SummaryThe molecular mechanism underlying the regulation of the expression of Apxl, the gene encoding cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase, as well as other antioxidant enzymes, was studied during the progression of drought stress and following recovery from drought. Increase in steady-state transcript levels of the cytosolic isozymes of ascorbate peroxidase and Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase paralleled the increase in stomatal resistance during drought stress, but was even more dramatically enhanced following recovery from drought. Cytosolic Cu/Znsuperoxide dismutase and ascorbate peroxidase and chloroplastic CulZn-superoxide dismutase protein and activity increased during drought stress and following recovery. In contrast, catalase activity increased during drought stress but returned to normal levels following recovery. During recovery from drought stress, cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase expression was regulated post-transcriptionally at the level of protein synthesis. The transcription rate of the Apxl gene, as determined by nuclear run-on assay, increased during drought stress and at 10 h following rewatering.
Salt damage to plants has been attributed to a combination of several factors including mainly osmotic stress and the accumulation of toxic ions. Recent findings in our laboratory showed that phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPX), an enzyme active in the cellular antioxidant system, was induced by salt in citrus cells and mainly in roots of plants. Following this observation we studied the two most important enzymes active in elimination of reactive oxygen species, namely, superoxide dismutase (SOD) and ascorbate peroxidase (APX), to determine whether a general oxidative stress is induced by salt. While Cu/Zn-SOD activity and cytosolic APX protein level were similarly induced by salt and methyl viologen, the response of PHGPX and other APX isozymes was either specific to salt or methyl viologen, respectively. Unlike PHGPX, cytosolic APX and Cu/Zn-SOD were not induced by exogenously added abscisic acid. Salt induced a significant increase in SOD activity which was not matched by the subsequent enzyme APX. We suggest that the excess of H2O2 interacts with lipids to form hydroperoxides which in turn induce and are removed by PHGPX. Ascorbate peroxidase seems to be a key enzyme in determining salt tolerance in citrus as its constitutive activity in salt-sensitive callus is far below the activity observed in salt-tolerant callus, while the activities of other enzymes involved in the defence against oxidative stress, namely SOD, glutathione reductase and PHGPX, are essentially similar.
A cDNA clone encoding the cytosclic ascorbate peroxidase of pea (Pisutn sarivwrn L.) was isolated and its nucleotide sequence determined. While ascorbate peroxidase shares limited overall homology with other peroxidases, significant homology with all known peroxidases was found in the vicinity of the putative active site.
5'-Adenylyl sulfate (APS) reductase (EC 1.8.4.9) catalyzes a key reaction in the plant sulfate assimilation pathway leading to the synthesis of cysteine and the antioxidant glutathione. In Arabidopsis thaliana APS reductase is encoded by a family of three genes. In vitro biochemical studies revealed that the enzyme product derived from one of them (APR1) is activated by oxidation, probably through the formation of a disulfide bond. The APR1 enzyme is 45-fold more active when expressed in a trxB strain of Escherichia coli than in a trxB(+) wild type. The enzyme is inactivated in vitro by treatment with disulfide reductants and is reactivated with thiol oxidants. Redox titrations show that the regulation site has a midpoint potential of -330 mV at pH 8.5 and involves a two-electron redox reaction. Exposure of a variety of plants to ozone induces a rapid increase in APS reductase activity that correlates with the oxidation of the glutathione pool and is followed by an increase in free cysteine and total glutathione. During the response to ozone, the level of immunodetectable APS reductase enzyme does not increase. Treatment of A. thaliana seedlings with oxidized glutathione or paraquat induces APS reductase activity even when transcription or translation is blocked with inhibitors. The results suggest that a posttranslational mechanism controls APS reductase. A model is proposed whereby redox regulation of APS reductase provides a rapidly responding, self-regulating mechanism to control the glutathione synthesis necessary to combat oxidative stress.
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