Literature DB >> 16698904

Necrosis- and ethylene-inducing peptide from Fusarium oxysporum induces a complex cascade of transcripts associated with signal transduction and cell death in Arabidopsis.

Hanhong Bae1, Moon S Kim, Richard C Sicher, Hyeun-Jong Bae, Bryan A Bailey.   

Abstract

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.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16698904      PMCID: PMC1489885          DOI: 10.1104/pp.106.076869

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Physiol        ISSN: 0032-0889            Impact factor:   8.340


  44 in total

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Authors:  Clare L Pemberton; George P C Salmond
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Authors:  Yuehui He; Hirotada Fukushige; David F Hildebrand; Susheng Gan
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  38 in total

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4.  Fusarium virguliform e Transcriptional Plasticity Is Revealed by Host Colonization of Maize versus Soybean.

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5.  Phytotoxicity and innate immune responses induced by Nep1-like proteins.

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Review 7.  Chlorophyll fluorescence imaging of plant-pathogen interactions.

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9.  The Cladosporium fulvum virulence protein Avr2 inhibits host proteases required for basal defense.

Authors:  H Peter van Esse; John W Van't Klooster; Melvin D Bolton; Koste A Yadeta; Peter van Baarlen; Sjef Boeren; Jacques Vervoort; Pierre J G M de Wit; Bart P H J Thomma
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10.  Subcellular localization of the barley stripe mosaic virus triple gene block proteins.

Authors:  Hyoun-Sub Lim; Jennifer N Bragg; Uma Ganesan; Steven Ruzin; Denise Schichnes; Mi Yeon Lee; Anna Maria Vaira; Ki Hyun Ryu; John Hammond; Andrew O Jackson
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