A Poly(A) Ribonuclease Controls the Cellotriose-Based Interaction between Piriformospora indica and Its Host Arabidopsis.
Joy M JohnsonJohannes ThürichElena K PetutschnigLothar AltschmiedDoreen MeichsnerIrena SherametiJulian DindasAnna MrozinskaChristian PaetzSandra S ScholzAlexandra C U FurchVolker LipkaRainer HedrichBernd SchneiderAleš SvatošRalf OelmüllerPublished in: Plant physiology (2018)
Piriformospora indica, an endophytic root-colonizing fungus, efficiently promotes plant growth and induces resistance to abiotic stress and biotic diseases. P. indica fungal cell wall extract induces cytoplasmic calcium elevation in host plant roots. Here, we show that cellotriose (CT) is an elicitor-active cell wall moiety released by P. indica into the medium. CT induces a mild defense-like response, including the production of reactive oxygen species, changes in membrane potential, and the expression of genes involved in growth regulation and root development. CT-based cytoplasmic calcium elevation in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) roots does not require the BAK1 coreceptor or the putative Ca2+ channels TPC1, GLR3.3, GLR2.4, and GLR2.5 and operates synergistically with the elicitor chitin. We identified an ethyl methanesulfonate-induced mutant (cytoplasmiccalcium elevation mutant) impaired in the response to CT and various other cellooligomers (n = 2-7), but not to chitooligomers (n = 4-8), in roots. The mutant contains a single nucleotide exchange in the gene encoding a poly(A) ribonuclease (AtPARN; At1g55870) that degrades the poly(A) tails of specific mRNAs. The wild-type PARN cDNA, expressed under the control of a 35S promoter, complements the mutant phenotype. Our identification of cellotriose as a novel chemical mediator casts light on the complex P. indica-plant mutualistic relationship.
Keyphrases
- cell wall
- wild type
- image quality
- dual energy
- arabidopsis thaliana
- computed tomography
- contrast enhanced
- plant growth
- reactive oxygen species
- positron emission tomography
- transcription factor
- oxidative stress
- poor prognosis
- magnetic resonance imaging
- gene expression
- magnetic resonance
- diabetic rats
- endothelial cells
- stress induced
- climate change
- ionic liquid
- genome wide identification
- copy number
- anti inflammatory