Klessig D F, Durner J, Noad R, Navarre D A, Wendehenne D, Kumar D, Zhou J M, Shah J, Zhang S, Kachroo P, Trifa Y, Pontier D, Lam E, Silva H
Waksman Institute and Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, 190 Frelinghuysen Road, Piscataway, NJ 08854-8020, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2000 Aug 1;97(16):8849-55. doi: 10.1073/pnas.97.16.8849.
Salicylic acid (SA) plays a critical signaling role in the activation of plant defense responses after pathogen attack. We have identified several potential components of the SA signaling pathway, including (i) the H(2)O(2)-scavenging enzymes catalase and ascorbate peroxidase, (ii) a high affinity SA-binding protein (SABP2), (iii) a SA-inducible protein kinase (SIPK), (iv) NPR1, an ankyrin repeat-containing protein that exhibits limited homology to IkappaBalpha and is required for SA signaling, and (v) members of the TGA/OBF family of bZIP transcription factors. These bZIP factors physically interact with NPR1 and bind the SA-responsive element in promoters of several defense genes, such as the pathogenesis-related 1 gene (PR-1). Recent studies have demonstrated that nitric oxide (NO) is another signal that activates defense responses after pathogen attack. NO has been shown to play a critical role in the activation of innate immune and inflammatory responses in animals. Increases in NO synthase (NOS)-like activity occurred in resistant but not susceptible tobacco after infection with tobacco mosaic virus. Here we demonstrate that this increase in activity participates in PR-1 gene induction. Two signaling molecules, cGMP and cyclic ADP ribose (cADPR), which function downstream of NO in animals, also appear to mediate plant defense gene activation (e.g., PR-1). Additionally, NO may activate PR-1 expression via an NO-dependent, cADPR-independent pathway. Several targets of NO in animals, including guanylate cyclase, aconitase, and mitogen-activated protein kinases (e.g., SIPK), are also modulated by NO in plants. Thus, at least portions of NO signaling pathways appear to be shared between plants and animals.
水杨酸(SA)在病原体攻击后植物防御反应的激活中发挥关键的信号传导作用。我们已经鉴定出SA信号通路的几个潜在组成部分,包括:(i)清除H₂O₂的酶过氧化氢酶和抗坏血酸过氧化物酶;(ii)一种高亲和力SA结合蛋白(SABP2);(iii)一种SA诱导蛋白激酶(SIPK);(iv)NPR1,一种含有锚蛋白重复序列的蛋白,与IκBα具有有限的同源性,是SA信号传导所必需的;以及(v)bZIP转录因子TGA/OBF家族的成员。这些bZIP因子与NPR1发生物理相互作用,并结合几个防御基因启动子中的SA反应元件,如病程相关蛋白1基因(PR-1)。最近的研究表明,一氧化氮(NO)是病原体攻击后激活防御反应的另一种信号。NO已被证明在动物先天免疫和炎症反应的激活中起关键作用。感染烟草花叶病毒后,抗性烟草而非感病烟草中类似一氧化氮合酶(NOS)的活性增加。在这里,我们证明这种活性增加参与了PR-1基因的诱导。两种在动物中在NO下游起作用的信号分子,环鸟苷酸(cGMP)和环ADP核糖(cADPR),似乎也介导植物防御基因的激活(例如PR-1)。此外,NO可能通过一条不依赖cADPR的NO依赖性途径激活PR-1的表达。NO在动物中的几个靶标,包括鸟苷酸环化酶、乌头酸酶和丝裂原活化蛋白激酶(例如SIPK),在植物中也受到NO的调节。因此,至少部分NO信号通路似乎在植物和动物之间是共享的。