We have previously observed that auxin can act as a repressor of the wound-inducible activation of a chimeric potato proteinase inhibitor Il-CAT chimeric gene (pin2-CAT) in transgenic tobacco (Nicotlana tobacum) callus and in whole plants. Therefore, this study was designed to examine endogenous levels of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) in plant tissues both before and after wounding. Endogenous IAA was measured in whole plant tissues by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry using an isotope dilution technique. 13C-Labeled IAA was used as an internal standard. The endogenous levels of IAA declined two-to threefold within 6 hours after a wound. The kinetics of auxin decline are consistent with the kinetics of activation of the pin2-CAT construction in the foliage of transgenic tobacco.the induction of the pin2-CAT gene. These studies revealed that auxin, when present at near physiological levels, can repress the synthesis of CAT protein in the transgenic callus and also in plants ( 18).This specific repression of the inhibitor II gene activation led us to address the question of IAA levels in whole plants following wounding. In this study we have measured the levels of endogenous IAA in the foliage of whole tobacco plants by an isotope dilution technique coupled with a GC-MS detection system.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
PlantsWhen plant foliage is mechanically wounded a series of specific and nonspecific plant defenses are induced (9,14). One group of the well studied defense products are the proteinase inhibitors of solanaceous plants. These proteinase inhibitors are activated at the transcriptional level following wounding (13). However, their kinetics of induction (mRNA begins to appear 2 to 4 h after wounding) makes them distinct from other wound-inducible genes from the lignin and phytoalexin biosynthetic pathways (9). Genes encoding the proteinase inhibitors from both tomato and potato have been isolated and characterized (6,12,19,23,27).Transgenic plants have been made with both proteinase inhibitor I and II and the expression of these genes in plants has been well studied (15,23,27 The plants used in this study were tobacco, Nicotiana tabacum cv Xanthi. Both wild-type and transformed progeny plants were used. The transformed plants were previously described (28). They were an R4 homozygous line of transgenic plants (four self-pollinations after regeneration, RO) containing a pin2-CAT construction which was also previously described (27). All plants were used once and then never again, so that multiple wounds did not occur on the same plant.