| Literature DB >> 26193260 |
Lei Huang1, Huijuan Zhang2, Yongbo Hong3, Shixia Liu4, Dayong Li5, Fengming Song6.
Abstract
Metacaspases, a class of cysteine-dependent proteases like caspases in animals, are important regulators of programmed cell death (PCD) during development and stress responses in plants. The present study was focused on comprehensive analyses of expression patterns of the rice metacaspase (OsMC) genes in response to abiotic and biotic stresses and stress-related hormones. Results indicate that members of the OsMC family displayed differential expression patterns in response to abiotic (e.g., drought, salt, cold, and heat) and biotic (e.g., infection by Magnaporthe oryzae, Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae and Rhizoctonia solani) stresses and stress-related hormones such as abscisic acid, salicylic acid, jasmonic acid, and 1-amino cyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (a precursor of ethylene), although the responsiveness to these stresses or hormones varies to some extent. Subcellular localization analyses revealed that OsMC1 was solely localized and OsMC2 was mainly localized in the nucleus. Whereas OsMC3, OsMC4, and OsMC7 were evenly distributed in the cells, OsMC5, OsMC6, and OsMC8 were localized in cytoplasm. OsMC1 interacted with OsLSD1 and OsLSD3 while OsMC3 only interacted with OsLSD1 and that the zinc finger domain in OsMC1 is responsible for the interaction activity. The systematic expression and biochemical analyses of the OsMC family provide valuable information for further functional studies on the biological roles of OsMCs in PCD that is related to abiotic and biotic stress responses.Entities:
Keywords: abiotic and biotic stress; expression patterns; metacaspase; protein–protein interaction; rice; subcellular localization
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26193260 PMCID: PMC4519946 DOI: 10.3390/ijms160716216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Expression patterns of OsMCs in rice leaf and root tissues after treatment with drought and salt stresses. Drought stress was applied to two-week-old seedlings by transferring to three layers of filter papers for fast dehydration. Salt stress was applied to two-week-old seedlings by drenching with 150 mM NaCl solution. Leaf and root samples were collected at indicated time points for qRT-PCR analyses. (A) Expression patterns of SNAC1 and OsWsi18 calculated with different reference genes; and (B) Expression patterns of OsMCs. Relative expression is shown as folds of transcript level of different reference genes (A) or Actin gene (B). Left and right parts in each graph divided by dashed lines represent the expression levels in leaf and root tissues, respectively. Data presented are the means ± SD from thee independent experiments and * above the columns indicate significant difference at p < 0.05 level.
Figure 2Expression patterns of OsMCs in response to cold and heat stresses. Cold and heat stresses were applied by placing two-week-old seedlings in growth chambers with temperatures set at 4 and 42 °C, respectively. Leaf samples were collected at indicated time points for qRT-PCR analyses. (A) Expression patterns of OsSRO1c and OsHCI1 calculated with different reference genes; and (B) Expression patterns of OsMCs. Relative expression is shown as folds of transcript levels of three different reference genes (A) or Actin gene (B). Data presented are the means ± SD from thee independent experiments and * above the columns indicate significant difference at p < 0.05 level.
Figure 3Expression patterns of OsMCs in incompatible and compatible interactions between rice and Magnaporthe oryzae. Two-week-old seedlings were inoculated by spraying with spore suspension of M. oryzae and leaf samples were collected at indicated time points after inoculation for qRT-PCR analyses. (A) Expression patterns of OsPR1a calculated with different reference genes; and (B) Expression patterns of OsMCs. Relative expression is shown as folds of transcript levels of three different reference genes (A) or Actin gene (B). Data presented are the means ± SD from thee independent experiments and * above the columns indicate significant difference at p < 0.05 level.
Figure 4Expression patterns of OsMCs in the incompatible and compatible interactions between rice and Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae. Eight-week-old seedlings were inoculated with X. oryzae pv. oryzae strain PXO99A by leaf clipping method and leaf samples were collected at indicated time points after inoculation for qRT-PCR analyses. (A) Expression patterns of OsPR1a calculated with different reference genes; and (B) Expression patterns of OsMCs. Relative expression is shown as folds of transcript levels of three different reference genes (A) or Actin gene (B). Data presented are the means ± SD from thee independent experiments and * above the columns indicate significant difference at p < 0.05 level.
Figure 5Expression patterns of OsMCs in response to Rhizoctonia solani. Six-week-old plants were inoculated by attaching mycelial of R. solani strain GD-118 onto sheath and leaf samples were collected at indicated time points after inoculation for qRT-PCR analyses. (A) Expression patterns of OsPR10 calculated with different reference genes; and (B) Expression patterns of OsMCs. Relative expression is shown as folds of transcript levels of three different reference genes (A) or Actin gene (B). Data presented are the means ± SD from three independent experiments and * above the columns indicate significant difference at p < 0.05 level.
Figure 6Expression patterns of OsMCs in response to stress-related hormones. Two-week-old seedlings were sprayed with 100 µM SA, 100 µM MeJA, 100 µM ACC, 100 µM ABA or similar volumes of solution as controls. Leaf samples were collected at indicated time points and relative expression of the genes is shown as folds of transcript level of the actin gene. Data presented are the means ± SD from thee independent experiments and * above the columns indicate significant difference at p < 0.05 level.
Putative cis-elements in promoter regions of the OsMC genes.
| Regulator | Code | Numbers of | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| ABA | ABRELATERD1 | S000414 | – | 2 | 1 | – | – | 2 | – | 1 |
| ABREOSRAB21 | S000012 | – | – | 2 | – | – | – | – | – | |
| ABRERATCAL | S000408 | – | 3 | – | – | – | 2 | – | 1 | |
| MYB | MYBCORE | S000176 | 2 | 4 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
| MYC | MYCCONSENSUSAT | S000407 | 4 | 14 | 8 | 4 | 4 | 8 | 6 | 8 |
| WRKY | WBOXATNPR1 | S000390 | 1 | 1 | 1 | – | 4 | – | – | 3 |
| WBOXNTERF3 | S000457 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | – | 1 | 6 | |
| WRKY710S | S000447 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 6 | 1 | 1 | 10 | |
| ERF | GCCCORE | S000430 | – | – | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2 | – | 1 |
| Auxin | NTBBF1ARROLB | S000273 | 1 | – | – | – | 1 | – | – | – |
Figure 7Subcellular localization of the OsMC proteins when transiently expressed in leaves of Nicotiana benthamiana. Agrobacteria harboring pFGC-OsMC1/2/3/4/5/6/7/8 or pFGC-Egfp were infiltrated into leaves of N. benthamiana plants expressing a red nucleus marker protein RFP-H2B and leaf samples were collected at 24 h after agroinfiltration. Images were observed and taken under a confocal laser scanning microscope in dark field for green fluorescence (A); red fluorescence (B); white field for cell morphology (C) and in combination (D), respectively. Bar = 50 µM.
Figure 8Interactions between type I OsMCs and OsLSDs. (A) Phylogenetic tree of rice OsLSDs/OsLOLs with Arabidopsis AtLSD1/AtLOLs. Phylogenetic tree was constructed by Neighbor-joining method using MEGA program; The bar represents 0.1 amino acid substitution per site; (B) Positive (pGADT7-T + pGBKT7-53) and negative (pGADT7-T + pGBKT7-Lam) controls; (C) Interactions of OsMC1, OsMC2 and OsMC3 with OsLSD1 and OsLSD3 but not with OsLSD2, OsLOL1 and OsLOL2; (D) Interactions of N- and C-terminals of OsMC1 with OsLSD1 and OsLSD3; and (E) Interactions among OsMC1, OsMC2 and OsMC3. Yeasts harboring the indicated plasmid combinations were grown on selective medium SD/Trp−Leu−His−Ade− and β-galactosidase activity showing positive interactions was examined by addition of X-α-gal. Repeated experiments showed similar results. AD, pGADT7 vector; BD, pGBKT7 vector.
Primers used in this study.
| Primers | Sequences (5′-3′) | Size (bp) |
|---|---|---|
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| OsMC1-F | ATGGATCACTTCGGCGGACG | 1107 |
| OsMC1-R | TTACAGGACGAACGGCTTGC | |
| OsMC2-F | ATGGCGAGCGCGAGGCCGCC | 1110 |
| OsMC2-R | TCACAAGAGGAAGGGCTTCC | |
| OsMC3-F | ATGGGCTGCAACTGCCTCGT | 1203 |
| OsMC3-R | TCACAGGAGAAACGGTTTCC | |
| OsMC4-F | ATGGGGCGGAAGAGAGCGGT | 1230 |
| OsMC4-R | TTAGCATATGAAAGCCACGT | |
| OsMC5-F | ATGGGGGGCCGGAAGCGCGC | 1263 |
| OsMC5-R | TCAGCATATGAAGGCCACAC | |
| OsMC6-F | ATGGGCCGCAAGCGCGCGCT | 1254 |
| OsMC6-R | TCAGCATATAAAAGACACAT | |
| OsMC7-F | ATGGAGAGGGGTCAGAAGAA | 1026 |
| OsMC7-R | TCAGAGCGCCGTCATGGCCT | |
| OsMC8-F | ATGGCGGTCGTCAGCGGCGG | 909 |
| OsMC8-R | TCACAGGATAAACTGCTCCT | |
| OsLSD1-F | ATGTGCATTGCTGAACCAAT | 606 |
| OsLSD1-R | TCAGCTGCTGGGCTTCTGGT | |
| OsLSD2-F | ATGGTGGCTTCAAGAGCTCCA | 444 |
| OsLSD2-R | CTATCCTAGACTGAAAAGCA | |
| OsLSD3-F | ATGCAGAGCCAGATCGTGT | 519 |
| OsLSD3-R | TTACTTTTTACCACCAGTTGTA | |
| OsLSD4-F | ATGCAGAGCCAGATCGTGTG | 561 |
| OsLSD4-R | CTATTTCCCAGTTGTAACTCCA | |
| OsLSD5-F | ATGCAGGACCAGCTGATCTG | 444 |
| OsLSD5-R | TCATCTTTTCCATGAGGTGAC | |
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| OsMC1-GFP-F | CGCGGATCC ATGGATCACTTCGGCGGACG | 1107 |
| OsMC1-GFP-R | TGCTCTAGA TTACAGGACGAACGGCTTGC | |
| OsMC2-GFP-F | CGCGGATCC ATGGCGAGCGCGAGGCCGCC | 1110 |
| OsMC2-GFP-R | TGCTCTAGA TCACAAGAGGAAGGGCTTCC | |
| OsMC3-GFP-F | CGCGGATCC ATGGGCTGCAACTGCCTCGT | 1203 |
| OsMC3-GFP-R | TGCTCTAGA TCACAGGAGAAACGGTTTCC | |
| OsMC4-GFP-F | CGCGGATCC ATGGGGCGGAAGAGAGCGGT | 1230 |
| OsMC4-GFP-R | TGCTCTAGA TTAGCATATGAAAGCCACGT | |
| OsMC5-GFP-F | CGCGGATCC ATGGGGGGCCGGAAGCGCGC | 1263 |
| OsMC5-GFP-R | TGCTCTAGA TCAGCATATGAAGGCCACAC | |
| OsMC6-GFP-F | CGCGGATCC ATGGGCCGCAAGCGCGCGCT | 1254 |
| OsMC6-GFP-R | TGCTCTAGA TCAGCATATAAAAGACACAT | |
| OsMC7-GFP-F | CGCGGATCC ATGGAGAGGGGTCAGAAGAA | 1026 |
| OsMC7-GFP-R | TGCTCTAGA TCAGAGCGCCGTCATGGCCT | |
| OsMC8-GFP-F | CGCGGATCC ATGGCGGTCGTCAGCGGCGG | 909 |
| OsMC8-GFP-R | TCCCCCGGG TCACAGGATAAACTGCTCCT | |
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| OsMC1-RT-F | GCTTCATCAAGGCGGTGGAGTG | 142 |
| OsMC1-RT-R | AAGTTGGCGACCTTGCGGATG | |
| OsMC2-RT-F | CGACCCGTACAGGGTGCCGA | 166 |
| OsMC2-RT-R | GCACAGCGCCTCGTCGTAGC | |
| OsMC3-RT-F | GGCTCCTTCGTCCGCAAGAT | 101 |
| OsMC3-RT-R | CACAGGAGAAACGGTTTCCTGT | |
| OsMC4-RT-F | TCGACGTTCGTGGAGATGCTC | 126 |
| OsMC4-RT-R | ATTCACGAGCCGCCTGATCTT | |
| OsMC5-RT-F | GTGCCAGACCGACCAGACAT | 102 |
| OsMC5-RT-R | CCGCTCTTCTCCGACAGGAT | |
| OsMC1-RT-F | GCTTCATCAAGGCGGTGGAGTG | 142 |
| OsMC1-RT-R | AAGTTGGCGACCTTGCGGATG | |
| OsMC6-RT-F | CCACACCGCAGGGTTCTTCAT | 147 |
| OsMC6-RT-R | GTCCAGGCTGCTGAGTGTATCC | |
| OsMC7-RT-F | ATACAGACCGTGCTGGCGTC | 143 |
| OsMC7-RT-R | AGGAATGGCGTCTCGGCGTT | |
| OsMC8-RT-F | TCCGGCAAGTGCCTCGTAAC | 150 |
| OsMC8-RT-R | CAATGCGGTCGGTCACAGGAT | |
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| OsMC1-BD-F | CGGAATTC ATGGATCACTTCGGCGGACGT | 1107 |
| OsMC1-BD-R | CGCGGATCC TTACAGGACGAACGGCTTGCG | |
| OsMC2-BD-F | CCGGAATTC ATGGCGAGCGCGAGGCCG | 1110 |
| OsMC2-BD-R | CGCGGATCC TCACAAGAGGAAGGGCTTC | |
| OsMC3-BD-F | CCGGAATTC ATGGGCTGCAACTGCCTCGTC | 1203 |
| OsMC3-BD-R | CGCGGATCC TCACAGGAGAAACGGTTTCC | |
| OsMC1-BDN-R | TGCTCTAGA CTTGCCGCGGGAGCCCGGGA | 252 |
| OsMC1-BDC-F | CGCGGATCC AAGCGCGCCGTCCTGATCGGC | 855 |
| OsLSD1-AD-F | CCGGAATTC ATGTGCATTGCTGAACCAAT | 606 |
| OsLSD1-AD-R | CGCGGATCC TCAGCTGCTGGGCTTCTGGT | |
| OsLSD2-AD-F | CCGGAATTC ATGGTGGCTTCAAGAGCTCCA | 444 |
| OsLSD2-AD-R | CGCGGATCC CTATCCTAGACTGAAAAGCA | |
| OsLSD3-AD-F | CCGGAATTC ATGCAGAGCCAGATCGTGT | 519 |
| OsLSD3-AD-R | CGCGGATCC TTACTTTTTACCACCAGTTGTA | |
| OsLSD4-AD-F | CCGGAATTC ATGCAGAGCCAGATCGTGTG | 561 |
| OsLSD4-AD-R | CGCGGATCC CTATTTCCCAGTTGTAACTCCA | |
| OsLSD5-AD-F | CCGGAATTC ATGCAGGACCAGCTGATCTG | 444 |
| OsLSD5-AD-R | CGCGGATCC TCATCTTTTCCATGAGGTGAC | |
Summary on the expression patterns of OsMCs in response to pathogens, abiotic stresses and hormones.
| Genes |
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| Abiotic Stress | Hormones | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compatible | Incompatible | Compatible | Incompatible | Drought | Salt | Heat | Cold | ACC | JA | SA | ABA | ||
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| ↓ | ↑ | ↓ | -- | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | -- | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ |
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| -- | -- | -- | ↑ | -- | ↓ | -- | -- | -- | ↓ | -- | ↓ | ↑ |
|
| ↓ | ↑ | -- | -- | ↓ | -- | -- | ↑ | ↓ | -- | -- | -- | -- |
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| ↓ | -- | ↑ | -- | -- | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | ↓ | -- | ↑ | ↓ |
|
| ↑ | ↑ | -- | -- | ↓ | -- | ↓ | ↑ | ↓ | -- | -- | -- | ↓ |
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| -- | ↑ | -- | -- | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | -- | ↑ | -- | -- | ↓ |
|
| ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | -- | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | ↓ | -- | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ |
|
| ↓ | -- | -- | ↑ | ↓ | -- | ↓ | -- | -- | -- | -- | ↓ | -- |
↑, represents significant upregulation; ↓, indicates significant downregulation; -- indicates no significant change. Expression patterns in root under drought and salt stresses are listed.