Fumonisin B1–Induced Cell Death in Arabidopsis Protoplasts Requires Jasmonate-, Ethylene-, and Salicylate-Dependent Signaling Pathways
Top Cited Papers
- 1 October 2000
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Cell
- Vol. 12 (10) , 1823-1835
- https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.12.10.1823
Abstract
We have established an Arabidopsis protoplast model system to study plant cell death signaling. The fungal toxin fumonisin B1 (FB1) induces apoptosis-like programmed cell death (PCD) in wild-type protoplasts. FB1, however, only marginally affects the viability of protoplasts isolated from transgenic NahG plants, in which salicylic acid (SA) is metabolically degraded; from pad4-1 mutant plants, in which an SA amplification mechanism is thought to be impaired; or from jar1-1 or etr1-1 mutant plants, which are insensitive to jasmonate (JA) or ethylene (ET), respectively. FB1 susceptibility of wild-type protoplasts decreases in the dark, as does the cellular content of phenylalanine ammonia-lyase, a light-inducible enzyme involved in SA biosynthesis. Interestingly, however, FB1-induced PCD does not require the SA signal transmitter NPR1, given that npr1-1 protoplasts display wild-type FB1 susceptibility. Arabidopsis cpr1-1, cpr6-1, and acd2-2 protoplasts, in which the SA signaling pathway is constitutively activated, exhibit increased susceptibility to FB1. The cpr6-1 and acd2-2 mutants also constitutively express the JA and ET signaling pathways, but only the acd2-2 protoplasts undergo PCD in the absence of FB1. These results demonstrate that FB1 killing of Arabidopsis is light dependent and requires SA-, JA-, and ET-mediated signaling pathways as well as one or more unidentified factors activated by FB1 and the acd2-2 mutation.Keywords
This publication has 75 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dead cells do tell talesCurrent Opinion in Plant Biology, 1998
- Differential expression of a senescence‐enhanced metallothionein gene inArabidopsisin response to isolates ofPeronospora parasiticaandPseudomonas syringaeThe Plant Journal, 1998
- The hypersensitive response and the induction of cell death in plantsCell Death & Differentiation, 1997
- Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programsNucleic Acids Research, 1997
- PROGRAMMED CELL DEATH IN PLANT-PATHOGEN INTERACTIONSAnnual Review of Plant Biology, 1997
- Characterization of aSalicylicAcid-Insensitive Mutant (sai1) ofArabidopsis thaliana, Identified in a Selective Screen Utilizing the SA-Inducible Expression of thetms2GeneMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 1997
- Death Don't Have No Mercy: Cell Death Programs in Plant-Microbe Interactions.Plant Cell, 1996
- Calcium-mediated apoptosis in a plant hypersensitive disease resistance responseCurrent Biology, 1996
- Dicing with death: dissecting the components of the apoptosis machineryTrends in Biochemical Sciences, 1994
- Coordinate Gene Activity in Response to Agents That Induce Systemic Acquired Resistance.Plant Cell, 1991