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1.
Roles of amyloplasts and water deficit in root tropisms   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Directed growth of roots in relation to a moisture gradient is called hydrotropism. The no hydrotropic response (nhr1) mutant of Arabidopsis lacks a hydrotropic response, and shows a stronger gravitropic response than that of wild type (wt) in a medium with an osmotic gradient. Local application of abscisic acid (ABA) to seeds or root tips of nhr1 increased root downward growth, indicating the critical role of ABA in tropisms. Wt roots germinated and treated with ABA in this system were strongly gravitropic, even though they had almost no starch amyloplasts in the root-cap columella cells. Hydrotropically stimulated nhr1 roots, with or without ABA, maintained starch in the amyloplasts, as opposed to those of wt. Hence, the near-absence (wt) or abundant presence (nhr1) of starch granules does not influence the extent of downward gravitropism of the roots in an osmotic gradient medium. Starch degradation in the wt might help the root sustain osmotic stress and carry out hydrotropism, instead of reducing gravity responsiveness. nhr1 roots might be hydrotropically inactive because they maintain this starch reserve in the columella cells, sustaining both their turgor and growth, and in effect minimizing the need for hydrotropism and at least partially disabling its mechanism. We conclude that ABA and water stress are critical regulators of root tropic responses.  相似文献   

2.
For most plants survival depends upon the capacity of root tips to sense and move towards water and other nutrients in the soil. Because land plants cannot escape environmental stress they use developmental solutions to remodel themselves in order to better adapt to the new conditions. The primary site for perception of underground signals is the root cap (RC). Plant roots have positive hydrotropic response and modify their growth direction in search of water. Using a screening system with a water potential gradient, we isolated a no hydrotropic response (nhr) semi-dominant mutant of Arabidopsis that continued to grow downwardly into the medium with the lowest water potential contrary to the positive hydrotropic and negative gravitropic response seen in wild type-roots. The lack of hydrotropic response of nhr1 roots was confirmed in a system with a gradient in air moisture. The root gravitropic response of nhr1 seedlings was significantly faster in comparison with those of wild type. The frequency of the waving pattern in nhr1 roots was increased compared to those of wild type. nhr1 seedlings had abnormal root cap morphogenesis and reduced root growth sensitivity to abscisic acid (ABA) and the polar auxin transport inhibitor N-(1-naphtyl)phtalamic acid (NPA). These results showed that hydrotropism is amenable to genetic analysis and that an ABA signaling pathway participates in sensing water potential gradients through the root cap.  相似文献   

3.

Background and Aims

Root hydrotropism is a response to water-potential gradients that makes roots bend towards areas of higher water potential. The gene MIZU-KUSSEI1 (MIZ1) that is essential for hydrotropism in Arabidopsis roots has previously been identified. However, the role of root hydrotropism in plant growth and survival under natural conditions has not yet been proven. This study assessed how hydrotropic response contributes to drought avoidance in nature.

Methods

An experimental system was established for the study of Arabidopsis hydrotropism in soil. Characteristics of hydrotropism were analysed by comparing the responses of the miz1 mutant, transgenic plants overexpressing MIZ1 (MIZ1OE) and wild-type plants.

Key Results

Wild-type plants developed root systems in regions with higher water potential, whereas the roots of miz1 mutant plants did not show a similar response. This pattern of root distribution induced by hydrotropism was more pronounced in MIZ1OE plants than in wild-type plants. In addition, shoot biomass and the number of plants that survived under drought conditions were much greater in MIZ1OE plants.

Conclusions

These results show that hydrotropism plays an important role in root system development in soil and contributes to drought avoidance, which results in a greater yield and plant survival under water-limited conditions. The results also show that MIZ1 overexpression can be used for improving plant productivity in arid areas.  相似文献   

4.
Roots are highly plastic and can acclimate to heterogeneous and stressful conditions. However, there is little knowledge of the effect of moisture gradients on the mechanisms controlling root growth orientation and branching, and how this mechanism may help plants to avoid drought responses. The aim of this study was to isolate mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana with altered hydrotropic responses. Here, altered hydrotropic response 1 (ahr1), a semi-dominant allele segregating as a single gene mutation, was characterized. ahr1 directed the growth of its primary root towards the source of higher water availability and developed an extensive root system over time. This phenotype was intensified in the presence of abscisic acid and was not observed if ahr1 seedlings were grown in a water stress medium without a water potential gradient. In normal growth conditions, primary root growth and root branching of ahr1 were indistinguishable from those of the wild type (wt). The altered hydrotropic growth of ahr1 roots was confirmed when the water-rich source was placed at an angle of 45° from the gravity vector. In this system, roots of ahr1 seedlings grew downward and did not display hydrotropism; however, in the presence of cytokinins, they exhibited hydrotropism like those of the wt, indicating that cytokinins play a critical role in root hydrotropism. The ahr1 mutant represents a valuable genetic resource for the study of the effects of cytokinins in the differential growth of hydrotropism and control of lateral root formation during the hydrotropic response.  相似文献   

5.
Root hydrotropism is the phenomenon of directional root growth toward moisture under water-deficient conditions. Although physiological and genetic studies have revealed the involvement of the root cap in the sensing of moisture gradients, and those of auxin and abscisic acid (ABA) in the signal transduction for asymmetric root elongation, the overall mechanism of root hydrotropism is still unclear. We found that the promoter activity of the Arabidopsis phospholipase Dζ2 gene (PLDζ2) was localized to epidermal cells in the distal root elongation zone and lateral root cap cells adjacent to them, and that exogenous ABA enhanced the activity and extended its area to the entire root cap. Although pldζ2 mutant root caps did not exhibit a morphological phenotype in either the absence or presence of exogenous ABA, the inhibitory effect of ABA on gravitropism, which was significant in wild-type roots, was not observed in pldζ2 mutant roots. In root hydrotropism experiments, pldζ2 mutations significantly retarded or disturbed root hydrotropic responses. A drought condition similar to that used in a hydrotropism experiment enhanced the PLDζ2 promoter activity in the root cap, as did exogenous ABA. These results suggest that PLDζ2 responds to drought through ABA signaling in the root cap and accelerates root hydrotropism through the suppression of root gravitropism.  相似文献   

6.
Hydrotropism, the differential growth of plant roots directed by a moisture gradient, is a long recognized, but not well-understood plant behavior. Hydrotropism has been characterized in the model plant Arabidopsis. Previously, it was postulated that roots subjected to water stress are capable of undergo water-directed tropic growth independent of the gravity vector because of the loss of the starch granules in root cap columella cells and hence the loss of the early steps in gravitropic signaling. We have recently proposed that starch degradation in these cells during hydrostimulation sustain osmotic stress and root growth for carrying out hydrotropism instead of reducing gravity responsiveness. In addition, we also proposed that abscisic acid (ABA) and water deficit are critical regulators of root gravitropism and hydrotropism, and thus mediate the interacting mechanism between these two tropisms. Our conclusions are based upon experiments performed with the no hydrotropic response (nhr1) mutant of Arabidopsis, which lacks a hydrotropic response and shows a stronger gravitropic response than that of wild type (WT) in a medium with an osmotic gradient.Key words: starch, water deficit, auxin, abscisic acid, gravitropism, hydrotropismRoots of land plants sense and respond to different stimuli, some of which are fixed in direction and intensity (i.e., gravity) while other vary in time, space, direction and intensity (i.e., obstacles and moisture gradients). Directed growth of roots in relation to a gradient in moisture is called hydrotropism and begins in the root cap with the sensing of the moisture gradient. However, since gravity is an omnipresent accompaniment of Earthly life and many living process have evolved with it as a background constant, it is not surprising that root hydrotropism interacts with gravitropism.1 The hydrotropic response in Arabidopsis, compare with other plants such as pea and cucumber2,3 is readily observed even in the presence of gravity.4,5 When Arabidopsis roots are subjected to a water gradient, such that the source of water is placed 180° opposed to the gravity vector, the roots will grow upwards, displaying positive hydrotropism. Therefore, it has been feasible to isolate so far two Arabidopsis mutants affected in their hydrotropic response.5,6 Analysis of these mutants reveals new insights of the mechanism of hydrotropism. For one hand, the no hydrotropic response (nhr1) mutant lacks a hydrotropic response, and shows a stronger gravitropic response than that of wt and a modified wavy growth response in a medium with an osmotic gradient.5,7 On the other hand, the mizu-kussei1 (miz1) mutant did not exhibit hydrotropism and showed regular gravitropism.6 Hence, the root hydrotropic response is both linked and unlinked from the gravitropic one. Nonetheless, miz1 roots also showed a reduced phototropism and a modified wavy growth response. This indicates that both MIZ1 and NHR1 are not exclusive components of the mechanism for hydrotropism and supports the notion that the root cap has assessment mechanisms that integrate many different environmental influences to produce a final integrated response.8 Thus, the physiological phenomena distinctively displayed by roots in order to forage resources from the environment are the result of integrated responses that resulted from many environmental influences sensed in the root cap.In the course of studying how gravity and water availability affected the perception and assessment of each other in root cap cells that generated the final root tropic response, we found that ABA is a critical regulator of the signal transduction mechanism that integrated these two-root tropisms.7 For this, we analyzed the long-term hydrotropic response of Arabidopsis roots in an osmotic gradient system. ABA, locally applied to seeds or root tips of nhr1, significantly increased root downward growth in a medium with an osmotic gradient (root length of nhr1 seedlings grown in this medium were on average 12.5 mm and plus 10 µM ABA were 25.1 mm). On the other hand, WT roots germinated and treated locally with ABA in this system were strongly gravitropic, albeit they had almost no starch in amyloplasts of root cap columella cells. Hydrotropically stimulated nhr1 roots, with or without ABA, maintained starch in amyloplastas, as opposed to those of WT. Therefore, the near-absence (WT) or abundant presence (nhr1) of starch granules does not affect the extent of downward gravitropism of roots in an osmotic gradient medium. Starch degradation in the wt might participate in osmoregulation by which root cells maintain turgor and consequently carry out hydrotropism, instead of reducing gravity responsiveness. In fact, it was just recently published that salt-induced rapid degradation of starch in amyloplasts is not likely the main reason for a negative gravitropic response seen under salt stress, because sos mutant roots of Arabidopsis showed negative gravitropic growth without any apparent rapid digestion of starch granules.9 Additionally, the stems of overwintering tubers of Potamogeton pectinatus are capable of elongating much faster in the absence than in the presence of oxygen for up to 14 days and its stems has an enhanced capacity for gravitropic movements in completely anoxic conditions.10 These authors hypothesized that ABA and starch degradation in the starchy tuber sustained stem cell elongation and cell division as well as differential growth required for the gravitropic response in these aquatic plants. These data taken together suggest that in conditions of anoxia, or water stress, ABA and degradation of starch play a critical role in the ability to survive relatively prolonged periods of unfavorable growth conditions. These players are critical when water or minerals are scarce since they regulate the enhancement of root downward growth. However, since roots can trail humidity gradients in soil, they can modulate their branching patterns (architecture) and thus respond to hydrotropism once a water-rich patch is found. Then the response of plants to gravity is principally one of nutrition (shoots to light, roots to mineral and water) and consequently must be regulated according to the long- and short-term environmental variables that occur during the development of the plant.Differential growth that occurs during the gravitropic and phototropic response has been explained according to the Cholodny-Went hypothesis, which states that the lateral transport of auxin across stimulated plant tissues is responsible for the curvature response.11 Analysis of hydrotropism in some Arabidopsis agravitropic auxin transport mutants has demonstrated that these mutations do not influence their hydrotropic response.4 Furthermore, current pharmacological studies using inhibitors also indicated that both auxin influx and efflux are not required for hydrotropic response whereas auxin response is necessary for it.12 These authors suggested a novel mechanism for auxin in root hydrotropism. Here, we analyzed whether asymmetric auxin distribution takes place across hydrotropically-stimulated roots using transgenic plants carrying a responsive auxin promoter (DR5) driving the expression of β-glucuronidase (GUS) or green fluorescent protein (GFP)13,14 in wt and nhr1 backgrounds. Wt and nhr1 roots hydrotropically stimulated in a system with air moisture gradient5 showed no asymmetric expression of the DR5:: GUS or DR5::GFP (Fig. 1A and B). Nonetheless, nhr1 roots showed a substantial decrease in the signal driven by the DR5::GUS and GFP reporters in humidity saturated conditions (Fig. 1A, part b and B, part b), which might indicate that auxin-induced gene expression in the root cap was inhibited. It remains to be determined the significance of this inhibition in the no hydrotropic response phenotype displayed by nhr1 roots. Determination of the DR5::GUS expression in wt and nhr1 roots growing in an osmotic gradient medium for testing long-term hydrotropism revealed that the GUS signal was to some extent diminished in both wt or in nhr1 roots (Fig. 2C and D) compared to those roots growing in normal medium (Fig. 2A and B). An inhibitor of auxin response reduced hydrotropism,12 and also inhibited auxin-dependent DR5::GUS expression.15 However, a decrease of DR5::GUS in wt root tips was not an impediment for developing an hydrotropic response. On the other hand, nhr1 roots also showed a decrease of DR5::GUS expression (Fig. 2B and D) and a complete absence of DR5::GFP (data not shown), which did not influence the extent of downward root gravitropism in water deficit conditions. Therefore, it is difficult to assign a role of auxin-induce gene expression in hydrotropism and further studies are required in order to unravel this issue. Furthermore, it needs to be resolved whether these expression studies oppose the idea that gradients in auxin precede differential growth in response to humidity gradients.Open in a separate windowFigure 1DR5:: GUS (A) and DR5::GFP (B) activity in the wild type NHR1 and nhr1 backgrounds. (A) Root tips hydrostimulated in a system with air moisture gradient (C and D) or grown in a saturated water conditions (A and B) stained with 1 mM 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-β-d-glucuronic (X-Gluc) acid buffer under the same conditions for 80 min. (B) Root tips hydrostimulated as in (A) (C and D) or grown in a saturated water conditions (A and B) whose green fluorescent signal was visualized by confocal microscopy. Shown are images selected from at least 45 representative root tips. Bar = 29 µm.Open in a separate windowFigure 2Expression of DR5::GUS in wild type NHR1 and nhr1 backgrounds. Roots were hydrotropically stimulated for 8 days in a medium with an osmotic gradient (C and D) or grown in normal medium (A and B) and stained with X-Gluc acid buffer under the same conditions for 80 min. Shown are images selected from at least 50 representative root tips. Bar = 25 µm.Our studies7 revealed that ABA is a critical regulator of both root gravitropism and hydrotropism in water deficit conditions, and that the role of auxin under these conditions seems to differ from those observed in several studies thus far published on gravitropism made under well-water conditions. The molecular characterization of NHR1 and from other nhr-like mutants already isolated in our lab will clarify the mechanisms involved in this fascinating tropism.16  相似文献   

7.
Plant roots undergo tropic growth in response to environmental cues, and each tropic response is affected by several environmental stimuli. Even its importance, molecular regulation of hydrotropism has not been largely uncovered. Tropic responses including hydrotropism were impacted by other environmental signal. We found that hydrotropism was reduced in dark-grown seedling. Moreover, we found that the expression of MIZ1, an essential gene for hydrotropism, was regulated by light signal. From our genetic analysis, phytochrome A (phyA)-, phyB- and HY5-mediated blue-light signalling play curial roles in light-mediated induction of MIZ1 and hydrotropism. In addition, we found that abscisic acid (ABA) also induced MIZ1 expression. ABA treatment could recover weak hydrotropism and MIZ1 expression level of hy5, and ABA synthesis inhibitor, abamineSG, further reduced hydrotropic curvature of hy5. In contrast, ABA treatment did not affect ahydrotropic phenotype of miz1. These results suggest that ABA signalling regulates MIZ1 expression independently from light signalling. Our results demonstrate that environmental signals, such as light and stresses mediated by ABA signalling, are integrated into MIZ1 expression and thus regulate hydrotropism. These machineries will allow plants to acquire sufficient amounts of water.  相似文献   

8.
Plants are sessile in nature and must respond to various environmental cues to regulate their growth orientation. Root hydrotropism, a response to moisture gradients, has been considered to play an important role in drought avoidance. Nonetheless, the processes underlying hydrotropism in roots have remained obscure until recently because of the interfering effect of gravitropism. To shed light on root hydrotropism, we isolated and analyzed two Arabidopsis mutants, mizu-kussei (miz) 1 and 2, that have abnormal hydrotropic responses but normal responses to gravity. MIZ1 encodes a protein of unknown function with a conserved domain at its C-terminus. MIZ2 encodes a guanine-nucleotide exchange factor for ADP-ribosylation factor-type G proteins, which has been identified as GNOM. These findings suggest that roots possess molecular mechanisms essential for hydrotropism but independent of gravitropism. One of such mechanisms involves vesicle transport unique to hydrotropism in roots. Here we summarize recent progress on the molecular mechanism of root hydrotropism and the roles of MIZ1 and MIZ2.  相似文献   

9.
Lee SC  Hwang BK 《Planta》2009,229(2):383-391
Biotic signaling molecules including abscisic acid (ABA) are involved in signal transduction pathways that mediate the defense response of plants to environmental stresses. The antimicrobial protein gene CaAMP1, previously isolated from pepper (Capsicum annuum), was strongly induced in pepper leaves exposed to ABA, NaCl, drought, or low temperature. Because transformation is very difficult in pepper, we overexpressed CaAMP1 in Arabidopsis. CaAMP1-overexpressing (OX) transgenic plants exhibited reduced sensitivity to ABA during the seed germination and seedling stages. Overexpression of CaAMP1 conferred enhanced tolerance to high salinity and drought, accompanied by altered expression of the AtRD29A gene, which is correlated with ABA levels and environmental stresses. The transgenic plants were also highly tolerant to osmotic stress caused by high concentrations of mannitol. Together, these results suggest that overexpression of the CaAMP1 transgene modulates salt and drought tolerance in Arabidopsis through ABA-mediated cell signaling. The nucleotide sequence data reported here have been deposited in the GenBank database under the accession number AY548741.  相似文献   

10.

Roots display directional growth toward moisture in response to a water potential gradient. Root hydrotropism is thought to facilitate plant adaptation to continuously changing water availability. Hydrotropism has not been as extensively studied as gravitropism. However, comparisons of hydrotropic and gravitropic responses identified mechanisms that are unique to hydrotropism. Regulatory mechanisms underlying the hydrotropic response appear to differ among different species. We recently performed molecular and genetic analyses of root hydrotropism in Arabidopsis thaliana. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge of specific mechanisms mediating root hydrotropism in several plant species.

  相似文献   

11.
Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) encodes the 2b protein, which plays a role in local and systemic virus movement, symptom induction and suppression of RNA silencing. It also disrupts signalling regulated by salicylic acid and jasmonic acid. CMV induced an increase in tolerance to drought in Arabidopsis thaliana. This was caused by the 2b protein, as transgenic plants expressing this viral factor showed increased drought tolerance, but plants infected with CMVΔ2b, a viral mutant lacking the 2b gene, did not. The silencing effector ARGONAUTE1 (AGO1) controls a microRNA‐mediated drought tolerance mechanism and, in this study, we noted that plants (dcl2/3/4 triple mutants) lacking functional short‐interfering RNA‐mediated silencing were also drought tolerant. However, drought tolerance engendered by CMV may be independent of the silencing suppressor activity of the 2b protein. Although CMV infection did not alter the accumulation of the drought response hormone abscisic acid (ABA), 2b‐transgenic and ago1‐mutant seeds were hypersensitive to ABA‐mediated inhibition of germination. However, the induction of ABA‐regulated genes in 2b‐transgenic and CMV‐infected plants was inhibited more strongly than in ago1‐mutant plants. The virus engenders drought tolerance by altering the characteristics of the roots and not of the aerial tissues as, compared with the leaves of silencing mutants, leaves excised from CMV‐infected or 2b‐transgenic plants showed greater stomatal permeability and lost water more rapidly. This further indicates that CMV‐induced drought tolerance is not mediated via a change in the silencing‐regulated drought response mechanism. Under natural conditions, virus‐induced drought tolerance may serve viruses by aiding susceptible hosts to survive periods of environmental stress.  相似文献   

12.
AtDjB1 is a member of the Arabidopsis thaliana J‐protein family. AtDjB1 is targeted to the mitochondria and plays a crucial role in A. thaliana heat and oxidative stress resistance. Herein, the role of AtDjB1 in adapting to saline and drought stress was studied in A. thaliana. AtDjB1 expression was induced through salinity, dehydration and abscisic acid (ABA) in young seedlings. Reverse genetic analyses indicate that AtDjB1 is a negative regulator in plant osmotic stress tolerance. Further, AtDjB1 knockout mutant plants (atj1‐1) exhibited greater ABA sensitivity compared with the wild‐type (WT) plants and the mutant lines with a rescued AtDjB1 gene. AtDjB1 gene knockout also altered the expression of several ABA‐responsive genes, which suggests that AtDjB1 is involved in osmotic stress tolerance through its effects on ABA signaling pathways. Moreover, atj1‐1 plants exhibited higher glucose levels and greater glucose sensitivity in the post‐germination development stage. Applying glucose promoted an ABA response in seedlings, and the promotion was more evident in atj1‐1 than WT seedlings. Taken together, higher glucose levels in atj1‐1 plants are likely responsible for the greater ABA sensitivity and increased osmotic stress tolerance.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
Developing new strategies for crop plants to respond to drought is crucial for their innovative breeding. The down‐regulation of nuclear cap‐binding proteins in Arabidopsis renders plants drought tolerant. The CBP80 gene in the potato cultivar Desiree was silenced using artificial microRNAs. Transgenic plants displayed a higher tolerance to drought, ABA‐hypersensitive stomatal closing, an increase in leaf stomata and trichome density, and compact cuticle structures with a lower number of microchannels. These findings were correlated with a higher tolerance to water stress. The level of miR159 was decreased, and the levels of its target mRNAs MYB33 and MYB101 increased in the transgenic plants subjected to drought. Similar trends were observed in an Arabidopsis cbp80 mutant. The evolutionary conservation of CBP80, a gene that plays a role in the response to drought, suggests that it is a candidate for genetic manipulations that aim to obtain improved water‐deficit tolerance of crop plants.  相似文献   

16.
Dong HP  Yu H  Bao Z  Guo X  Peng J  Yao Z  Chen G  Qu S  Dong H 《Planta》2005,221(3):313-327
HrpN, a protein produced by the plant pathogenic bacterium Erwinia amylovora, has been shown to stimulate plant growth and resistance to pathogens and insects. Here we report that HrpN activates abscisic acid (ABA) signalling to induce drought tolerance (DT) in Arabidopsis thaliana L. plants grown with water stress. Spraying wild-type plants with HrpN-promoted stomatal closure decreased leaf transpiration rate, increased moisture and proline levels in leaves, and alleviated extents of damage to cell membranes and plant drought symptoms caused by water deficiency. In plants treated with HrpN, ABA levels increased; expression of several ABA-signalling regulatory genes and the important effector gene rd29B was induced or enhanced. Induced expression of rd29B, promotion of stomatal closure, and reduction in drought severity were observed in the abi1-1 mutant, which has a defect in the phosphatase ABI1, after HrpN was applied. In contrast, HrpN failed to induce these responses in the abi2-1 mutant, which is impaired in the phosphatase ABI2. Inhibiting wild-type plants to synthesize ABA eliminated the role of HrpN in promoting stomatal closure and reducing drought severity. Moreover, resistance to Pseudomonas syringae developed in abi2-1 as in wild-type plants following treatment with HrpN. Thus, an ABI2-dependent ABA signalling pathway is responsible for the induction of DT but does not affect pathogen defence under the circumstances of this study.Hong-Ping Dong and Haiqin Yu contributed equally to this study and are regarded as joint first authors.  相似文献   

17.
Arabidopsis thaliana acyl‐CoA‐binding protein 2 (ACBP2) is a stress‐responsive protein that is also important in embryogenesis. Here, we assign a role for ACBP2 in abscisic acid (ABA) signalling during seed germination, seedling development and the drought response. ACBP2 was induced by ABA and drought, and transgenic Arabidopsis overexpressing ACBP2 (ACBP2‐OXs) showed increased sensitivity to ABA treatment during germination and seedling development. ACBP2‐OXs also displayed improved drought tolerance and ABA‐mediated reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in guard cells, thereby promoting stomatal closure, reducing water loss and enhancing drought tolerance. In contrast, acbp2 mutant plants showed decreased sensitivity to ABA in root development and were more sensitive to drought stress. RNA analyses revealed that ACBP2 overexpression up‐regulated the expression of Respiratory Burst Oxidase Homolog D (AtrbohD) and AtrbohF, two NAD(P)H oxidases essential for ABA‐mediated ROS production, whereas the expression of Hypersensitive to ABA1 (HAB1), an important negative regulator in ABA signalling, was down‐regulated. In addition, transgenic plants expressing ACBP2pro:GUS showed beta‐glucuronidase (GUS) staining in guard cells, confirming a role for ACBP2 at the stomata. These observations support a positive role for ACBP2 in promoting ABA signalling in germination, seedling development and the drought response.  相似文献   

18.
Roots respond not only to gravity but also to moisture gradient by displaying gravitropism and hydrotropism, respectively, to control their growth orientation, which helps plants obtain water and become established in the terrestrial environment. As gravitropism often interferes with hydrotropism, however, the mechanisms of how roots display hydrotropism and differentiate it from gravitropism are not understood. We previously reported MIZU-KUSSEI1 (MIZ1) as a gene required for hydrotropism but not for gravitropism, although the function of its protein was not known. Here, we found that a mutation of GNOM encoding guanine-nucleotide exchange factor for ADP-ribosylation factor-type G proteins was responsible for the ahydrotropism of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), miz2. Unlike other gnom alleles, miz2 showed no apparent morphological defects or reduced gravitropism. Instead, brefeldin A (BFA) treatment inhibited both hydrotropism and gravitropism in Arabidopsis roots. In addition, a BFA-resistant GNOM variant, GNM696L, showed normal hydrotropic response in the presence of BFA. Furthermore, a weak gnom allele, gnomB/E, showed defect in hydrotropic response. These results indicate that GNOM-mediated vesicular trafficking plays an essential role in hydrotropism of seedling roots.Stationary growth is a distinct feature of plants and distinguishes them from other organisms. Plants have evolved a variety of mechanisms for responding to environmental cues, which enables them to survive in the presence of limited resources or environmental stresses. One of the most important growth adaptations plants have acquired is tropism, growth response that involves bending or curving of plant organs toward or away from a stimulus. For example, roots display tropisms in response to environmental cues such as gravity, light, touch, and moisture (Darwin and Darwin, 1880; Takahashi, 1997; Correll and Kiss, 2002; Monshausen et al., 2008). Gravitropism has been the subject of intense study, while other tropic responses of roots have been less well characterized. There is some evidence of hydrotropism in roots, but this response has proven difficult to differentiate from gravitropism, as the latter always interferes with hydrotropism (Jaffe et al., 1985; Takahashi, 1994; Takahashi, 1997). The demonstration of true hydrotropism in roots has facilitated the identification of some of the physiological aspects of hydrotropism and its existence in a wide range of plant species. However, the underlying mechanisms that regulate hydrotropism remain unknown. The limited supply of water and precipitation in many parts of the world greatly affects agriculture and ecosystems. Elucidating the molecular mechanism of hydrotropism in roots is therefore important not only for understanding how terrestrial plants adapt to changes in moisture, but also for improving crop yields and biomass production.The isolation and analysis of hydrotropism-deficient mutants using the model plant species Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) represents a potent tool for dissecting the molecular mechanism of hydrotropism. Previously, we isolated an ahydrotropic mutant of Arabidopsis, mizu-kussei1 (miz1), and showed that MIZ1 encodes a protein of unknown function (Kobayashi et al., 2007). In light of both the physiological features of hydrotropism, as well as what we have learned from genetic studies of other tropisms, it is unlikely that miz1 alone governs the hydrotropic response. In support of this, we have identified a second ahydrotropic mutant, miz2, a unique allele of gnom that confers ahydrotropic but not agravitropic growth, which implies distinct roles of vesicular trafficking between hydrotropism and gravitropism in roots.  相似文献   

19.
Degradation of proteins via the ubiquitin system is an important step in many stress signaling pathways in plants. E3 ligases recognize ligand proteins and dictate the high specificity of protein degradation, and thus, play a pivotal role in ubiquitination. Here, we identified a gene, named Arabidopsis thaliana abscisic acid (ABA)‐insensitive RING protein 4 (AtAIRP4), which is induced by ABA and other stress treatments. AtAIRP4 encodes a cellular protein with a C3HC4‐RING finger domain in its C‐terminal side, which has in vitro E3 ligase activity. Loss of AtAIRP4 leads to a decrease in sensitivity of root elongation and stomatal closure to ABA, whereas overexpression of this gene in the T‐DNA insertion mutant atairp4 effectively recovered the ABA‐associated phenotypes. AtAIRP4 overexpression plants were hypersensitive to salt and osmotic stresses during seed germination, and showed drought avoidance compared with the wild‐type and atairp4 mutant plants. In addition, the expression levels of ABA‐ and drought‐induced marker genes in AtAIRP4 overexpression plants were markedly higher than those in the wild‐type and atairp4 mutant plants. Hence, these results indicate that AtAIRP4 may act as a positive regulator of ABA‐mediated drought avoidance and a negative regulator of salt tolerance in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

20.
玉米初生根向水性诱导优化试验研究   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
为了研究湿度梯度对根系向水性反应的影响,采用Takahashi and Scott于1993年创建的方法,设置以下3个试验:1)向水性诱导物不同倾斜角试验;2)根系距向水性诱导物不同距离试验;3)根尖距底部饱和K2CO3溶液不同距离试验。同时,还研究了根长和根系延伸速率对根系向水性弯曲的影响。结果表明,用饱和K2CO3溶液控制湿度时根系的向水性弯曲度明显大于纯水。随着诱导物倾斜角的增大,向水性弯曲增强。与距诱导物3 mm和6 mm相比,根系直接接触诱导物时表现出最大的向水性反应。与根尖距底部盐溶液6 cm相比,相距4 cm时向水性弯曲度增大,这些与根尖周围的湿度梯度增大有关。当根长为1.0、1.5、2.0、2.5、3.0 cm时,短根比长根表现出更大的向水性反应,这可能与其较慢的延伸速率为根系对湿度梯度的反应提供了更充足的时间有关。为了验证这个假说,用相同长度的根系、通过控制不同温度进行试验,结果表明根系的向水性弯曲随温度升高而降低。可见,玉米初生根的向水性反应受环境和根系发育阶段两方面影响。当根系相距诱导物较近、根系周围的湿度梯度较大时,根系向水性反应更强。而且,具有较小延伸速率根系的向水性反应更大。考虑到干旱条件下根系伸长慢、且土壤中湿度梯度大,因而可以认为干旱条件下根系的向水性生长在玉米吸收水分中有重要作用。同时,对根系向水性诱导方法的优化有助于其生理机制的进一步研究。  相似文献   

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