRef][Web of Science] O'Neill SD (1997) Pollination regulation of flower development. Annu Rev Plant Physiol Plant Mol Biol 48: 547–574[CrossRef][Web of Science] Park JH, Halitschke R, Kim HB, Baldwin IT, Feldmann KA, Feyereisen R (2002) A knock-out mutation in allene oxide synthase results in male sterility and defective wound signal transduction in Arabidopsis due to a block in jasmonic acid biosynthesis. Plant J 31: 1–12[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Paschold A, Halitschke R, Baldwin IT (2007) Co(i)-ordinating defenses: NaCOI1 mediates herbivore-induced resistance in Nicotiana attenuata and reveals the role of herbivore movement in avoiding defenses. Plant J 51: 79–91[CrossRef][Medline] Pearce G, Moura DS, Stratmann J, Ryan CA (2001) Production of multiple plant hormones from a single polyprotein precursor. Nature 411: 817–820[CrossRef][Medline] Pearce G, Ryan CA (2003) Systemic signaling in tomato plants for defense against herbivores—isolation and characterization of three novel defense-signaling glycopeptide hormones coded in a single precursor gene. J Biol Chem 278: 30044–30050 Pearce G, Siems WF, Bhattacharya R, Chen YC, Ryan CA (2007) Three hydroxyproline-rich glycopeptides derived from a single petunia polyprotein precursor activate defensin I, a pathogen defense response gene. J Biol Chem 282: 17777–17784 Ren F, Lu YT (2006) Overexpression of tobacco hydroxyproline-rich glycopeptide systemin precursor A gene in transgenic tobacco enhances resistance against Helicoverpa armigera larvae. Plant Sci 171: 286–292[CrossRef][Web of Science] Rieu I, Wolters-Arts M, Derksen J, Mariani C, Weterings K (2003) Ethylene regulates the timing of anther dehiscence in tobacco. Planta 217: 131–137[Web of Science][Medline] Rocha-Granados MC, Sánchez-Hernández C, Sánchez-Hernández CV, Martínez-Gallardo NA, Ochoa-Alejo N, Délano-Frier JP (2005) The expression of the hydroxyproline-rich glycopeptide systemin precursor A in response to (a)biotic stress and elicitors is indicative of its role in the regulation of the wound response in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.). Planta 222: 794–810[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Sanders PM, Lee PY, Biesgen C, Boone JD, Beals TP, Weiler EW, Goldberg RB (2000) The Arabidopsis DELAYED DEHISCENCE1 gene encodes an enzyme in the jasmonic acid synthesis pathway. Plant Cell 12: 1041–1061 Schilmiller AL, Howe GA (2005) Systemic signaling in the wound response. Curr Opin Plant Biol 8: 369–377[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Schmidt S, Baldwin IT (2006) Systemin in Solanum nigrum: The tomato-homologous polypeptide does not mediate direct defense responses. Plant Physiol 142: 1751–1758 Schmidt S, Baldwin IT (2009) Down-regulation of systemin after herbivory is associated with increased root allocation and competitive ability in Solanum nigrum. Oecologia 159: 473–482[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Sharma RK, Mazumder R (1970) Purification, properties, and feedback control of L-Threonine dehydratase from spinach. J Biol Chem 245: 3008–3014 Sommer-Knudsen J, Bacic A, Clarke AE (1998) Hydroxyproline-rich plant glycoproteins. Phytochemistry 47: 483–497[CrossRef][Web of Science] Stintzi A, Browse J (2000) The Arabidopsis male-sterile mutant, opr3, lacks the 12-oxophytodienoic acid reductase required for jasmonate synthesis. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 97: 10625–10630 Vanaltvorst AC, Bovy AG (1995) The role of ethylene in the senescence of carnation flowers, a review. Plant Growth Regul 16: 43–53[CrossRef][Web of Science] von Dahl CC, Winz R, Halitschke R, Kühnemann F, Gase K, Baldwin IT (2007) Tuning the herbivore-induced ethylene burst: the role of transcripts accumulation and ethylene perception in Nicotiana attenuata. Plant J 51: 293–307[CrossRef][Medline] Wang L, Halitschke R, Kang JH, Berg A, Harnisch F, Baldwin IT (2007) Independently silencing two members of the JAR family impairs levels of trypsin proteinase inhibitors but not nicotine. Planta 226: 159–167[CrossRef][Medline] Whelan S, Goldman N (2001) A general empirical model of protein evolution derived from multiple protein families using a maximum-likelihood approach. Mol Biol Evol 18: 691–699 Wu J, Hettenhausen C, Baldwin IT (2006) Evolution of proteinase inhibitor defenses in North American allopolyploid species of Nicotiana. Planta 224: 750–760[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Wu J, Hettenhausen C, Meldau S, Baldwin IT (2007) Herbivory rapidly activates MAPK signaling in attacked and unattacked leaf regions but not between leaves of Nicotiana attenuata. Plant Cell 19: 1096–1122 Zavala JA, Patankar A, Gase K, Hui D, Baldwin IT (2004) Manipulation of endogenous trypsin proteinase inhibitor production in Nicotiana attenuata demonstrates their function as antiherbivore defenses. Plant Physiol 134: 1181–1190 This article has been cited by other articles:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| ASPB Publications | PLANT PHYSIOLOGY® | THE PLANT CELL | |
|---|---|---|---|