The recent identification of DAD (defender against apoptotic death) gene in plants suggests that the N-linked glycosylation of proteins could be an important control point of plant programmed cell death. In this paper we describe the effects of Tunicamycin, an inhibitor of N-linked protein glycosylation, and Brefeldin A, an inhibitor of protein trafficking from the Golgi apparatus, on sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus L.) cell cultures. These two chemicals proved able to induce a strong acceleration of the cell death; changes in cell and nucleus morphology; an increase in DNA fragmentation, detectable by a specific immunological reaction; and the presence of oligonucleosomal-size fragments (laddering) in DNA gel electrophoresis. Moreover, Brefeldin A, but not Tunicamycin, strongly stimulated the production of hydrogen peroxide. These results indicate that also in plants chemicals interfering with the activities of endoplasmic reticulum and of Golgi apparatus strongly induce a form of programmed cell death showing apoptotic features.
Fusicoccin (FC) is a well known toxin acting as a 14-3-3 proteinmediated activator of the plasma membrane H 1 -ATPase and it has been widely used to study the regulatory mechanism and the physiological role of this enzyme's activity. Recently, FC has been shown to induce other responses similar to those occurring under a stress condition, perhaps not strictly dependent on the activation of proton extrusion. In this paper we report that in cultured sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus L.) cells FC induces H 2 O 2 overproduction as well as other novel, presumably related responses, such as the activation of the alternative oxidase and the leakage of cytochrome c from the mitochondria, accompanied by a decrease of the cytochrome pathway capacity. The relationship between H 2 O 2 production and other phenomena has also been studied by means of exogenously added H 2 O 2 .
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