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1.
G A Howe  C A Ryan 《Genetics》1999,153(3):1411-1421
In tomato plants, systemic induction of defense genes in response to herbivory or mechanical wounding is regulated by an 18-amino-acid peptide signal called systemin. Transgenic plants that overexpress prosystemin, the systemin precursor, from a 35S::prosystemin (35S::prosys) transgene exhibit constitutive expression of wound-inducible defense proteins including proteinase inhibitors and polyphenol oxidase. To study further the role of (pro)systemin in the wound response pathway, we isolated and characterized mutations that suppress 35S::prosys-mediated phenotypes. Ten recessive, extragenic suppressors were identified. Two of these define new alleles of def-1, a previously identified mutation that blocks both wound- and systemin-induced gene expression and renders plants susceptible to herbivory. The remaining mutants defined four loci designated Spr-1, Spr-2, Spr-3, and Spr-4 (for Suppressed in 35S::prosystemin-mediated responses). spr-3 and spr-4 mutants were not significantly affected in their response to either systemin or mechanical wounding. In contrast, spr-1 and spr-2 plants lacked systemic wound responses and were insensitive to systemin. These results confirm the function of (pro)systemin in the transduction of systemic wound signals and further establish that wounding, systemin, and 35S::prosys induce defensive gene expression through a common signaling pathway defined by at least three genes (Def-1, Spr-1, and Spr-2).  相似文献   

2.
Wound- and systemin-inducible calmodulin gene expression in tomato leaves   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Using a calmodulin (CaM) cDNA as a probe in northern analyses, transgenic tomato plants that overexpress the prosystemin gene were found to express increased levels of CaM mRNA and protein in leaves compared to wild-type plants. These transgenic plants have been reported previously to express several wound-inducible defense-related genes in the absence of wounding. Calmodulin mRNA and protein levels were found to increase in leaves of young wild-type tomato plants after wounding, or treatment with systemin, methyl jasmonate, or linolenic acid. CaM mRNA appeared within 0.5 h after wounding or supplying young tomato plants with systemin, and peaked at 1 h. The timing of CaM gene expression is similar to the expression of the wound- or systemin-induced lipoxygenase and prosystemin genes, signal pathway genes whose expression have been reported to begin at 0.5–1 h after wounding and 1–2 h earlier than the genes coding for defensive proteinase inhibitor genes. The similarities in timing between the synthesis of CaM mRNA and the mRNAs for signal pathway components suggests that CaM gene expression may be associated with the signaling cascade that activates defensive genes in response to wounding.  相似文献   

3.
系统素、茉莉酸在番茄系统伤反应中的作用   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
当植物受到机械损伤或昆虫伤害时,植物体会在受伤部位产生伤信号分子启动防御基因的系统表达,蛋白酶抑制剂基因是防御基因的一典型代表.番茄是研究植物系统伤信号很好的模式植物,目前,三种类型的番茄系统伤信号突变体被鉴定出来,通过对番茄系统伤信号突变体进行功能分析并在它们之间进行相互嫁接实验,研究结果表明系统素和茉莉酸通过同一信号通路来激活防御基因的系统表达.系统素(或它的前体原系统素)在受伤部位激活茉莉酸的合成,使之达到系统反应的水平,应对外来伤害;茉莉酸或其衍生物是重要的系统伤信号分子,它诱导伤防御基因的系统表达.植物的系统伤反应可比做动物的炎症反应,它们之间有许多相似之处.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Tomato systemin is a signalling peptide produced in response to wounding that locally and systemically activates several defence genes. The peptide is released from the C-terminus of prosystemin, the 200 amino acid precursor, following post-translational modifications involving unknown events and enzymes. In tobacco, two systemin molecules have been recently isolated, neither sharing any sequence homologies with the tomato prosystemin gene/protein, but performing similar functions. We modified the tomato prosystemin gene by replacing the systemin-encoding region with a synthetic sequence encoding TMOF (trypsin-modulating oostatic factor), a 10 amino acid insect peptide hormone toxic to Heliothis virescens larvae, and expressed the chimeric gene in tobacco. The results reported here show that transformed leaves contain the TMOF peptide and exert toxic activity against insect larvae reared on them. In addition, subcellular localization studies showed the cytoplasmic location of the released TMOF, suggesting that in tobacco the enzymes responsible for the post-translational modifications of the tomato precursor protein are present and act in the cytoplasm to recognise the modified prohormone. The molecular engineering of the precursor, beside supplying new clues towards the understanding of prosystemin processing, constitutes an useful tool for plant genetic manipulation, by enabling the delivery of short biological active peptides.  相似文献   

6.
Systemin, an octadecapeptide isolated from tomato, is a primary signal molecule involved in the local and systemic responses to pest attack, elicited by activation of a set of defence genes. It derives from processing of prosystemin, a prohormone of almost 200 amino acids. Prosystemin orthologues have been found in other Solanaceae species but not in tobacco, where are present hydroxyproline-rich peptides functionally but not structurally related to tomato systemin. Molecular events leading to the release of signalling peptides from protein precursors are unknown in plants; the occurrence of a family of signal molecules suggests that initiation of wound response may involve different processing mechanisms. It has been previously shown that the protein product from an engineered tomato prosystemin gene is processed in tobacco, thus suggesting that the components responsible for its post-translational modifications are present in this species. By analyzing analysing the proteome repertoire of transformed tobacco plant leaves with 2-DE, here we demonstrate that the constitutive expression of the tomato prosystemin gene highly affected host protein synthesis. In particular, engineered plants showed a number of differentially synthesized proteins that were identified by PMF MALDI-TOF and microLC-ESI-IT-MS/MS experiments as polypeptide species involved in protection from pathogens and oxidative stress, or in carbon/energy metabolism. Significant differences in over-produced proteins were observed with respect to previous data reported on systemin-engineered tomato plants. Our results strongly support the need of using proteomic approaches during systematic analysis of plant tissues to investigate the principle of substantial equivalence in transgenic plants expressing a transgene coding for a signalling molecule.  相似文献   

7.
Wound-induced systemic expression of defensive proteinase inhibitor (PI) genes in tomato plants requires the action of systemin and its precursor protein prosystemin. Although it is well established that systemin induces PI expression through the octadecanoid pathway for jasmonic acid (JA) biosynthesis, relatively little is known about how systemin and JA interact to promote long-distance signaling between damaged and undamaged leaves. Here, this question was addressed by characterizing a systemin-insensitive mutant (spr1) that was previously identified as a suppressor of prosystemin-mediated responses. In contrast to JA biosynthetic or JA signaling mutants that lack both local and systemic PI expression in response to wounding, spr1 plants were deficient mainly in the systemic response. Consistent with this phenotype, spr1 plants exhibited normal PI induction in response to oligosaccharide signals that are thought to play a role in the local wound response. Moreover, spr1 abolished JA accumulation in response to exogenous systemin, and reduced JA accumulation in wounded leaves to approximately 57% of wild-type (WT) levels. Analysis of reciprocal grafts between spr1 and WT plants showed that spr1 impedes systemic PI expression by blocking the production of the long-distance wound signal in damaged leaves, rather than inhibiting the recognition of that signal in systemic undamaged leaves. These experiments suggest that Spr1 is involved in a signaling step that couples systemin perception to activation of the octadecanoid pathway, and that systemin acts at or near the site of wounding (i.e. in rootstock tissues) to increase JA synthesis to a level that is required for the systemic response. It was also demonstrated that spr1 plants are not affected in the local or systemic expression of a subset of rapidly induced wound-response genes, indicating the existence of a systemin-independent pathway for wound signaling.  相似文献   

8.
An 18-amino acid peptide in tomato leaves called systemin is a primary signal released at wound sites in response to herbivory that systemically signals the activation of defense genes throughout the plants. We report here the isolation of three hydroxyproline-rich glycopeptides from tomato leaves, of 20, 18, and 15 amino acids in length, that signal the activation of defense genes, similar to the activity of the systemin peptide. The three new peptides cause an alkalinization of suspension-cultured cells and induce the synthesis of defensive proteinase inhibitor proteins when supplied at fmol levels to young tomato plants through their cut stems. This suggests that they are part of the wound signaling of tomato plants that activates defense against herbivores and pathogens. Isolation of cDNAs coding for the tomato peptides revealed that they are all derived from the same pre-proprotein precursor that is systemically wound-inducible. The peptides are considered members of the functionally characterized systemin family of defense signals from plants that are synthesized both in wounded leaves and in distal, unwounded leaves in response to herbivory or other mechanical wounding. The precursor deduced from the cDNA exhibits a leader sequence, indicating that it is synthesized through the secretory pathway, where it is hydroxylated and glycosylated. The amino acid sequence of the precursor exhibited weak identity to the precursor of two hydroxyproline-rich defense signals recently found in tobacco, suggesting that the two pre-protein precursors have evolved from a common ancestral protein. The identification of hydroxyproline-rich glycoprotein systemins in tomato indicates that the initiation of wound signaling is more complex than previously thought and appears to involve multiple peptide signals.  相似文献   

9.
Antimicrobial peptides offer a new method for controlling pathogens, however, many promising peptides are too small for direct production in plants. A protein delivery system was developed based on a proteolytic mechanism used by Solanaceous plants to produce the very small (18 amino acid) signaling peptide systemin from the polypeptide prosystemin. Fusion of the gene encoding the 23 kDa protein prosystemin with the antimicrobial peptide (pep11) sequence, replacing the systemin sequence, allowed for expression in transgenic tomato plants. Six days after inoculation with the late blight pathogen Phytophthora infestans, detached leaflets of transgenic tomato (Rutgers) exhibited a reduction in lesion size of at least 50 percent.  相似文献   

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12.
植物在遭受机械损伤或食草动物伤害时,体内的信号应答防御系统立即被激活,从而激活防御相关基因的表达,达到自我保护的目的。信号分子如系统素、系统素糖肽前体物质,是茄科植物中具有信号传导功能的一类多肽,在损伤信号传导方面起着重要的作用。近年来,对系统素家族以及茉莉酸等信号传导方面的研究有了很大的进展,本文着重对烟草中的主要损伤信号分子进行系统的阐述,并且对损伤后烟草相关基因的表达变化做了简单的归纳与分析,旨在为烟草的抗虫性、烟叶的储存与加工等方面的研究提供参考。  相似文献   

13.
Hydroxyproline-rich glycopeptides (HypSys peptides) are recently discovered 16-20-amino acid defense signals in tobacco and tomato leaves that are derived from cell wall-associated precursors. The peptides are powerful wound signals that activate the expression of defensive genes in tobacco and tomato leaves in response to herbivore attacks. We have isolated a cDNA from petunia (Petunia hybrida) leaves encoding a putative protein of 214 amino acids that is a homolog of tobacco and tomato HypSys peptide precursors and is inducible by wounding and MeJA. The deduced protein contains a leader sequence and four predicted proline-rich peptides of 18-21 amino acids. Three of the four peptides were isolated from leaves, and each peptide contained hydroxylated prolines and glycosyl residues. Each of the peptides has a -GR- motif at its N terminus, indicating that it may be the substrate site for a processing enzyme. The peptides were active in a petunia suspension culture bioassay at nanomolar concentrations, but they did not induce the expression of defense genes that are directed against herbivores, as found in tobacco and tomato leaves. They did, however, activate expression of defensin 1, a gene associated with inducible defense responses against pathogens.  相似文献   

14.
G A Howe  J Lightner  J Browse    C A Ryan 《The Plant cell》1996,8(11):2067-2077
The activation of defense genes in tomato plants has been shown to be mediated by an octadecanoic acid-based signaling pathway in response to herbivore attack or other mechanical wounding. We report here that a tomato mutant (JL5) deficient in the activation of would-inducible defense genes is also compromised in resistance toward the lepidopteran predator Manduca sexta (tobacco hornworm). Thus we propose the name defenseless1 (def1) for the mutation in the JL5 line that mediates this altered defense response. In experiments designed to define the normal function of DEF1, we found that def1 plants are defective in defense gene signaling initiated by prosystemin overexpression in transgenic plants as well as by oligosaccharide (chitosan and polygalacturonide) and polypeptide (systemin) elicitors. Supplementation of plants through their cut stems with intermediates of the octadecanoid pathway indicates that def1 plants are affected in octadecanoid metabolism between the synthesis of hydroperoxylinolenic acid and 12-oxo-phytodienoic acid. Consistent with this defect, def1 plants are also compromised in their ability to accumulate jasmonic acid, the end product of the pathway, in response to wounding and the aforementioned elicitors. Taken together, these results show that octadecanoid metabolism plays an essential role in the transduction of upstream would signals to the activation of antiherbivore plant defenses.  相似文献   

15.
Plants have evolved complex mechanisms to perceive environmental cues and develop appropriate and coordinated responses to abiotic and biotic stresses. Considerable progress has been made towards a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms of plant response to a single stress. However, the existence of cross-tolerance to different stressors has proved to have great relevance in the control and regulation of organismal adaptation. Evidence for the involvement of the signal peptide systemin and jasmonic acid in wound-induced salt stress adaptation in tomato has been provided. To further unravel the functional link between plant responses to salt stress and mechanical damage, transgenic tomato ( Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) plants constitutively expressing the prosystemin cDNA have been exposed to a moderate salt stress. Prosystemin over-expression caused a reduction in stomatal conductance. However, in response to salt stress, prosystemin transgenic plants maintained a higher stomatal conductance compared with the wild-type control. Leaf concentrations of abscissic acid (ABA) and proline were lower in stressed transgenic plants compared with their wild-type control, implying that either the former perceived a less stressful environment or they adapted more efficiently to it. Consistently, under salt stress, transgenic plants produced a higher biomass, indicating that a constitutive activation of wound responses is advantageous in saline environment. Comparative gene expression profiling of stress-induced genes suggested that the partial stomatal closure was not mediated by ABA and/or components of the ABA signal transduction pathway. Possible cross-talks between genes involved in wounding and osmotic stress adaptation pathways in tomato are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The allene oxide cyclase (AOC)-catalyzed step in jasmonate (JA) biosynthesis is important in the wound response of tomato. As shown by treatments with systemin and its inactive analog, and by analysis of 35S::prosysteminsense and 35S::prosysteminantisense plants, the AOC seems to be activated by systemin (and JA) leading to elevated formation of JA. Data are presented on the local wound response following activation of AOC and generation of JA, both in vascular bundles. The tissue-specific occurrence of AOC protein and generation of JA is kept upon wounding or other stresses, but is compromised in 35S::AOCsense plants, whereas 35S::AOCantisense plants exhibited residual AOC expression, a less than 10% rise in JA, and no detectable expression of wound response genes. The (i). activation of systemin-dependent AOC and JA biosynthesis occurring only upon substrate generation, (ii). the tissue-specific occurrence of AOC in vascular bundles, where the prosystemin gene is expressed, and (iii). the tissue-specific generation of JA suggest an amplification in the wound response of tomato leaves allowing local and rapid defense responses.  相似文献   

17.
Hydroxyproline-rich systemins (HypSys) are small defense signaling glycopeptides found within the Solanaceae family that until recently were thought to only induce defense genes to herbivore attack. The glycopeptides are processed from larger proproteins with up to 3 different glycopeptides being processed out of a single precursor protein. A conserved central hydroxyproline motif within each HypSys is the site of pentose sugar attachment. Recently, it was found that in Petunia hybrida, these defense signaling glycopeptides did not induce protease inhibitor but instead, increased levels of defensin, a gene that is involved in pathogen attack. More recently, a HypSys peptide was isolated from Ipomoea batatas (sweet potato) of the Convolvulaceae family and found to induce sporamin. The proprotein precursor contained six putative peptide signals and had a propeptidase processing region with homology to solanaceous proHypSys. Thus, the HypSys defense peptides are no longer confined to defense against herbivory or exclusivity to the Solanaceae family, redefining both function and dispersion.Key words: systemin, hydroxyproline-rich systemin glycopeptides, HypSys, plant defense, proteinase inhibitorsPlants have evolved an arsenal of defense mechanisms for survival against the wide array of predators and pathogens that they encounter. Each species has evolved within its unique environment and the protective defense mechanisms must evolve and refine over time to allow a plant to compete in its niche.1 Plant peptide signals have recently been discovered that induce defense genes for protection against both herbivores and pathogens.2 This raises the issue of how these peptides, their receptors, signaling pathways, and the downstream regulated defense proteins and compounds have evolved to meet the unique and specific needs of each plant. Our recent papers3,4 reveal that these defense signaling peptides are not confined to a single family of plants and that the end products of the signaling pathway may be more diverse than expected.Systemin was the first peptide signal discovered in plants.5 The 18 amino acid peptide is processed from the C-terminal of a 200 amino acid precursor; prosystemin.6 Although lacking a signal sequence, prosystemin reaches the apoplast and the mature peptide is processed upon insect attack, signaling downstream events leading to the production of defense proteins, such as polyphenol oxidase and protease inhibitors.7 Systemin has only been found in the Solanaceae family and more specifically, only in the subfamily Solanoideae, which contains tomato, potato, nightshade and pepper.The hydroxyproline-rich systemin glycopeptides are similar to systemin in size (18–20 amino acids in length) and, like systemin, are processed from larger precursors.2,8 Both systemin and HypSys induce the production of methyl jasmonate and function to amplify the defense response. Each HypSys peptide contains a hydroxyproline-rich inner core that is the site of glycosylation and both the peptide backbone and the carbohydrate moieties are important for receptor recognition (9,10 Although there is no sequence similarity between prosystemin and hydroxyproline-rich systemins, it has been suggested that because of their size, structure and functional similarities, they should be classified together.11

Table 1

Comparisons of the amino acid sequences of isolated and putative Systemin and HypSys peptides
Open in a separate windowTomato systemin was aligned with the putative homologs from potato (St systemin I and II, Solanum tuberosum), nightshade (Sn systemin, Solanum nigrum), and pepper systemin (Ca systemin, Capsicum annuum). HypSys peptide from tobacco (NtHypSys I and II), tomato (SlHypSys I, II and III), petunia (PhHypSys I, II and III, Petunia hybrida), nightshade (SnHypSys I, II and III), and sweet potato (IbHypSys IV, Ipomoea batatas), and the putative peptides encoded in the precursor protein deduced from the cDNA of sweet potato (IbHypSys I, II, III, V, and VI) were aligned by the hydroxyproline/proline central motif. The poplar (PtHypSys I and II, Populus trichocarpa) sequences were deduced from Map Viewer Gnomon model: hmm3236034, and the coffee (CcHypSys I, II and III, Coffea canephora) sequences were deduced from Unigene SGN-U311058 in the Sol Genomics Network (http://sgn.cornell.edu). The hydroxyproline-rich regions of the isolated peptides are red and the proline-rich regions of the systemins and the putative HypSys peptides are blue. The isolated peptides are marked with a star.A second defense peptide family, the AtPeps, was recently discovered in Arabidopsis and like systemin, the precursors lack a signal sequence but the mature peptide interacts with the extracellular domain of a membrane bound receptor.3,12 The active peptides are 23 amino acids in length and like systemin, processed from the extreme C-terminus. One of the major induced defense genes of the AtPeps is defensin and the AtPeps have been found to protect the plant from pathogen attack.12 AtPep orthologs have been found in many of the major crop plants.The precursors for HypSys peptides, unlike prosystemin, were found in a wider range of Solanaceous plants including the Cestroideae subfamily that includes tobacco and petunia. Each precursor contained multiple peptide signals; for instance, tobacco contained 2 HypSys peptides per precursor,13 tomato with 3 HypSys peptides,14 nightshade with 3 HypSys peptides,15 potato with 3 HypSys peptides,16 and most recently petunia with 3 and possibly 4 HypSys peptides per precursor.5 Surprisingly, the petunia HypSys peptides were found to induce the pathogen defense gene, defensin, like the AtPeps, rather than proteinase inhibitors. This expands the known role of HypSys peptides from exclusive involvement in protection from herbivory to broader defense responses, including pathogen defense.A second major finding was the isolation of the first non-solanaceous HypSys peptide from sweet potato, a member of the Convolvulaceae family.4 The precursor was larger than any found within the Solanaceae (291 amino acids in length), and contained a surprising 6 putative signaling peptides. The precursor contained a signal sequence and a propeptidase splicing region with homology to the Solanaceae precursors. Since the discovery of the sweet potato proHypSys, candidate proHypSys genes have been found in nucleotide data bases of other non-solanaceous plants, including poplar and coffee (相似文献   

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19.
The systemic accumulation of both hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) and proteinase inhibitor proteins in tomato leaves in response to wounding was inhibited by the NADPH oxidase inhibitors diphenylene iodonium (DPI), imidazole, and pyridine. The expression of several defense genes in response to wounding, systemin, oligosaccharides, and methyl jasmonate also was inhibited by DPI. These genes, including those of four proteinase inhibitors and polyphenol oxidase, are expressed within 4 to 12 hr after wounding. However, DPI did not inhibit the wound-inducible expression of genes encoding prosystemin, lipoxygenase, and allene oxide synthase, which are associated with the octadecanoid signaling pathway and are expressed 0.5 to 2 hr after wounding. Accordingly, treatment of plants with the H(2)O(2)-generating enzyme glucose oxidase plus glucose resulted in the induction of only the later-expressed defensive genes and not the early-expressed signaling-related genes. H(2)O(2) was cytochemically detected in the cell walls of vascular parenchyma cells and spongy mesophyll cells within 4 hr after wounding of wild-type tomato leaves, but not earlier. The cumulative results suggest that active oxygen species are generated near cell walls of vascular bundle cells by oligogalacturonide fragments produced by wound-inducible polygalacturonase and that the resulting H(2)O(2) acts as a second messenger for the activation of defense genes in mesophyll cells. These data provide a rationale for the sequential, coordinated, and functional roles of systemin, jasmonic acid, oligogalacturonides, and H(2)O(2) signals for systemic signaling in tomato plants in response to wounding.  相似文献   

20.
Phospholipase A (PLA) activity, as measured by the accumulation of (14)C-lysophosphatidylcholine in leaves of tomato plants, increased rapidly and systemically in response to wounding. The increase in PLA activity in the systemic unwounded leaves was biphasic in wild-type tomato plants, peaking at 15 min and again at 60 min, but the second peak of activity was absent in transgenic prosystemin antisense plants. Supplying young excised tomato plants with the polypeptide hormone systemin also caused (14)C-lysophosphatidylcholine to increase to levels similar to those induced by wounding, but the increase in activity persisted for >2 hr. Antagonists of systemin blocked both the release of (14)C-lysophosphatidylcholine and the accumulation of defense proteins in response to systemin. (14)C-lysophosphatidylcholine levels did not increase in response to jasmonic acid. Chemical acylation of the lysophosphatidylcholine produced by wounding, systemin, and oligosaccharide elicitors followed by enzymatic hydrolysis with lipases of known specificities demostrated that the lysophosphatidylcholine is generated by a PLA with specificity for the sn-2 position.  相似文献   

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