| Literature DB >> 24194741 |
Gunja Gayatri1, Srinivas Agurla, Agepati S Raghavendra.
Abstract
The modulation of guard cell function is the basis of stomatal closure, essential for optimizing water use and CO2 uptake by leaves. Nitric oxide (NO) in guard cells plays a very important role as a secondary messenger during stomatal closure induced by effectors, including hormones. For example, exposure to abscisic acid (ABA) triggers a marked increase in NO of guard cells, well before stomatal closure. In guard cells of multiple species, like Arabidopsis, Vicia and pea, exposure to ABA or methyl jasmonate or even microbial elicitors (e.g., chitosan) induces production of NO as well as reactive oxygen species (ROS). The role of NO in stomatal closure has been confirmed by using NO donors (e.g., SNP) and NO scavengers (like cPTIO) and inhibitors of NOS (L-NAME) or NR (tungstate). Two enzymes: a L-NAME-sensitive, nitric oxide synthase (NOS)-like enzyme and a tungstate-sensitive nitrate reductase (NR), can mediate ABA-induced NO rise in guard cells. However, the existence of true NOS in plant tissues and its role in guard cell NO-production are still a matter of intense debate. Guard cell signal transduction leading to stomatal closure involves the participation of several components, besides NO, such as cytosolic pH, ROS, free Ca(2+), and phospholipids. Use of fluorescent dyes has revealed that the rise in NO of guard cells occurs after the increase in cytoplasmic pH and ROS. The rise in NO causes an elevation in cytosolic free Ca(2+) and promotes the efflux of cations as well as anions from guard cells. Stomatal guard cells have become a model system to study the signaling cascade mechanisms in plants, particularly with NO as a dominant component. The interrelationships and interactions of NO with cytosolic pH, ROS, and free Ca(2+) are quite complex and need further detailed examination. While assessing critically the available literature, the present review projects possible areas of further work related to NO-action in stomatal guard cells.Entities:
Keywords: abscisic acid; cytosolic pH; elicitors; phospholipids; polyamines; reactive oxygen species; signal transduction
Year: 2013 PMID: 24194741 PMCID: PMC3810675 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2013.00425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
The rise in NO of guard cells as a common event during stomatal closure induced by hormones, elicitors or environmental factors.
| ABA | Endogenous | García-Mata and Lamattina, | |
| Gonugunta et al., | |||
| Neill et al., | |||
| MJ | Endogenous | Munemasa et al., | |
| Xin et al., | |||
| SA | Endogenous | Xin et al., | |
| Sun et al., | |||
| Poór and Tari, | |||
| Ethylene | Endogenous | Jing et al., | |
| Liu et al., | |||
| Chitosan | Derivative of chitin fragments from fungal cell wall | Lee et al., | |
| Srivastava et al., | |||
| Khokon et al., | |||
| Flg22 | 22 amino acid peptide from Flagellin, bacterial flagellar protein | Melotto et al., | |
| LPS | Glycolipid component of gram negative bacterial outer membrane | Melotto et al., | |
| Human pathogen | Melotto et al., | ||
| Harpin | Zhang et al., | ||
| INF1 | Zhang et al., | ||
| Boehmerin | Zhang et al., | ||
| Nep1 | Zhang et al., | ||
| YEL (Yeast elicitor) | Yeast extract | Khokon et al., | |
| Oligochitosan | Fragment of chitosan prepared by enzymatic hydrolysis | Li et al., | |
| UV-B | Environment | He et al., | |
| He et al., | |||
| Bicarbonate (mimics high CO2) | Environment | Kolla and Raghavendra, | |
| CaCl2 (Buffered) | Endogenous | Wang et al., | |
| H2O2 | Endogenous | He et al., | |
| Bright et al., | |||
| Calmodulin | Endogenous | Li et al., | |
PAMP- the term used for elicitors like flg22, LPS.
Use of Arabidopsis mutants to demonstrate the importance of signaling components involved in the rise of NO during stomatal closure.
| Protein phosphatase 2C | ABA | Stomatal closure but not NO production | Desikan et al., | |
| Protein phosphatase 2C | Methyl jasmonate | NO and ROS production | Ye et al., | |
| NADPH Oxidase | ABA | H2O2 production | Bright et al., | |
| Coronatine-insensitive1 protein (COI1) and protein phosphatase 2C | Methyl jasmonate | ROS and NO production | Munemasa et al., | |
| Calcium dependent protein kinase | ABA and MJ | NO levels; no change in ROS | Munemasa et al., | |
| G-protein α sub unit and NADPH Oxidase | Extracellular calmodulin (ExtCaM) | NO rise in guard cell and stomatal closure | Li et al., | |
| Nitrate reductase | Salicylic acid and ABA | NO rise in guard cell and stomatal closure | Bright et al., | |
| Phospholipase Dα1 | ABA | NO production | Zhang et al., | |
| Phosholipase Dα and Dδ | ABA | NO production only, but not stomatal closure | Distéfano et al., | |
| Regulatory subunit of protein phosphatase 2A | Methyl jasmonate | NO production | Saito et al., |
Figure 1Signal transduction mechanism involved during stomatal closure induced by ABA, MJ, and microbial elicitors. The components/secondary messengers induced by either ABA or MJ or elicitors leading to the production of nitric oxide are indicated by forward arrows. The ion channels are represented by blue color. During stomatal signaling mechanism the guard cells upon perception of ABA, MJ, or elicitors, activate NADPH oxidase, leading to a burst of ROS, which leads to a NO burst. The elevation of NO raises the cytosolic free Ca2+, through up-regulation of cADPR and cGMP. In turn, the high cytosolic Ca2+ causes a down-regulation of K+ inward channels and activation of outward anion channels, all leading to stomatal closure. Parallely, NO can increase the levels of PA via modulation of PLD and PLC. Several of these steps are validated by the use of mutants of Arabidopsis (indicated by red color), deficient in a particular signaling component. In the mutants, the relevant steps are blocked. The Arabidopsis mutants represented in this Figure are: abi1/abi2, ABA-insensitive (ABI1 and ABI2 protein phosphatases); atrbohD/F, A. thaliana NADPH oxidase catalytic subunit D/F; atnoa, A. thaliana nitric oxide-associated 1; coi1, coronatine-insensitive 1 mutant; cpk, calcium-dependent protein kinase; gork, guard cell outward rectifying K+ channel; jar1, JA response 1 mutant; nia1, nia2, Nitrate reductase double mutant; ost1, open stomata 1 kinase; pldα1/pldδ, phospholipase α1/phospholipase δ double mutant; rcn1, protein phosphatase 2A regulatory A subunit 1; slac1, slow anion channel-associated 1 mutant. A description of these components is given in the section on “Signaling components in guard cells during NO action.” Further information can be seen in Tables 1, 2. Abbreviations are listed in first page. The events demonstrated by experimental evidence are represented by solid arrows. The possible interactions/effects are indicated by broken arrows.
Interactions of signaling components with NO during modulation of stomatal closure induced by different effectors.
| Cytosolic pH | Precedes NO production | ABA, MJ and Chitosan | Gonugunta et al., | |
| Ethylene | Jing et al., | |||
| H2O2 | Promotes NO production | Chitosan | Srivastava et al., | |
| ABA | Bright et al., | |||
| Ca2+ | Increases NO production | ABA | Garcia-Mata and Lamattina, | |
| PLDα1 | Increases NO production | ABA | Zhang et al., | |
| PLDδ | Acts downstream of NO | ABA and NO | Distéfano et al., | |
| H2S | Depletes NO levels in guard cells | H2S | Lisjak et al., | |
| Functions downstream of NO | Ethylene | Jing et al., | ||
| ABA | NO increases the sensitivity to ABA | NR and NOA | Lozano-Juste and León, | |
| MJ | Elevates endogenous ABA | Methyl jasmonate | Ye et al., |