Isolation of an Ozone-Sensitive and Jasmonate-Semi-Insensitive Arabidopsis Mutant (oji1)
Author(s) -
Machi Kanna,
Masanori Tamaoki,
Akihiro Kubo,
Nobuyoshi Nakajima,
Randeep Rakwal,
Ganesh Kumar Agrawal,
Shigeru Tamogami,
Motohide Ioki,
Daisuke Ogawa,
Hikaru Saji,
Mitsuko Aono
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
plant and cell physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.975
H-Index - 152
eISSN - 1471-9053
pISSN - 0032-0781
DOI - 10.1093/pcp/pcg157
Subject(s) - methyl jasmonate , jasmonate , mutant , arabidopsis , wild type , ethylene , ozone , chemistry , glycine , biochemistry , botany , biology , gene , amino acid , organic chemistry , catalysis
A novel ozone-sensitive mutant was isolated from Arabidopsis T-DNA tagging lines. This mutant revealed severe foliar injury and higher ethylene emission than the wild type under ozone exposure. The ozone-induced injury and ethylene emission were suppressed by pretreatment with aminoethoxyvinyl glycine, an inhibitor of ethylene biosynthesis, both in this mutant and wild-type plants. Pretreatment with methyl-jasmonate (MeJA) at 10 micro M, however, suppressed the ozone-induced ethylene emission and foliar injury only in the wild-type plants. This mutant was less sensitive to jasmonate than the wild type, estimated by the MeJA-induced inhibition of root elongation and ozone-induced expression of AtVSP1, a jasmonate-inducible gene. Thus, this mutant was named oji1 (ozone-sensitive and jasmonate-insensitive 1). These results suggest that the ozone sensitivity of oji1 is caused by the increase in ozone-induced emission of ethylene as a result of low sensitivity to jasmonate, which plays defensive roles under stress conditions.
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