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Stomata sind kleine Poren in der Blattoberfläche, die Pflanzen eine Anpassung ihres Wasserhaushalts an sich ändernde Umweltbedingungen ermöglichen. Die Öffnungsweite der Stomata wird durch den Turgordruck der Schließzellen bestimmt, der wiederum durch Ionenflüsse über die Membranen der Zelle reguliert wird. Ein Netzwerk von Signaltransduktionswegen sorgt dafür, dass Pflanzen die Stomabewegungen an die Umgebungsbedingungen anpassen können. Viele molekulare Komponenten dieser Signaltransduktionketten in Schließzellen von Angiospermen sind inzwischen bekannt und Calcium spielt darin als Signalmolekül eine wichtige Rolle. Weitgehend unbekannt sind dagegen die Mechanismen, die zur Erzeugung von transienten Erhöhungen der Calciumkonzentration führen. Auch die molekularen Grundlagen der Regulierung der Stomaweite in Nicht-Angiospermen-Arten sind bisher nur wenig verstanden. Um zur Aufklärung dieser Fragestellungen
beizutragen, wurden in dieser Arbeit Mechanismen zur Erhöhungen der cytosolischen Calciumkonzentration sowie elektrophysiologische Eigenschaften von Schließzellen untersucht. Der Fokus lag hierbei insbesondere auf der Visualisierung cytosolischer Calciumsignale in Schließzellen. Im ersten Teil der Arbeit wurde durch die Applikation hyperpolarisierender Spannungspulse mittels TEVC (Two Electrode Voltage Clamp) gezielt eine Erhöhung der cytosolischen Calciumkonzentration in einzelnen Schließzellen von Nicotiana tabacum ausgelöst. Um die Dynamik der cytosolischen Calciumkonzentration dabei zeitlich und räumlich hoch aufgelöst zu visualisieren, wurde simultan zu den elektrophysiologischen Messungen ein
Spinning-Disc-System für konfokale Aufnahmen eingesetzt. Während der Applikation
hyperpolarisierender Spannungspulse wurde eine transiente Vergrößerung des cytosolischen Volumens beobachtet. Diese lässt sich durch einen osmotisch getriebenen Wasserfluss erklären, der durch die Veränderung der Ionenkonzentration im Cytosol verursacht wird. Diese wiederum wird durch die spannungsabhängige Aktivierung einwärtsgleichrichtender Kaliumkanäle in der Plasmamembran der Schließzellen und durch den Kompensationsstrom der eingestochenen Mikroelektrode hervorgerufen. Mit Hilfe des calciumsensitiven Farbstoffs Fura-2 konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Erhöhung der freien cytosolischen Calciumkonzentration während der Applikation hyperpolarisierender Spannungspulse durch zwei Mechanismen verursacht wird. Der erste Mechanismus ist die Aktivierung hyperpolarisationsaktivierter, calciumpermeabler Kanäle (HACCs) in der Plasmamembran, die schon 1998 von Grabov & Blatt beschrieben wurde. Zusätzlich zu diesem Mechanismus der Calciumfreisetzung, konnte ein zweiter bislang unbekannter Mechanismus aufgedeckt werden, bei dem Calcium aus intrazellulären Speichern in das Cytosol freigesetzt wird. Dieser Mechanismus hängt mit der oben beschriebenen Vergrößerung des cytosolischen Volumens zusammen und ist wahrscheinlich durch die Änderungen der mechanischen Spannung der Membran bzw. der Osmolarität innerhalb der Zelle bedingt. Diese könnten zu einer Aktivierung mechanosensitiver, calciumpermeabler Kanäle führen.
Der zweite Teil der Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit den molekularen Grundlagen der Regulierung von Stomata in Nicht-Angiospermen. In Schließzellen von Polypodium vulgare konnten durch die Anwendung der TEVC-Technik ähnliche spannungsabhängige Ströme über die Plasmamembran gemessen werden wie in Angiospermen. Ebenso wurden durch die Applikation hyperpolarisierender Spannungspulse an Schließzellen von Polypodium und Asplenium Erhöhungen der cytosolischen Calciumkonzentration ausgelöst, die auf die Existenz spannungsabhängiger, calciumpermeabler Kanäle in der Plasmamembran
hinweisen. Die Diffusion von Fluoreszenzfarbstoffen in die Nachbarschließzellen nach der iontophoretischen Beladung in Polypodium, Asplenium, Ceratopteris und Selaginella zeigte, dass in diesen Arten eine symplastische Verbindung zwischen benachbarten Schließzellen besteht, die an Schließzellen von Angiospermen bisher nicht beobachtet werden konnte. Anhand elektronenmikroskopischer Aufnahmen von Polypodium glycyrrhiza Schließzellen konnte gezeigt werden, dass diese Verbindung wahrscheinlich durch Plasmodesmata zwischen benachbarten Schließzellen gebildet wird. Durch die Analyse der Calciumdynamik in benachbarten Schließzellen nach hyperpolarisierenden Spannungspulsen stellte sich heraus, dass die Calciumhomöostase trotz symplastischer Verbindung in beiden Schließzellen unabhängig voneinander reguliert zu werden scheint. Im Rahmen der Untersuchungen an Farnschließzellen wurde desweiteren eine Methode zur Applikation von ABA etabliert, die es erlaubt mithilfe von Mikroelektroden das Phytohormon iontophoretisch in den Apoplasten zu laden. Im Gegensatz zu den Schließzellen von Nicotiana tabacum, die auf eine so durchgeführte ABA-Applikation mit dem Stomaschluss reagierten, wurde in Polypodium vulgare auf diese Weise kein Stomaschluss ausgelöst. Da die ABA-Antwort der Farnstomata aber auch von anderen Faktoren wie Wachstumsbedingungen abhängig ist (Hõrak et al., 2017), kann eine ABA-Responsivität in dieser Farnart trotzdem nicht vollkommen ausgeschlossen werden.
Die Freisetzung von Calcium aus intrazellulären Speichern, wie sie in dieser Arbeit gezeigt wurde, könnte eine wichtige Rolle bei der Regulierung der Stomaweite spielen. Zur Aufklärung dieser Fragestellung wäre die Identifizierung der Kanäle, die an der osmotisch/mechanisch induzierten Calciumfreisetzung aus internen Speichern beteiligt sind, von großem Interesse. Weiterführende Studien an Schließzellen von Farnen könnten die physiologische Bedeutung der aus Angiospermen bekannten Ionenkanäle für die Stomabewegungen in evolutionär älteren Landpflanzen aufklären und so maßgeblich zum Verständnis der Evolution der Regulierunsgmechanismen von Stomata beitragen. Außerdem stellt sich die Frage, welche Rolle die hier gezeigte symplastische Verbindung der Nachbarschließzellen durch Plasmodesmata für die Funktion der Stomata spielt.
Farmland tree cultivation is considered an important option for enhancing wood production. In South India, the native leaf-deciduous tree species Melia dubia is popular for short-rotation plantations. Across a rainfall gradient from 420 to 2170 mm year\(^{–1}\), we studied 186 farmland woodlots between one and nine years in age. The objectives were to identify the main factors controlling aboveground biomass (AGB) and growth rates. A power-law growth model predicts an average stand-level AGB of 93.8 Mg ha\(^{–1}\) for nine-year-old woodlots. The resulting average annual AGB increment over the length of the rotation cycle is 10.4 Mg ha\(^{–1}\) year\(^{–1}\), which falls within the range reported for other tropical tree plantations. When expressing the parameters of the growth model as functions of management, climate and soil variables, it explains 65% of the variance in AGB. The results indicate that water availability is the main driver of the growth of M. dubia. Compared to the effects of water availability, the effects of soil nutrients are 26% to 60% smaller. We conclude that because of its high biomass accumulation rates in farm forestry, M. dubia is a promising candidate for short-rotation plantations in South India and beyond.
Soil salinity is an increasingly global problem which hampers plant growth and crop yield. Plant productivity depends on optimal water-use efficiency and photosynthetic capacity balanced by stomatal conductance. Whether and how stomatal behavior contributes to salt sensitivity or tolerance is currently unknown. This work identifies guard cell-specific signaling networks exerted by a salt-sensitive and salt-tolerant plant under ionic and osmotic stress conditions accompanied by increasing NaCl loads.
We challenged soil-grown Arabidopsis thaliana and Thellungiella salsuginea plants with short- and long-term salinity stress and monitored genome-wide gene expression and signals of guard cells that determine their function.
Arabidopsis plants suffered from both salt regimes and showed reduced stomatal conductance while Thellungiella displayed no obvious stress symptoms. The salt-dependent gene expression changes of guard cells supported the ability of the halophyte to maintain high potassium to sodium ratios and to attenuate the abscisic acid (ABA) signaling pathway which the glycophyte kept activated despite fading ABA concentrations.
Our study shows that salinity stress and even the different tolerances are manifested on a single cell level. Halophytic guard cells are less sensitive than glycophytic guard cells, providing opportunities to manipulate stomatal behavior and improve plant productivity.
Ants belong to the most successful insects living on our planet earth. One criterion of their tremendous success is the division of labor among workers that can be related to age (age¬– or temporal polyethism) and/ or body size (size–related polymorphism). Young ants care for the queen and brood in the nest interior and switch to foraging tasks in the outside environment with ongoing age. This highly flexible interior–exterior transition probably allows the ant workers to properly match the colony needs and is one of the most impressive behaviors a single worker undergoes during its life. As environmental stimuli are changing with this transition, workers are required to perform a new behavioral repertoire. This requires significant adaptions in sensory and higher¬–order integration centers in the brain, like the mushroom bodies. Furthermore, foragers need proper time measuring mechanisms to cope with daily environmental changes and to adapt their own mode of life. Therefore, they possess a functional endogenous clock that generates rhythms with a period length of approximately 24 hours. The species–rich genus of Camponotus ants constitute a rewarding model to study how behavioral duties of division of labor were performed and modulated within the colony and how synaptic plasticity in the brain is processed, as they can divide their labor to both, age and body size, simultaneously.
In my PhD thesis, I started to investigate the behavioral repertoire (like foraging and locomotor activity) of two sympatric Camponotus species, C. mus and C. rufipes workers under natural and under controlled conditions. Furthermore, I focused on the division of labor in C. rufipes workers and started to examine structural and ultrastructural changes of neuronal architectures in the brain that are accompanied by the interior–exterior transition of C. rufipes ants.
In the first part of my thesis, I started to analyze the temporal organization of task allocation throughout the life of single C. rufipes workers. Constant video–tracking of individually labeled workers for up to 11 weeks, revealed an age–related division of labor of interior and exterior workers. After emergence, young individuals are tended to by older ones within the first 48 hours of their lives before they themselves start nurturing larvae and pupae. Around 52% switch to foraging duties at an age of 14–20 days. The workers that switched to foraging
tasks are mainly media–sized workers and seem to be more specialized than nurses. Variations in proportion and the age of switching workers between and within different subcolonies indicate how highly flexible and plastic the age–related division of labor occurs in this ant species. Most of the observed workers were engaged in foraging tasks exclusively during nighttime. As the experiments were conducted in the laboratory, they are completely lacking environmental stimuli of the ants´ natural habitat.
I therefore asked in a second study, how workers of the two closely related Camponotus species, C. rufipes and C. mus, adapt their daily activity patterns (foraging and locomotor activity) under natural (in Uruguay, South America) and controlled (in the laboratory) conditions to changing thermal conditions. Monitoring the foraging activity of both Camponotus species in a field experiment revealed, that C. mus workers are exclusively diurnal, whereas C. rufipes foragers are predominantly nocturnal. However, some nests showed an elevated daytime activity, which could be an adaption to seasonally cold night temperatures. To further investigate the impact of temperature and light on the differing foraging activity patterns in the field, workers of both Camponotus species were artificially exposed to different thermal regimes in the laboratory, simulating local winter and summer conditions. Here again, C. mus workers display solely diurnal locomotor activity, whereas workers of C. rufipes shifted their locomotor activity from diurnal under thermal winter conditions to nocturnal under thermal summer conditions. Hence, the combination of both, field work and laboratory studies, shows that daily activity is mostly shaped by thermal conditions and that temperature cycles are not just limiting foraging activity but can be used as zeitgeber to schedule the outside activities of the nests.
Once an individual worker switches from indoor duties to exterior foraging tasks, it is confronted with an entirely new set of sensory information. To cope with changes of the environmental conditions and to facilitate the behavioral switch, workers need a highly flexible and plastic neuronal system. Hence, my thesis further focuses on the underlying neuronal adaptations of the visual system, including the optic lobes as the primary visual neuropil and the mushroom bodies as secondary visual brain neuropil, that are accompanied with the behavioral switch from nursing to foraging. The optic lobes as well as the mushroom bodies of light–deprived workers show an `experience–independent´ volume increase during the first two weeks of adulthood. An additional light exposure for 4 days induces an `experience–dependent´ decrease of synaptic complexes in the mushroom body collar,
followed by an increase after extended light exposure for 14 days. I therefore conclude, that the plasticity of the central visual system represents important components for the optimal timing of the interior–exterior transitions and flexibility of the age–related division of labor. These remarkable structural changes of synaptic complexes suggest an active involvement of the mushroom body neuropil in the lifetime plasticity that promotes the interior–exterior transition of Camponotus rufipes ants. Beside these investigations of neuronal plasticity of synaptic complexes in the mushroom bodies on a structural level, I further started to examine mushroom body synaptic structures at the ultrastructural level. Until recently, the detection of synaptic components in projection neuron axonal boutons were below resolution using classical Transmission Electron Microscopy. Therefore, I started to implement Electron Tomography to increase the synaptic resolution to understand architectural changes in neuronal plasticity process. By acquiring double tilt series and consecutive computation of the acquired tilt information, I am now able to resolve individual clear–core and dense–core vesicles within the projection neuron cytoplasm of C. rufipes ants. I additionally was able to reveal single postsynaptic Kenyon cell dendritic spines (~62) that surround one individual projection neuron bouton. With this, I could reveal first insights into the complex neuronal architecture of single projection neuron boutons in the olfactory mushroom body lip region. The high resolution images of synaptic architectures at the ultrastructural level, received with Electron Tomography would promote the understanding of architectural changes in neuronal plasticity.
In my PhD thesis, I demonstrate that the temporal organization within Camponotus colonies involves the perfect timing of different tasks. Temperature seems to be the most scheduling abiotic factors of foraging and locomotor activity. The ants do not only need to adapt their behavioral repertoire in accordance to the interior–exterior switch, also the parts in the peripheral and central that process visual information need to adapt to the new sensory environment.
Key message
Mobile laser scanning and geometrical analysis revealed relationships between tree geometry and seed dispersal mechanism, latitude of origin, as well as growth.
Abstract
The structure and dynamics of a forest are defined by the architecture and growth patterns of its individual trees. In turn, tree architecture and growth result from the interplay between the genetic building plans and environmental factors. We set out to investigate whether (1) latitudinal adaptations of the crown shape occur due to characteristic solar elevation angles at a species’ origin, (2) architectural differences in trees are related to seed dispersal strategies, and (3) tree architecture relates to tree growth performance. We used mobile laser scanning (MLS) to scan 473 trees and generated three-dimensional data of each tree. Tree architectural complexity was then characterized by fractal analysis using the box-dimension approach along with a topological measure of the top heaviness of a tree. The tree species studied originated from various latitudinal ranges, but were grown in the same environmental settings in the arboretum. We found that trees originating from higher latitudes had significantly less top-heavy geometries than those from lower latitudes. Therefore, to a certain degree, the crown shape of tree species seems to be determined by their original habitat. We also found that tree species with wind-dispersed seeds had a higher structural complexity than those with animal-dispersed seeds (p < 0.001). Furthermore, tree architectural complexity was positively related to the growth performance of the trees (p < 0.001). We conclude that the use of 3D data from MLS in combination with geometrical analysis, including fractal analysis, is a promising tool to investigate tree architecture.
The role of lipid transfer proteins (LTPs) during the fertilization process in Arabidopsis thaliana
(2021)
Double fertilization is a defining characteristic of flowering plants (angiosperms). As the sperm cells of higher plants are non-motile, they need to be transported to the female gametophyte via the growing pollen tube. The pollen-tube journey through the female tissues represents a highly complex process. To provide for successful reproduction it demands intricate communication between the cells of the two haploid gametophytes - the polar growing pollen tube (carrying the two non-motile sperm cells) and the ovule (hosting the egg cell/synergid cells). The polar growth of the pollen tube towards the female gamete is guided by different signaling molecules, including sugars, amino acids and peptides. Some of these belong to the family of lipid transfer proteins (LTPs), which are secreted cysteine-rich peptides. Depending on the plant species several lines of evidence have also suggested potential roles for LTPs during pollen germination or pollen-tube guidance. Although Arabidopsis thaliana has 49 annotated genes for LTPs, several of which are involved in plant immunity and cell-to-cell communication, the role of most members of this family during fertilization is unknown.
The aim of this project was therefore to systematically identify LTPs which play a role in the fertilization process in A. thaliana, particularly during pollen tube guidance. To identify candidate proteins, the expression profile of LTPs in reproductive tissue was investigated. This was accomplished by in-silico bioinformatic analysis using different expression databases. Following confirmion of these results by qRT-PCR analysis, seven Type-I nsLTPs (LTP1, LTP2, LTP3, LTP4, LTP5, LTP6 and LTP12) were found to be exclusively expressed in pistils. Except for LTP12, all other pistil expressed LTPs were transcriptionally induced upon pollination. Using reporter-based transcriptional and translational fusions the temporal and spatial expression patterns together with protein localizations for LTP2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 12 were determined in planta. Stable transgenic plants carrying PromLTP::GUS constructs of the six different LTP candidates showed that most of LTPs were expressed in the stigma/stylar region and were induced upon pollination. With respect to protein localization on the cellular level, they split into two categories: LTP2, LTP5 and LTP6 were localized in the cell wall, while LTP3, LTP4 and LTP12 were specifically targeted to the plasma membrane.
For the functional characterization of the candidate LTPs, several T-DNA insertion mutant plant lines were investigated for phenotypes affecting the fertilization process. Pollen development and quality as well as their in-vitro germination rate did not differ between the different single ltp mutant lines and wildtype plants. Moreover, in-vivo cross pollination experiments revealed that tube growth and fertilization rate of the mutant plants were similar to wildtype plants. Altogether, no discernible phenotype was evident in other floral and vegetative parts between different single ltp mutant lines and wildtype plants. As there was no distinguishable phenotype observed for single ltp-ko plants, double knock out plants of the two highly homologous genes LTP2 (expressed in the female stigma, style and transmitting tract) and LTP5 (expressed in the stigma, style, pollen pollen-tube and transmitting tract) were generated using the EPCCRISPR-Cas9 genome editing technique. Two ltp2ltp5 mutant transgenic-lines (#P31-P2 and #P31-P3) with frameshift mutations in both the genes could be established. Further experiments showed, that the CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knock-out of LTP2/LTP5 resulted in significantly reduced fertilization success. Cell biological analyses revealed that the ltp2ltp5 double mutant was impaired in pollen tube guidance towards the ovules and that this phenotype correlated with aberrant callose depositions in the micropylar region during ovule development. Detailed analysis of in-vivo pollen-tube growth and reciprocal cross pollination assay suggested that, the severely compromised fertility was not caused by any defect in development of the pollen grains, but was due to the abnormal callose deposition in the embryo sac primarily concentrated at the synergid cell near the micropylar end. Aberrant callose deposition in ltp2ltp5 ovules pose a complete blockage for the growing pollen tube to change its polarity to enter the funiculus indicating funicular and micropylar defects in pollen tube guidance causing fertilization failure.
Our finding suggests that female gametophyte expressed LTP2 and LTP5 play a crucial role in mediating pollen tube guidance process and ultimately having an effect on the fertilization success. In line with the existence of a N-terminal signal peptide, secreted LTPs might represent a well-suited mobile signal carrier in the plant’s extracellular matrix. Previous reports suggested that, LTPs could act as chemoattractant peptide, imparting competence to the growing pollen tube, but the molecular mechanism is still obscure. The results obtained in this thesis further provide strong evidence, that LTP2/5 together regulate callose homeostasis and testable models are discussed. Future work is now required to elucidate the detailed molecular link between these LTPs and their potential interacting partners or receptors expressed in pollen and synergid cells, which should provide deeper insight into their functional role as regulatory molecules in the pollen tube guidance mechanism.
Epidermal fragments enriched in guard cells (GCs) were isolated from the halophyte quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa Wild.) species, and the response at the proteome level was studied after salinity treatment of 300 mM NaCl for 3 weeks. In total, 2147 proteins were identified, of which 36% were differentially expressed in response to salinity stress in GCs. Up and downregulated proteins included signaling molecules, enzyme modulators, transcription factors and oxidoreductases. The most abundant proteins induced by salt treatment were desiccation-responsive protein 29B (50-fold), osmotin-like protein OSML13 (13-fold), polycystin-1, lipoxygenase, alpha-toxin, and triacylglycerol lipase (PLAT) domain-containing protein 3-like (eight-fold), and dehydrin early responsive to dehydration (ERD14) (eight-fold). Ten proteins related to the gene ontology term “response to ABA” were upregulated in quinoa GC; this included aspartic protease, phospholipase D and plastid-lipid-associated protein. Additionally, seven proteins in the sucrose–starch pathway were upregulated in the GC in response to salinity stress, and accumulation of tryptophan synthase and L-methionine synthase (enzymes involved in the amino acid biosynthesis) was observed. Exogenous application of sucrose and tryptophan, L-methionine resulted in reduction in stomatal aperture and conductance, which could be advantageous for plants under salt stress. Eight aspartic proteinase proteins were highly upregulated in GCs of quinoa, and exogenous application of pepstatin A (an inhibitor of aspartic proteinase) was accompanied by higher oxidative stress and extremely low stomatal aperture and conductance, suggesting a possible role of aspartic proteinase in mitigating oxidative stress induced by saline conditions.
Plant stress signalling involves bursts of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which can be mimicked by the application of acute pulses of ozone. Such ozone-pulses inhibit photosynthesis and trigger stomatal closure in a few minutes, but the signalling that underlies these responses remains largely unknown.
We measured changes in Arabidopsis thaliana gas exchange after treatment with acute pulses of ozone and set up a system for simultaneous measurement of membrane potential and cytosolic calcium with the fluorescent reporter R-GECO1.
We show that within 1 min, prior to stomatal closure, O\(_{3}\) triggered a drop in whole-plant CO\(_{2}\) uptake. Within this early phase, O\(_{3}\) pulses (200–1000 ppb) elicited simultaneous membrane depolarization and cytosolic calcium increase, whereas these pulses had no long-term effect on either stomatal conductance or photosynthesis. In contrast, pulses of 5000 ppb O\(_{3}\) induced cell death, systemic Ca\(^{2+}\) signals and an irreversible drop in stomatal conductance and photosynthetic capacity.
We conclude that mesophyll cells respond to ozone in a few seconds by distinct pattern of plasma membrane depolarizations accompanied by an increase in the cytosolic calcium ion (Ca\(^{2+}\)) level. These responses became systemic only at very high ozone concentrations. Thus, plants have rapid mechanism to sense and discriminate the strength of ozone signals.
Climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of warming and drought periods around the globe, currently representing a threat to many plant species. Understanding the resistance and resilience of plants to climate change is, therefore, urgently needed. As date palm (Phoenix dactylifera) evolved adaptation mechanisms to a xeric environment and can tolerate large diurnal and seasonal temperature fluctuations, we studied the protein expression changes in leaves, volatile organic compound emissions, and photosynthesis in response to variable growth temperatures and soil water deprivation. Plants were grown under controlled environmental conditions of simulated Saudi Arabian summer and winter climates challenged with drought stress. We show that date palm is able to counteract the harsh conditions of the Arabian Peninsula by adjusting the abundances of proteins related to the photosynthetic machinery, abiotic stress and secondary metabolism. Under summer climate and water deprivation, these adjustments included efficient protein expression response mediated by heat shock proteins and the antioxidant system to counteract reactive oxygen species formation. Proteins related to secondary metabolism were downregulated, except for the P. dactylifera isoprene synthase (PdIspS), which was strongly upregulated in response to summer climate and drought. This study reports, for the first time, the identification and functional characterization of the gene encoding for PdIspS, allowing future analysis of isoprene functions in date palm under extreme environments. Overall, the current study shows that reprogramming of the leaf protein profiles confers the date palm heat- and drought tolerance. We conclude that the protein plasticity of date palm is an important mechanism of molecular adaptation to environmental fluctuations.
Simple Summary
Abiotic and biotic stress conditions result in profound changes in plant lipid metabolism. Vegetable oil consists of triacylglycerols, which are important energy and carbon storage compounds in seeds of various plant species. These compounds are also present in vegetative tissue, and levels have been reported to increase with different abiotic stresses in leaves. This work shows that triacylglycerols accumulate in roots and in distal, non-treated leaves upon treatment with a fungal pathogen or lipopolysaccharide (a common bacterial-derived elicitor in animals and plants). Treatment of leaves with a bacterial pathogen or a bacterial effector molecule results in triacylglycerol accumulation in leaves, but not systemically in roots. These results suggest that elicitor molecules are sufficient to induce an increase in triacylglycerol levels, and that unidirectional long-distance signaling from roots to leaves is involved in pathogen and elicitor-induced triacylglycerol accumulation.
Abstract
Interaction of plants with the environment affects lipid metabolism. Changes in the pattern of phospholipids have been reported in response to abiotic stress, particularly accumulation of triacylglycerols, but less is known about the alteration of lipid metabolism in response to biotic stress and leaves have been more intensively studied than roots. This work investigates the levels of lipids in roots as well as leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana in response to pathogens and elicitor molecules by UPLC-TOF-MS. Triacylglycerol levels increased in roots and systemically in leaves upon treatment of roots with the fungus Verticillium longisporum. Upon spray infection of leaves with the bacterial pathogen Pseudomonas syringae, triacylglycerols accumulated locally in leaves but not in roots. Treatment of roots with a bacterial lipopolysaccharide elicitor induced a strong triacylglycerol accumulation in roots and leaves. Induction of the expression of the bacterial effector AVRRPM1 resulted in a dramatic increase of triacylglycerol levels in leaves, indicating that elicitor molecules are sufficient to induce accumulation of triacylglycerols. These results give insight into local and systemic changes to lipid metabolism in roots and leaves in response to biotic stresses.