Pullman, Washington
July 19, 2005
Source:
American Society of Plant Biologists via
Checkbiotech
Washington State University
researcher's findings could help crops fend off disease.
Scientists at
Washington State University in
Pullman have discovered a molecule that plays a role in the
battle plants must win against bacteria and fungi that would eat
them for lunch.
The group led by Professor Clarence A. "Bud" Ryan isolated a
small protein called Pep1 that appears to act like a hormone,
signaling to the rest of the plant to raise its defenses at the
first sign of an infection.
They also discovered the receptor protein to which Pep1 binds to
exert its protective effects.
Pep1 was isolated from the plant Arabidopsis thaliana,
which is a species favored by investigators for attributes that
facilitate experimentation, but the same molecule is found in
crop species such as canola, soybean, potato, tomato, rice, and
poplar.
Therefore, further work on Pep1 and its receptor could lead to a
general increase in the resistance of crops to pathogens, which
could greatly benefit farmers.
Already, the researchers have used the Pep1 gene to increase the
resistance of Arabidopsis plants to a fungal pathogen called
Pythium irregulare.
These findings will be presented July 20, at 11:20 at the ASPB
meeting at the Washington State Convention and Trade Center in
Seattle, WA.
The abstract, #9183, is below:
Presenter: Huffaker, Alisa
Authors: Huffaker, Alisa
(A); Pearce, Gregory
(A); Ryan, Clarence, A
(A);
Affiliations: (A): Institute of Biological Chemistry, Washington
State University
Title: A novel peptide signal, AtPep1, regulates pathogen
defense in Arabidopsis
ABSTRACT
AtPep1 is a 23 amino acid peptide
that was isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana (G. Pearce, A.
Huffaker, C.A. Ryan, submitted). The peptide is encoded by a
gene at the locus At5g64900 and is derived from the carboxyl
terminus of a 92 amino acid precursor, proAtPep1, a scenario
commonly found in both animal and plant peptide precursors. No
physiological role was known for AtPep1, and a function was
sought in Arabidopsis by incubating plants under a variety of
conditions and monitoring expression of the proAtPep1 gene. Cold
and dehydration stress and exposure to ABA or MeSA did not
affect the expression of proAtPep1, but wounding, exposing
plants to methyl jasmonate (MeJA), or supplying plants with the
AtPep1 peptide through cut petioles induced expression of the
gene. Also expressed in response to AtPep1 were the PDF1.2 gene
(a plant defensin) and the PR-1 gene, (a pathogenesis-related
gene). Two wound-related genes, LOX2 and VSP2, were not induced
by AtPep1. Supplying AtPep1 to jasmonate-deficient fad3-2 fad7-2
fad8 mutant plants did not induce the proAtPep1, PDF1.2 or PR-1
genes, indicating that AtPep1 signaling involves the
octadecanoid pathway. AtPep1 induction of defense genes in
excised Arabidopsis leaves was inhibited by DPI, implicating the
generation of H2O2 in the signaling pathway. Constitutively
overexpressing the proAtPep1 gene in Arabidopsis induced a
constitutive activation of PDF1.2, PR-1, and tyrosine amino
transferase (TAT3) genes, but not the expression of LOX2 or VSP2
genes. The transgenic plants were more resistant toward the
oomycete root pathogen Pythium irregulare than wild-type plants,
evidenced by a more robust leaf and root growth upon infection.
ProAtPep1 belongs to a seven member gene family in Arabidopsis
with tissue-specific paralogs that exhibit differential
expression profiles. Orthologs of the proAtPep1 gene have been
identified in important crop species including canola, soybean,
potato, tomato, rice and poplar. |