Biologia Plantarum (Sep 2016)
Combined effect of ethylene- and salicylic acid-signaling insensitive mutation on Arabidopsis response to low temperature
Abstract
The roles of ethylene (ET) or salicylic acid (SA) in plant response to low temperature (LT, 5 °C) have been implicated. However, the combined effect of ET- and SA-signaling on plant growth and metabolism under LT remains to be evaluated. In this study, we comparatively analyzed the response of Arabidopsis ethylene insensitive (ein) 2-1 (an ET insensitive mutant), nonexprressor of pathogenesis relative (npr)1-1 (an SA insensitive mutant) and double mutant ein2-1/npr1-1 plants to LT. The results show that a LT of 5 °C induced plant growth retardation to a less degree in ein2-1, an intermediate degree in npr1-1, but a much larger in ein2-1/npr1-1 compared to the wild-type (WT) plants. The LT susceptibility of the ein2-1/npr1-1 plants was correlated to a lower net photosynthetic rate and proline content, and a higher content of H2O2 and malondialdehyde and electrolyte leakage relative to the WT plants. Lower activities of superoxide dismutase, peroxidase, and catalase, as well as a lower glutathione content and a ratio of its reduced form to its oxidized form were also observed in the double mutant plants as compared with the WT plants. However, at normal conditions (23 °C), all the tested physiological and biochemical parameters were comparable between the ein2-1/npr1-1 and WT plants, and plant growth was even better in the double mutant than in the WT plants. On the contrary, most of the above-mentioned parameters were advantageous in the ein2-1 and npr1-1 plants over the WT plants under the LT conditions. These data suggest that a parallel function or physiological redundancy of nonexpressor of pathogenesis relative 1 and ethylene insensitive 2 existed in the Arabidopsis plant response to the LT. On the other hand, an interaction between ET- and SA-signaling occurred during this process.
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