Land plants are sessile and have developed sophisticated mechanisms that allow for both immediate and acclimatory responses to changing environments. Partial exposure of low light-adapted Arabidopsis plants to excess light results in a systemic acclimation to excess excitation energy and consequent photooxidative stress in unexposed leaves. Thus, plants possess a mechanism to communicate excess excitation energy systemically, allowing them to mount a defense against further episodes of such stress. Systemic redox changes in the proximity of photosystem II, hydrogen peroxide, and the induction of antioxidant defenses are key determinants of this mechanism of systemic acquired acclimation.
The mutant regulator of APX2 1-1 (rax1-1) was identified in Arabidopsis thaliana that constitutively expressed normally photooxidative stress-inducible ASCORBATE PEROXIDASE2 (APX2) and had $50% lowered foliar glutathione levels. Mapping revealed that rax1-1 is an allele of g-GLUTAMYLCYSTEINE SYNTHETASE 1 (GSH1), which encodes chloroplastic g-glutamylcysteine synthetase, the controlling step of glutathione biosynthesis. By comparison of rax1-1 with the GSH1 mutant cadmium hypersensitive 2, the expression of 32 stress-responsive genes was shown to be responsive to changed glutathione metabolism. Under photo-oxidative stress conditions, the expression of a wider set of defense-related genes was altered in the mutants. In wild-type plants, glutathione metabolism may play a key role in determining the degree of expression of defense genes controlled by several signaling pathways both before and during stress. This control may reflect the physiological state of the plant at the time of the onset of an environmental challenge and suggests that changes in glutathione metabolism may be one means of integrating the function of several signaling pathways.
Glutathione (GSH), a major antioxidant in most aerobic organisms, is perceived to be particularly important in plant chloroplasts because it helps to protect the photosynthetic apparatus from oxidative damage. In transgenic tobacco plants overexpressing a chloroplast-targeted ␥ -glutamylcysteine synthetase ( ␥ -ECS), foliar levels of GSH were raised threefold. Paradoxically, increased GSH biosynthetic capacity in the chloroplast resulted in greatly enhanced oxidative stress, which was manifested as light intensity-dependent chlorosis or necrosis. This phenotype was associated with foliar pools of both GSH and ␥ -glutamylcysteine (the immediate precursor to GSH) being in a more oxidized state. Further manipulations of both the content and redox state of the foliar thiol pools were achieved using hybrid transgenic plants with enhanced glutathione synthetase or glutathione reductase activity in addition to elevated levels of ␥ -ECS. Given the results of these experiments, we suggest that ␥ -ECS-transformed plants suffered continuous oxidative damage caused by a failure of the redox-sensing process in the chloroplast. INTRODUCTIONPlants, like all aerobic organisms, possess an array of hydrophilic and lipophilic antioxidants, such as glutathione, ascorbic acid (vitamin C), phenolic isoflavanoid compounds, ␣ -tocopherol (vitamin E), and the carotenoids, including the xanthophylls (Fryer, 1993; Mullineaux and Creissen, 1996). The reduced forms of these compounds, together with antioxidant enzymes, scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS) and other products of oxidative reactions. These enzymes include subcellular compartment-specific isoforms of superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase, ascorbate peroxidase (APX), glutathione S -transferase/glutathione peroxidase (GST/GPX), dehydroascorbate reductase, monodehydroascorbate free radical reductase, and glutathione reductase (GR). Several reduction-oxidation (redox) cycles that scavenge ROS in different subcellular compartments and that involve these enzymes and antioxidants have been proposed (e.g., the ascorbate-GSH cycle). The reducing equivalents for these reactions are derived ultimately from photosynthetic electron transport (Foyer and Halliwell, 1976; Mullineaux and Creissen, 1997). Thus, the degree of reduction of major antioxidant pools is generally considered to reflect the redox status of the tissue in question and is consequently an indicator of oxidative stress.Glutathione, either as GSH or as GSSG (glutathione disulfide; oxidized glutathione), is regarded as a key component of antioxidant defenses in most aerobic organisms, including plants (Foyer et al., 1997). However, the high (i.e., millimolar) concentration of GSH in the chloroplast (Foyer and Halliwell, 1976; Law et al., 1983; Bielawski and Joy, 1986) is in apparent conflict with its proposed roles: the regeneration of ascorbate (Foyer and Halliwell, 1976), reduction of lipid hydroperoxides (Mullineaux et al., 1998), and regulation of chloroplast gene expression by thiol-mediated modulation of RNA polymeras...
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