Complex intercellular interaction is a common theme in plant-pathogen/symbiont relationship. Cellular physiology of both the partners is affected by abiotic stress. However, little is known about the degree of protection each offers to the other from different types of environmental stress. Our current study focused on the changes in response to toxic arsenic in the presence of an endophytic fungus Piriformospora indica that colonizes the paddy roots. The primary impact of arsenic was observed in the form of hyper-colonization of fungus in the host root and resulted in the recovery of its overall biomass, root damage, and chlorophyll due to arsenic toxicity. Further, fungal colonization leads to balance the redox status of the cell by adjusting the antioxidative enzyme system which in turn protects photosynthetic machinery of the plant from arsenic stress. We observed that fungus has ability to immobilize soluble arsenic and interestingly, it was also observed that fungal colonization restricts most of arsenic in the colonized root while a small fraction of it translocated to shoot of colonized plants. Our study suggests that P. indica protects the paddy (Oryza sativa) from arsenic toxicity by three different mechanisms viz. reducing the availability of free arsenic in the plant environment, bio-transformation of the toxic arsenic salts into insoluble particulate matter and modulating the antioxidative system of the host cell.
Arsenic promotes hippocampal neuronal damage inducing cognitive impairments. However, mechanism arbitrating arsenic-mediated cognitive deficits remains less-known. Here, we identified that chronic exposure to environmentally relevant doses of arsenic increased apoptosis, characterized by caspase-3 activation, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick-end labeling of rat hippocampal neurons, marked by NeuN. Investigating apoptotic mechanism through invivo and invitro studies revealed that arsenic promoted bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP2) expression, supported by increased BMP-receptor2 (BMPR2) and p-Smad1/5 in hippocampal neurons. BMP2-silencing and treatment with BMP antagonist, noggin, attenuated the arsenic-induced apoptosis and loss in hippocampal neurons. We then investigated whether BMP2/Smad signaling stimulated neuronal apoptosis independently or required other intermediate pathways. We hypothesized participation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) that promotes neuronal survival. We identified an arsenic-mediated attenuation of BDNF-dependent TrkB signaling, and observed that co-treatment with recombinant-BDNF reinstated BDNF/TrkB and reduced neuronal apoptosis. To probe whether BMP2/Smad and BDNF/TrkB pathways could be linked, we co-treated arsenic with noggin or recombinant BDNF. We detected a noggin-mediated restored BDNF/TrkB, while recombinant-BDNF failed to affect BMP2/Smad signaling. In addition, we found that TrkB-inhibitor, K252a, nullified noggin-induced protection, proving the necessity of a downstream reduced BDNF/TrKB signaling for BMP2/Smad-mediated apoptosis in arsenic-treated neurons. We further related our observations with cognitive performances, and detected noggin-mediated restoration of transfer latency time and learning-memory ability for passive avoidance and Y-Maze tests respectively in arsenic-treated rats. Overall, our study proves that arsenic promotes hippocampal neuronal apoptosis through an up-regulated BMP2/Smad-dependent attenuation of BDNF/TrkB pathway, inducing cognitive deficits.
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