Glutathione Metabolic Genes Coordinately Respond to Heavy Metals and Jasmonic Acid in Arabidopsis
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Cell
- Vol. 10 (9) , 1539-1550
- https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.10.9.1539
Abstract
Glutathione plays a pivotal role in protecting plants from environmental stresses, oxidative stress, xenobiotics, and some heavy metals. Arabidopsis plants treated with cadmium or copper responded by increasing transcription of the genes for glutathione synthesis, gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase and glutathione synthetase, as well as glutathione reductase. The response was specific for those metals whose toxicity is thought to be mitigated through phytochelatins, and other toxic and nontoxic metals did not alter mRNA levels. Feeding experiments suggested that neither oxidative stress, as results from exposure to H2O2, nor oxidized or reduced glutathione levels were responsible for activating transcription of these genes. Jasmonic acid also activated the same suite of genes, which suggests that it might be involved in the signal transduction pathway for copper and cadmium. Jasmonic acid treatment increased mRNA levels and the capacity for glutathione synthesis but did not alter the glutathione content in unstressed plants, which supports the idea that the glutathione concentration is controlled at multiple levels.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Oligosaccharins, brassinolides, and jasmonates: nontraditional regulators of plant growth, development, and gene expression.Plant Cell, 1997
- The promoter of a H2O2‐inducible, Arabidopsis glutathione S‐transferase gene contains closely linked OBF‐ and OBP1‐binding sitesThe Plant Journal, 1996
- Synthesis of Glutathione in Leaves of Transgenic Poplar Overexpressing [gamma]-Glutamylcysteine SynthetasePlant Physiology, 1996
- Characterization of Glutathione Uptake in Broad Bean Leaf ProtoplastsPlant Physiology, 1996
- Localization and Characterization of Peroxidases in the Mitochondria of Chilling-Acclimated Maize SeedlingsPlant Physiology, 1995
- Arabidopsis thaliana gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase is structurally unrelated to mammalian, yeast, and Escherichia coli homologs.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
- Evidence for Chilling-Induced Oxidative Stress in Maize Seedlings and a Regulatory Role for Hydrogen Peroxide.Plant Cell, 1994
- Glutathione Depletion Due to Copper-Induced Phytochelatin Synthesis Causes Oxidative Stress in Silene cucubalusPlant Physiology, 1992
- Accumulation of non-protein metal-binding polypeptides (gamma-glutamyl-cysteinyl)n-glycine in selected cadmium-resistant tomato cells.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1986
- Tandem gene amplification mediates copper resistance in yeast.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1982