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Plant Physiol, June 2002, Vol. 129, pp. 460-468
UPDATE ON STRESS TOLERANCE
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INTRODUCTION |
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The vigor and responsiveness of plants to environmental stress result from the constant re-adjustment of physiology and metabolism throughout the life cycle within the framework of the genetic background. Plants have developed unique strategies for responding to ever-changing environmental conditions, exhaustively monitoring their surroundings and adjusting their metabolic systems to maintain homeostasis. The severity of stress, the genetic background of the plant, and its individual history determine everyday survival or death. These factors dictate the destiny of any individual. The genome-environment interaction is, therefore, an essential focus for the elucidation of the nature of the phenotypic variation leading to the successful response of plants to environmental cues.
Plants acclimate to biotic and abiotic stresses by triggering a cascade or network of events that starts with stress perception and ends with the expression of a battery of target genes. The key components of the stress-response relationship are illustrated in Fig. 1. These are stress stimulus, signals, transducers, transcription regulators, target genes, and stress responses, including morphological, biochemical, and physiological changes. In evolutionary terms, components that are near to the end of the stress-response cascade are not predicted to be the ones whose actions significantly affect the operation of other genes. However, factors that act at early stages are critical for other cell functions. Plants make use of common pathways and components in the stress-response relationship. This phenomenon, which is known as cross-tolerance, allows plants to adapt/acclimate to a range of different stresses after exposure to one specific stress. The major focus of this review, therefore, concerns the basic features of signaling that underpin cross-tolerance and result from the action of common elements, which are likely to occur early in the stress response cascade. First, using drought and chilling as examples, we explore the evidence for common signals and elements that confer cross-tolerance. Second, we highlight the importance of "redox signals" in such networks and discuss the evidence to date for the existence of such pathways in plants. The elucidation of common components has enormous potential and has, therefore, become a priority in research and breeding programs aimed at improving plant stress tolerance.
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REGULATION OF TRANSCRIPTION DURING STRESS |
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Gene expression is mainly regulated at the initiation of
transcription. The proportion of the plant genome dedicated to genes encoding transcription factors reflects this important feature. Approximately 25% of the 25,498 genes encoding proteins from 11,000 families in the Arabidopsis genome are involved in transcription, signal transduction, and the control of cell destiny and survival. Moreover, about 15% of the genes sequenced in chromosome 4 alone participate in the regulation and mechanics of transcription (Bevan et
al., 1998
). Although an increasing number of the regulatory proteins
involved in transcription have been identified in plants, our current
knowledge of transcription factors mediating the stress response and
their regulation is still limited compared with the vast amount of
information available for animals and yeast.
Gene expression is mediated by one or more interacting transcription
factors. Multiple protein-protein and/or protein-DNA interactions
frequently dictate the rate of transcription by activation/repression of a given promoter under given environmental conditions. A good example is the interaction between the bZIP and Dof transcription factors in the expression of Arabidopsis glutathione-S-transferase-6 (GST6). The GST6 promoter contains Dof-binding
sites closely linked to a 20-bp octopine synthase (ocs) element. The
ocs element is not only the binding site for bZIP proteins, but it is
also responsive to H2O2 and
pathogens. The GST6 promoter is induced in roots after treatment with salicylic acid or
H2O2 (Chen and Singh,
1999
). However, mutation of the ocs element does not abolish expression suggesting that other promoter elements are also important in the regulation of GST6.
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CIS-ELEMENTS AND BINDING FACTORS INVOLVED IN DROUGHT AND COLD |
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Drought and low growth temperatures cause major limitations on
crop productivity. These stresses are complex environmental phenomena.
Plant breeding for improved stress tolerance has consistently demonstrated that plant vigor over a range of environmental conditions is governed by multiple loci. Hence, stress tolerance is inherently multigenic in nature. Although the vast majority of these genes remain
to be identified, some transcription factors and regulatory sequences
in plant promoters have been described. Cis-elements and
corresponding binding proteins have been implicated in both drought and
low temperature tolerance in Arabidopsis as discussed below. This may
be explained by the common requirement for stability during
dehydration, a component inherent to both of these stresses and also to
other environmental extremes such as high salt. The cis-acting element
identified in the promoter region of the RD29A gene, for
example, is responsive to both drought and low temperatures. This
dehydration-responsive element (DRE) is essential for the regulation of
expression of dehydration-responsive genes. It is also found in the
promoter regions of other dehydration- and cold-inducible genes, such
as rd17, kin1, and cor6.6 (Wang et
al., 1995
; Iwasaki et al., 1997
). The cDNAs encoding the DRE-binding
proteins DREB1A and DREB2A were isolated using the yeast two-hybrid
screening system. When DREB1A was expressed in transformed plants,
under the control of 35S cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV)
promoter, deregulated expression of stress-inducible genes was observed
leading to increased freezing, salt, and drought tolerance (Liu et al.,
1998
). Moreover, even greater stress tolerance and improved growth was
observed in other transformed plants where the stress-inducible
rd29A promoter was used to drive DREB1A expression, compared
with the growth retardation observed in CaMV promoter-DREB1A expressing
plants under similar conditions (Kasuga et al., 1999
).
CBF genes encode transcriptional activators that control the
expression of a suite of genes containing C-repeat/DRE sequences in
their promoters (Jaglo-Ottosen et al., 1998
). Constitutive expression
of CBF1 or CBF3 (equivalent to DREB1B and DREB1A) enhanced freezing
tolerance and induced the expression of the cold-regulated (COR) genes. Moreover, overexpression of CBF3 resulted in
the activation of multiple components in response to chilling.
Transgenic plants overexpressing CBF3 had enhanced levels of Pro and
total soluble sugars, including Suc, raffinose, Fru, and Glc (Gilmour et al., 2000
).
Other transcriptional regulators, such as the MYC and MYB proteins, are
activators in the dehydration- and abscisic acid (ABA)-inducible expression of the rd22 gene (Abe et al., 1997
). The promoter
of rd22 gene contains a 67-bp fragment with two closely
situated recognition sites for the basic helix-loop-helix protein MYC. There is also a putative recognition site for MYB in the promoter of
the rd22 gene. All three recognition sites function as
cis-acting elements in the dehydration-induced expression of
rd22.
DRE-related motifs have been reported in the promoter region of the
cold-inducible wcs120 gene from wheat (Triticum
aestivum; Ouellet et al., 1998
). The copy number and organization
of wcs120 are identical in wheat cultivars with different
degrees of freezing tolerance, and expression is regulated mainly at
the transcriptional level. Homologs of wcs120 are not
expressed in other chilling-sensitive monocotyledonous (monocot)
species, such as rice (Oryza sativa) and maize (Zea
mays). The lack of expression may be due to inefficient cis-acting
elements or to the absence of transcription factors regulating these
genes. This could explain, at least in part, the inability of these
chilling sensitive species to acclimate to cold temperatures. Moreover,
these observations emphasize the importance of identifying the specific
responses of monocot and dicotyledonous species to stress.
Overexpression of the transcription factor Alfin1 was found to improve
tolerance to salt stress in alfalfa (Medicago sativa) enhancing root growth under normal and saline conditions (Winicov and
Bastola, 1999
). Alfin1 binds to promoter fragments of the NaCl-inducible MsPRP2 gene regulating its expression in a
tissue-specific manner.
Analysis of the expression of dehydration-inducible genes in
Arabidopsis suggests that there are at least four independent signal
transduction pathways for the induction of genes in response to
dehydration (Shinozaki and Yamaguchi-Shinozaki, 1997
). Two of these are
ABA-dependent and two are ABA-independent. ABA has been implicated in
the regulation of many processes in plants, particularly those that
involve metabolic arrest and cell survival. These include specific
expression patterns during seed development and drought, cold, and salt
responses. The mechanism of ABA-mediated regulation of transcription
has been elucidated by analysis of the cis-acting sequences required
for ABA-induced gene expression. ABA-inducible genes, such as
Em from wheat and rab16A from rice, were used in
expression studies. Analysis of protein binding in vitro revealed the
presence of an ABA-responsive element (ABRE) in the promoters of these
genes (Marcotte et al., 1989
; Mundy et al., 1990
). The ABRE family is
similar to the G-box sequence group that is present in many promoters
responsive to environmental stimuli such as UV, wounding, and
anaerobiosis (Merkens et al., 1995
). Analysis of the promoter of the
chalcone synthase (chs) gene revealed two types of
cis-elements, G-box and H-box, which seem to act differentially in
tissue-specific and stress-induced expression (Faktor et al., 1997
).
Mutation of the G- and H-boxes decreased the response of the
chs promoter to the abiotic elicitor HgCl2 and TMV infection, the impairment being
stronger in the case of the H-box mutation, which also affected the
response of the promoter to wounding.
In summary, a single transcription factor can orchestrate the expression of many genes to improve stress tolerance. However, acclimation to complex stresses such as cold and drought must involve the simultaneous operation of many signaling pathways/networks. It is worth noting that, in many cases, plants survive stress by metabolic arrest, in which growth and development essentially stop. Such dramatic changes may be enhanced as a result of activation or de-regulated expression of transcription factors in transformed plants. Unpredictable performance is an important outcome of such manipulations and is a crucial limiting factor in terms of crop quality and yield. Agriculturally important parameters, such as yield and biomass, are critical points in any consideration of manipulations in the major food crops, particularly wheat and maize.
It is, therefore, not only essential to identify stress-regulated transcription factors, but it is also vital to characterize the proteins and the signaling mechanisms that control their function. The cis-responsive elements in the promoters of these signaling genes may hold the key with which to unravel the underlying mechanisms conferring tolerance to cold and drought. Because oxidative stress is a common signaling event in all stress situations, the elucidation of "redox"-mediated networks and pathways for the control of transcription is an essential step to understanding plant stress responses.
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OXIDATIVE STRESS-RELATED CIS-ELEMENTS AND TRANS-ACTING FACTORS |
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The most important and best documented common response of plants to different abiotic and biotic stresses, such as heat, cold, high-light intensities, drought, osmotic shock, wounding, UV-B radiation, ozone, and pathogens is the accelerated production of active oxygen species (AOS) such as superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and the hydroxyl radical. It is, therefore, surprising that little information is available on the cis-responsive elements and trans-acting factors related to oxidative stress responses in plants, particularly in comparison with that reported for other kingdoms.
A range of trans-acting factors has been identified in
Escherichia coli and higher eukaryotes that regulate the
expression of genes induced by oxidative stress (Table
I). In E. coli, the transcription factor SoxR/SoxS mediates responses to superoxide (O·2
), whereas OxyR activates
genes responsive to H2O2
(Christman et al., 1985
; Greenberg et al., 1990
; Tsaneva and
Weiss, 1990
). In mammalian systems, the transcription factors
NF-
B and AP-1 are central to the regulation of the oxidative stress
response. NF-
B is a multiunit transcription factor that is
post-translationally activated by low
H2O2 concentrations,
causing the rapid induction of genes encoding defense and signaling
proteins (Schreck et al., 1991
). The activator protein-1 (AP-1) family
comprises both Fos and Jun related proteins, which are
post-transcriptionally regulated by complex mechanisms (Meyer et al.,
1993
; Bergelson et al., 1994
). The yeast YAP-1 protein is homologous to
the AP-1 family of eukaryotic transcription factors.
YAP-deleted strains are sensitive to
O·2
,
H2O2, and compounds that
generate these oxidants (Moye-Rowley et al., 1989
). An
antioxidant-responsive element (ARE) or electrophile-responsive element
(EpRE), consisting of two non-overlapping core sequences GTGACA(A/T)(A/T) GC, is the binding site for the AP-1 transcription factor complex (Daniel, 1993
). ARE is present in animal GST
genes but not in plant GSTs. To date, apart from AP-1 and
ARE, no homologs of other major animal or microbial redox-sensitive
elements and factors have been reported in plants.
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Only recently have oxidative stress-responsive elements been identified
in the promoters of plant genes, and these are relatively few.
Signaling pathways for ozone and pathogen responses seem to involve the
activation of the same cis-element. An ozone-responsive region was
found in the promoter of the grapevine stilbene synthase gene
(Sandermann et al., 1998
). The promoter sequence contains an inverse
elicitor-responsive element, also found in the promoters of
defense-related genes, such as pathogenesis-related 1 protein. Pathogenesis-related 1 and related proteins are induced by both ozone
and a fungal elicitor (Eckey-Kaltenbach et al., 1997
). Plant GST promoters often contain ocs elements, which are similar
to EpREs. Both ocs and EpREs have tandem binding sites, and both are
binding sites for dimeric bZIP transcription factors (Zhang and Singh,
1994
).
The action of H2O2 as a
signal in the induction of the expression of the catalase
(Cat) genes (Cat1, Cat2) and of
GST1 has recently been demonstrated (Polidoros and
Scandalios, 1999
). The ARE is present in all three maize Cat
promoters having a role in the induction of gene expression in response
to oxidative stress. Gel retardation analyses revealed that ARE
interacts strongly with an unidentified transcription factor at late
stages of germination in maize seeds, when the scutellum is undergoing
senescence. Cat1 and Cat3 transcripts increase
dramatically in wounded leaves, the response being independent of
jasmonic acid and ABA (Guan and Scandalios, 2000
). Cat2 is
specifically induced during drought in wheat leaves (C. Luna,
G.M. Pastori, and C.H. Foyer, unpublished data). The sequence motif
responsible for Cat1 up-regulation during wounding was found
to overlap with ABRE (G-box) in the Cat1 promoter. This
suggests that H2O2 may be
the signal in wounding-regulated CAT expression.
Together with catalase, ascorbate peroxidase (APX) controls the amount
of H2O2 present within the
plant cell (but not the apoplast) so that it rarely approaches the
concentrations that inhibit metabolism and trigger cell death. Several
sequence motifs, characteristic of the heat shock element, are present
in the promoters of pea (Pisum sativum) and Arabidopsis
APX1 genes (Storozhenko et al., 1998
). In addition,
sequences similar to the cis-elements as-1 from the CaMV promoter, ocs
from ocs promoter, and the H-box recognized by proteins of the MYB
family were found in the promoter of the APX1 gene. The heat
shock cis-element contributes to the induction of the gene by heat
shock in vivo and only partially to the induction mediated by methyl
viologen, a superoxide generating herbicide.
The Arabidopsis binding protein, CEO1, was found not only to confer
tolerance to oxidative stress caused by tert-butylhydroperoxide, but
also to give cross-tolerance to
H2O2 and the superoxide
generator, diamide, in a Yap-1 yeast mutant (Belles-Boix et
al., 2000
). CEO1 interacts physically with two
DNA-binding-like proteins, and this suggests that CEO1 is a cofactor
interacting with transcription factors involved in responses to stress.
It is interesting to note that no CEO1 homologs have been reported to
date in animals or microbes.
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REDOX (OXIDANT AND ANTIOXIDANT)-MEDIATED SIGNALING |
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The concept that redox signals are key regulators of plant
metabolism, morphology, and development is widely accepted. Key electron transport components, particularly plastoquinone and ubiquinone, have recently been shown to play a major role in local and
systemic acquired resistance responses. Moreover, the importance of AOS
in such responses has been repeatedly demonstrated (Levine et al.,
1994
; Alvarez et al., 1998
; Chamnongpol et al., 1998
). For example,
H2O2 is considered to be a
local and systemic signal involved in the adaptation of leaves to high
light (Karpinski et al., 1999
). Similarly,
H2O2 induces synthesis of
heat shock proteins and tolerance to heat shock as well as to low
temperatures (Prasad et al., 1994
; Foyer et al., 1997
).
H2O2 has now also been shown to be a crucial component of movement and growth responses, particularly those induced by environmental stimuli (Table
II). H2O2 is, therefore, central
to cross-tolerance phenomena and a key component in the stress survival
network. In response to any stress, the flux of
H2O2 generation is
increased. Moreover, the plant cell is able to monitor the extent of
flux enhancement or accumulation. Relatively small increases or
localized bursts of H2O2
influence only part of the network and modify gene expression in such a
way as to strengthen plant defense responses. We conclude that changes
in H2O2 homeostasis are a
pivotal signaling event allowing the general enhancement of stress
tolerance. In contrast, large increases in
H2O2 trigger a distinct
local sequence of events in gene expression that leads inevitably to
programmed cell death. This effective strategy allows rapid,
appropriate, and flexible responses to changing environmental
threats.
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Much remains to be resolved concerning the components of the
H2O2-induced signaling
cascade and the mechanism(s) by which information on redox status is
used to modify gene expression. The role of mitogen-activated protein
kinases (MAPKs) in oxidative stress signaling has been recently
demonstrated in Arabidopsis. A MAPKKK, ANP1, that activates a specific
class of stress-induced MAPKs, was found to be induced by
H2O2 (Kovtun et al., 2000
). Evidence for intensive cross-talk between oxidative stress and plant
growth, mediated by the MAPK signaling cascade, was provided by the
observed strong effect of
H2O2 on MAPKs activation
together with the repressive action of MAPKs on auxin-inducible
promoters. Oxidants such as
H2O2 interact with other
signaling systems, particularly hormones (Table II). They also
influence and modify the action of other secondary messengers such as
Ca2+ and NO. To date, however, unlike animals,
the formation of peroxynitrite has not been found to be critical in NO
action. Similarly, H2O2 has
a strong regulatory influence on fluxes through
Ca2+ channels and on Ca2+
concentrations in different cellular compartments. Most importantly, the recent observation that
H2O2 is transported from
the apoplast to the cytosol through water channels (aquaporins; Fig.
2) suggests other possibilities for
regulation of signal transduction via modulation of transport
systems.
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The evidence discussed above supports the view that
H2O2 acts as a signal
transducing molecule in optimal and stress conditions. The life-time of
H2O2 in planta is
determined by the capacity of the two major antioxidant buffers of the
plant cell, ascorbate and glutathione, together with the antioxidant
enzymes that use these antioxidants (Noctor and Foyer, 1998
). Most
plant cells contain very large quantities of ascorbate (10-100
mM) and glutathione (1-10 mM), and most
intracellular compartments, hence, have the capacity to deal with very
high fluxes of H2O2
production (Noctor et al., 2002
). Here, we define the compartment
outside the plasma membrane, including the cell wall, as the apoplasm
and everything inside the plasma membrane as the cytoplasm. In
comparison with the cytoplasm, the apoplasm has relatively little
antioxidant defense and, hence,
H2O2 accumulates when
H2O2 synthesis (in the plasmalemma or cell wall) is increased. This causes oxidation of the
apoplast as observed during the hypersensitive response to pathogens or
upon exposure to ozone. A strong oxidative signal can persist on the
apoplastic face of the plasmalemma causing modifications in calcium
transport and other ion fluxes as well as modifying plasmalemma-based
electron transport systems (Fig. 2). In contrast,
H2O2 transported into the
cytoplasm via the aquaporins is immediately neutralized, and the redox
state of the cytoplasm can, hence, be maintained at a very different
level than that of the apoplasm. Moreover, rapid compartment-specific
differences in redox state (and, hence, signaling) that influence the
operation of many fundamental processes in plant cells can be achieved
by modifying AOS (H2O2)
production or by repression or activation of the antioxidant defenses
or by both. Rapid cell death responses, such as occur in the aleurone
cells of cereal grains, incorporate both of these events (Bethke and
Jones, 2001
).
Specific compartment-based signaling can also be achieved via
differential changes in the amounts and relative reduction states of
the ascorbate and glutathione pools (Noctor et al., 2000
). GSH and
ascorbate are key components of redox signaling. The
ascorbate/dehydroascorbate and GSH/oxidized glutathione redox couples
have been shown to modulate gene expression (Baier et al., 2000
; Noctor
et al., 2000
).
Although glutathione has long been considered as a transcriptional
regulator, ascorbate-mediated regulation of gene expression has only
recently been demonstrated (Baier et al., 2000
; Veljovic-Jovanovic et
al., 2001
). Thiols such as thioredoxin, dithiothreitol, Cys, and GSH
enhance NF-
B DNA binding activity in animal systems (Galter et al.,
1994
; Arnér and Holmgren, 2000
). GSH-responsive elements are
present in the promoters of GST genes and in genes involved in the synthesis of phytoalexins (Dron et al., 1988
; Levine et al.,
1994
). We have also previously suggested that the low availability of
reducing power in the bundle sheath compared with the mesophyll cells
of maize leaves may control the intercellular distribution of
antioxidant enzymes such as glutathione reductase (GR). The GR enzyme
protein is localized exclusively in the maize leaf mesophyll cells, but
GR transcripts are found in both bundle sheath and mesophyll cells of
maize leaves (Pastori et al., 2000
). This suggests that redox control
of translation is a key determinant of protein abundance in maize.
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CONCLUSIONS |
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The ways that plants respond to stress in the physical environment is crucial for productivity. From an agricultural perspective, environmental stresses constitute the most significant factors leading to substantial and unpredictable decreases in crop yield at the present time. The genome-environment interaction is also a key determinant to plant tissue composition (quality factors), anatomy, morphology, and development. Plants have to integrate a diversity of environmental and metabolic signals; they do this via a network of interacting signal transduction pathways that together regulate gene expression during stress. It is not surprising that a common "alarm" signaling system has evolved to provide pre-emptive defenses and protection against the many challenges of a harmful environment. In our view, this alarm signal is oxidative in nature, employing H2O2 and other AOS as key signals and messengers. These components are also clearly involved in the regulation of development and differentiation. Agriculture requires fast growth and high yield particularly in cereals. The interaction of signals conferring cross-tolerance and developmental traits and its influence on crop growth and yield is, therefore, a priority in programs for improving plant stress tolerance.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Received November 27, 2001; returned for revision February 19, 2002; accepted March 15, 2002.
1 This work was supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) of the United Kingdom (to G.M.P.). IACR receives grant-aided support from the BBSRC.
* Corresponding author; e-mail christine.foyer{at}bbsrc.ac.uk; fax 44-1582-763010.
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.011021.
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LITERATURE CITED |
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B and AP-1.
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