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1.
BMC Plant Biol ; 18(1): 101, 2018 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29859042

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Ethylene is an important plant hormone that controls many physiological processes in plants. Conventional methods for detecting ethylene include gas chromatographs or optical mid-infrared sensors, which are expensive and, in the case of gas chromatographs, are hardly suitable for automated parallelized online measurement. Electrochemical ethylene sensors are cheap but often suffer from poor resolution, baseline drifting, and target gas oxidation. Thus, measuring ethylene at extremely low levels is challenging. RESULTS: This report demonstrates the integration of electrochemical ethylene sensors into a respiration activity monitoring system (RAMOS) that measures, in addition to the oxygen transfer rate, the ethylene transfer rate in eight parallel shake flasks. A calibration method is presented that is not prone to baseline drifting and considers target gas oxidation at the sensor. In this way, changes in ethylene transfer rate as low as 4 nmol/L/h can be resolved. In confirmatory experiments, the overall accuracy of the method was similar to that of gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC/MS) measurements. The RAMOS-based ethylene determination method was exemplified with parsley suspension-cultured cells that were primed for enhanced defense by pretreatment with salicylic acid, methyl jasmonate or 4-chlorosalicylic acid and challenged with the microbial pattern Pep13. Ethylene release into the headspace of the shake flask was observed upon treatment with salicylic acid and methyl jasmonate was further enhanced, in case of salicylic acid and 4-chlorosalicylic acid, upon Pep13 challenge. CONCLUSION: A conventional RAMOS device was modified for simultaneous measurement of the ethylene transfer rate in eight parallel shake flasks at nmol/L/h resolution. For the first time electrochemical sensors are used to provide a medium-throughput method for monitoring ethylene release by plants. Currently, this can only be achieved by costly laser-based detection systems and automated gas chromatographs. The new method is particularly suitable for plant cell suspension cultures. However, the method may also be applicable to intact plants, detached leaves or other plant tissues. In addition, the general principle of the technology is likely extendable to other volatiles or gases as well, such as nitric oxide or hydrogen peroxide.


Subject(s)
Ethylenes/analysis , Petroselinum/metabolism , Plant Growth Regulators/analysis , Acetates/metabolism , Calibration , Cells, Cultured , Cyclopentanes/metabolism , Ethylenes/metabolism , Online Systems , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygen/metabolism , Oxylipins/metabolism , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Salicylates/metabolism
2.
Plant Physiol ; 176(3): 2395-2405, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29288231

ABSTRACT

Modern crop production calls for agrochemicals that prime plants for enhanced defense. Reliable test systems for spotting priming-inducing chemistry, however, are rare. We developed an assay for the high-throughput search for compounds that prime microbial pattern-induced secretion of antimicrobial furanocoumarins (phytoalexins) in cultured parsley cells. The screen produced 1-isothiocyanato-4-methylsulfinylbutane (sulforaphane; SFN), a secondary metabolite in many crucifers, as a novel defense priming compound. While elucidating SFN's mode of action in defense priming, we found that in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsisthaliana) the isothiocyanate provokes covalent modification (K4me3, K9ac) of histone H3 in the promoter and promoter-proximal region of defense genes WRKY6 and PDF12, but not PR1 SFN-triggered H3K4me3 and H3K9ac coincide with chromatin unpacking in the WRKY6 and PDF12 regulatory regions, primed WRKY6 expression, unprimed PDF12 activation, and reduced susceptibility to downy mildew disease (Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis). Because SFN also directly inhibits Harabidopsidis and other plant pathogens, the isothiocyanate is promising for the development of a plant protectant with a dual mode of action.


Subject(s)
Chromatin/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/drug effects , High-Throughput Screening Assays/methods , Histones/metabolism , Isothiocyanates/pharmacology , Arabidopsis/drug effects , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis/microbiology , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Chromatin/genetics , Chromatin/metabolism , Host-Pathogen Interactions/drug effects , Isothiocyanates/chemistry , Lysine/metabolism , Oomycetes/pathogenicity , Oxidation-Reduction , Petroselinum/cytology , Petroselinum/drug effects , Promoter Regions, Genetic/drug effects , Sesquiterpenes/metabolism , Sulfoxides , Sulfur/chemistry , Sulfur/metabolism , Transcription Factors/genetics , Phytoalexins
3.
BMC Plant Biol ; 15: 282, 2015 Nov 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26608728

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In modern agriculture, the call for an alternative crop protection strategy increases because of the desired reduction of fungicide and pesticide use and the continuously evolving resistance of pathogens and pests to agrochemicals. The direct activation of the plant immune system does not provide a promising plant protection measure because of high fitness costs. However, upon treatment with certain natural or synthetic compounds, plant cells can promote to a fitness cost-saving, primed state of enhanced defense. In the primed state, plants respond to biotic and abiotic stress with faster and stronger activation of defense, and this is often associated with immunity and abiotic stress tolerance. Until now, the identification of chemical compounds with priming-inducing activity (so-called plant activators) relied on tedious and invasive approaches, or required the late detection of secreted furanocoumarin phytoalexins in parsley cell cultures. Thus, simple, fast, straightforward, and noninvasive techniques for identifying priming-inducing compounds for plant protection are very welcome. RESULTS: This report demonstrates that a respiration activity-monitoring system (RAMOS) can identify compounds with defense priming-inducing activity in parsley cell suspension in culture. RAMOS relies on the quasi-continuous, noninvasive online determination of the oxygen transfer rate (OTR). Treatment of parsley culture cells with the known plant activator salicylic acid (SA), a natural plant defense signal, resulted in an OTR increase. Addition of the defense elicitor Pep13, a cell wall peptide of Phythophthora sojae, induced two distinctive OTR peaks that were higher in SA-primed cells than in unprimed cells upon Pep13 challenge. Both, the OTR increase after priming with SA and the Pep13 challenge were dose-dependent. Furthermore, there was a close correlation of a compound's activity to enhance the oxygen consumption in parsley cells and its capacity to prime Pep13-induced furanocoumarin secretion as evaluated by fluorescence spectroscopy. CONCLUSIONS: RAMOS noninvasively determines the OTR as a measure of the metabolic activity of plant cells. Chemical enhancement of oxygen consumption by salicylic derivatives in parsley cell suspension cultures correlates with the induction of the primed state of enhanced defense that enhances the quantity of Pep13-induced furanocoumarin phytoalexins. Treatment with the priming-active compounds methyl jasmonate and pyraclostrobin also resulted in an enhanced respiration activity. Thus, RAMOS is a novel technology for identifying priming-inducing compounds for agriculture.


Subject(s)
Oxygen/metabolism , Petroselinum/immunology , Crop Protection , Immunity, Innate , Petroselinum/metabolism , Plant Cells/immunology , Plant Cells/metabolism
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