The gaseous phytohormone ethylene C 2 H 4 mediates numerous aspects of growth and development. Genetic analysis has identified a number of critical elements in ethylene signaling, but how these elements interact biochemically to transduce the signal from the ethylene receptor complex at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane to transcription factors in the nucleus is unknown. To close this gap in our understanding of the ethylene signaling pathway, the challenge has been to identify the target of the CONSTITUTIVE TRIPLE RESPONSE1 (CTR1) Raf-like protein kinase, as well as the molecular events surrounding ETHYLENE-INSENSITIVE2 (EIN2), an ER membrane-localized Nramp homolog that positively regulates ethylene responses. Here we demonstrate that CTR1 interacts with and directly phosphorylates the cytosolic C-terminal domain of EIN2. Mutations that block the EIN2 phosphorylation sites result in constitutive nuclear localization of the EIN2 C terminus, concomitant with constitutive activation of ethylene responses in Arabidopsis. Our results suggest that phosphorylation of EIN2 by CTR1 prevents EIN2 from signaling in the absence of ethylene, whereas inhibition of CTR1 upon ethylene perception is a signal for cleavage and nuclear localization of the EIN2 C terminus, allowing the ethylene signal to reach the downstream transcription factors. These findings significantly advance our understanding of the mechanisms underlying ethylene signal transduction. mass spectrometry | serine
This work aims at identifying the effects of ethylene on the response of Arabidopsis thaliana root system to cadmium chloride (CdCl2) stress. Two ethylene-insensitive mutants, ein2-5 and ein3-1eil1-1, were subjected to (25, 50, 75, and 100 μM) CdCl2 concentrations, from which 75 μM concentration decreased root growth by 40% compared with wild type Col-0 as a control. Ethylene biosynthesis increased in response to CdCl2 treatment. The length of primary root and root tip in ein2-5 and ein3-1eil1-1 decreased compared with wild type after CdCl2 treatment, suggesting that ethylene play a role in root system response to Cd stress. The superoxide concentration in roots of ein2-5 and ein3-1eil1-1 was greater than in wild type seedlings under Cd stress. Application of exogenous 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) (a precursor of ethylene biosynthesis) in different concentrations (0.01, 0.05 and 0.5 μM) decreased superoxide accumulation in Col-0 root tips and increased the activities of superoxide dismutase (SOD) isoenzymes under Cd stress. This result was reversed with 5 μM of aminoisobutyric acid AIB (an inhibitor of ethylene biosynthesis). Moreover, it was accompanied by increase in lateral roots number and root hairs length, indicating the essential role of ethylene in modulating root system development by controlling superoxide accumulation through SOD isoenzymes activities. The suppressed Cd-induced superoxide accumulation in wild type plants decreased the occurrence of cells death while programmed cell death (PCD) was initiated in the root tip zone, altering root morphogenesis (decreased primary root length, more lateral roots and root hairs) to minimize the damage caused by Cd stress, whereas this response was absent in the ein2-5 and ein3-1eil1-1 seedlings. Hence, ethylene has a role in modulating root morphogenesis during CdCl2 stress in A. thaliana by increasing the activity of SOD isoenzymes to control superoxide accumulation.
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