Lipid peroxidation was investigated in relation with the hypersensitive reaction in cryptogein-elicited tobacco leaves. A massive production of free polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) hydroperoxides dependent on a 9-lipoxygenase (LOX) activity was characterized during the development of leaf necrosis. The process occurred after a lag phase of 12 h, was accompanied by the concomitant increase of 9-LOX activity, and preceded by a transient accumulation of LOX transcripts. Free radical-mediated lipid peroxidation represented 10% of the process. Inhibition and activation of the LOX pathway was shown to inhibit or to activate cell death, and evidence was provided that fatty acid hydroperoxides are able to mimic leaf necrotic symptoms. Within 24 h, about 50% of leaf PUFAs were consumed, chloroplast lipids being the major source of PUFAs. The results minimize the direct participation of active oxygen species from the oxidative burst in membrane lipid peroxidation. They suggest, furthermore, the involvement of lipase activity to provide the free PUFA substrates for LOX. The LOX-dependent peroxidative pathway, responsible for tissue necrosis, appears as being one of the features of hypersensitive programmed cell death.In plant-pathogen interactions, a typical feature of plant resistance is hypersensitive reaction (HR), 1 characterized by the induction of rapid cell death at the site of an attempted attack by either an avirulent strain of a pathogen or a nonpathogen. The collapse of challenged cells, occurring during incompatible interactions, was shown in most cases to be dependent on a gene for gene plant pathogen interaction (1, 2). HR is accompanied by a battery of defense mechanisms including de novo synthesis of antimicrobial enzymes and metabolites, strengthening of the cell wall, and the onset of systemic acquired resistance dependent on salicylic acid accumulation (3, 4). HR often leads to dry lesions that are supposed to limit pathogen growth. Other proposed roles is the release in apoplasm of defense-related proteins and toxic metabolites, as well as of signals that activate the defenses of both neighboring and distant cells. Hypersensitive cell death appears to not be the result of the direct action of released pathogenic factors but is rather under the genetic control of the host. Indeed, several observations underline that HR is an example of PCD in plants (1, 2). Furthermore, hypersensitive cell death has morphological and molecular features similar to the mammalian PCD, called apoptosis. These include cytoplasm and chromatin condensation followed by their fragmentation, activation of calciumdependent endonucleases (5-8) and of cysteine proteases (9 -11), and involvement of similar regulation factors (2). Some differences between HR and mammalian apoptosis were observed, however, such as changes in DNA laddering (5,8) and the lack in HR of the repressor role of Bcl-x L (12). One ultimate characteristic of HR is the loss of membrane integrity, and thus HR is often characterized by an associated electrolyte le...
A large body of evidence from the past decade supports the existence, in membrane from animal and yeast cells, of functional microdomains that play important roles in protein sorting, signal transduction, or infection by pathogens. Recent reports demonstrated the presence, in plants, of detergent-resistant fractions isolated from plasma membrane. Analysis of the lipidic composition of this fraction revealed its enrichment in sphingolipids and sterols and depletion in phospho-and glycerolipids as previously observed for animal microdomains. One-dimensional gel electrophoresis experiments indicated that these detergent-resistant fractions are able to recruit a specific set of plasma membrane proteins and exclude others. In the present study, we used mass spectrometry to give an extensive description of a tobacco plasma membrane fraction resistant to solubilization with Triton X-100. This led to the identification of 145 proteins whose functional and physicochemical characteristics were analyzed in silico. Parameters such as isoelectric point, molecular weight, number and length of transmembrane segments, or global hydrophobicity were analyzed and compared with the data available concerning plant plasma membrane proteins. Post-translational modifications, such as myristoylation, palmitoylation, or presence of a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor, were examined in relation to the presence of the corresponding proteins in these microdomains. From a functional point of view, this analysis indicated that if a primary function of the plasma membrane, such as transport, seems under-represented in the detergent-resistant fraction, others undergo a significant increase of their relative importance. Among these are signaling and response to biotic and abiotic stress, cellular trafficking, and cell wall metabolism. This suggests that these domains are likely to constitute, as in animal cells,
). ² These authors contributed equally to this work. SummaryA cDNA encoding a protein, NtrbohD, located on the plasma membrane and homologue to thē avocytochrome of the neutrophil NADPH oxidase, was cloned in tobacco. The corresponding mRNA was accumulated when tobacco leaves and cells were treated with the fungal elicitor cryptogein. After elicitation with cryptogein, tobacco cells transformed with antisense constructs of NtrbohD showed the same extracellular alkalinization as the control, but no longer produced active oxygen species (AOS). This work represents the ®rst demonstration of the function of a homologue of gp91 ±phox in AOS production in elicited tobacco cells.
Cadmium is suspected to exert its toxic action on cells through oxidative damage. However, the transition metal is unable to directly generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) via redox reactions with molecular oxygen in a biological environment. Here, we show that bright yellow-2 (BY-2) tobacco cells exposed to millimolar concentrations of CdCl 2 developed cell death within 2-3 h. The death process was preceded by two successive waves of ROS differing in their nature and subcellular localization. Firstly, these consisted in the transient NADPH oxidase-dependent accumulation of H 2 O 2 followed by the accumulation of O 2 -. in mitochondria. A third wave of ROS consisting in fatty acid hydroperoxide accumulation was concomitant with cell death. Accumulation of H 2 O 2 was preceded by an increase in cytosolic free calcium concentration originating from internal pools that was essential to activate the NADPH oxidase. The cell line gp3, impaired in NADPH oxidase activity, and that was unable to accumulate H 2 O 2 in response to Cd 2 + , was nevertheless poisoned by the metal. Therefore, this first wave of ROS was not sufficient to trigger all the cadmiumdependent deleterious effects. However, we show that the accumulation of O 2 -. of mitochondrial origin and membrane peroxidation are key players in Cd 2 + -induced cell death.
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