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First published online September 16, 2005; 10.1104/pp.105.066407 Plant Physiology 139:991-998 (2005) © 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists
Nitric Oxide Mediates the Fungal Elicitor-Induced Hypericin Production of Hypericum perforatum Cell Suspension Cultures through a Jasmonic-Acid-Dependent Signal Pathway1State Key Lab of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, College of Life Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310012, People's Republic of China (M.-J.X., M.-Y.Z.); and Department of Biotechnology, Zhejiang Gongshang University, Hangzhou 310035, People's Republic of China (M.-J.X., J.-F.D.)
Fungal elicitor prepared from the cell walls of Aspergillum niger induces multiple responses of Hypericum perforatum cells, including nitric oxide (NO) generation, jasmonic acid (JA) biosynthesis, and hypericin production. To determine the role of NO and JA in elicitor-induced hypericin production, we study the effects of NO scavenger 2- to 4-carboxyphenyl-4,4, 5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide (cPITO), nitric oxide synthase inhibitor S,S'-1,3-phenylene-bis(1,2-ethanediyl)-bis-isothiourea, and inhibitors of the octadecanoid pathway on elicitor-induced NO generation, JA biosynthesis, and hypericin production. Pretreatment of the cells with cPITO and JA biosynthesis inhibitors suppresses not only the elicitor-induced NO generation and JA accumulation but also the elicitor-induced hypericin production, which suggests that both NO and JA are involved in elicitor-induced hypericin biosynthesis. S,S'-1,3-phenylene-bis(1,2-ethanediyl)-bis-isothiourea and cPITO inhibit both elicitor-induced NO generation and JA biosynthesis, while JA biosynthesis inhibitors do not affect the elicitor-induced NO generation, indicating that JA acts downstream of NO generation and that its biosynthesis is regulated by NO. External application of NO via its donor sodium nitroprusside induces hypericin production in the absence of fungal elicitor. Sodium-nitroprusside-induced hypericin production is blocked by JA biosynthesis inhibitors, showing that JA biosynthesis is essential for NO-induced hypericin production. The results demonstrate a causal relationship between elicitor-induced NO generation, JA biosynthesis, and hypericin production in H. perforatum cells and indicate a sequence of signaling events from NO to hypericin production, within which NO mediates the elicitor-induced hypericin biosynthesis at least partially via a JA-dependent signaling pathway.
Production of secondary metabolites with distinct and complex structures in plants by cell cultures has been one of the most extensively explored areas in recent years owing to the enormous commercial value of those compounds, the scarcity of the plants in the world, and the extremely low levels of such compounds in plants. Application of plant cell culture for the production of useful secondary metabolites, however, is still limited due to the low yield of the desired compounds.
The synthesis of many secondary metabolites in plants is widely believed to be part of the responses of plants to pathogenic attack. The use of elicitors from microorganisms has been one of the most effective strategies for improving the productivity of useful secondary metabolites in plant cell cultures (Roberts and Shuler, 1997
Nitric oxide (NO) is a bioactive molecule that exerts a number of diverse signal functions in phylogenetically distant species (Beligni and Lamattina, 2000
In addition to NO, jasmonic acid (JA) and its derivatives, such as methyl jasmonate (MeJA), have been recognized as another class of elicitor signal transducers in plant cells (Creelman and Mullet, 1997 Although both JA biosynthesis and NO accumulation are the best-characterized early responses of plants to elicitor and pathogen infection, their relationship in mediating elicitor-induced useful secondary metabolite biosynthesis in plant cells is still not well characterized. This information is essential for elucidating the elicitor signaling mechanism in plant cells. Here, we report that the elicitors prepared from the cell walls of Aspergillum niger stimulated hypericin production of Hypericum perforatum cell cultures and that both NO and JA were involved in mediating the elicitor-induced hypericin production in the cells. Furthermore, our results demonstrated that NO and JA triggered the elicitor-induced hypericin biosynthesis at least partially through the same signal transduction pathway within which JA acted downstream of NO.
Elicitor-Induced Hypericin Production
Figure 1 shows the time courses of hypericin production of normal (control) H. perforatum suspension cells and cells treated with 50 µg mL1 elicitor on day 5. The results showed that the production of hypericin by H. perforatum cells was significantly increased after elicitor treatment, achieving 4.2-fold higher over the control after 25 d of elicitor treatment. This is in agreement with the previous observation, which showed that the elicitor derived from the cell walls of A. niger stimulated secondary metabolite biosynthesis of plant cells (Zhao et al., 2001
As shown in Figure 2, elicitor-induced hypericin production of the cells is dose dependent. Hypericin production increased relatively with the addition of elicitor over the concentration ranged of 0 to 60 µg mL1, but once the concentrations of the elicitor exceeded 80 µg mL1, addition of elicitor actually had a light inhibitory effect on hypericin production.
Elicitor-Induced NO Generation
Greiss reagent and the hemoglobin assay are the most frequently used methods for the determination of NO released by cells (Delledonne et al., 2001
Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) is instrumental in the generation of NO in the animal systems. As shown in Figure 3B, the activities of NOS were also significantly increased after elicitor treatment, which suggested that NOS or NOS-like enzymes in H. perforatum cells were strongly induced by the fungal elicitor.
JA accumulation is one of the common responses of plant cells to fungal elicitors (Creelman and Mullet, 1997
Dependence of the Elicitor-Induced Hypericin Production on NO Generation and JA Biosynthesis The results of our work indicated that NO generation and JA biosynthesis were two early reactions of H. perforatum cells to the fungal elicitor. However, their relationship and involvement in elicitor-induced hypericin production is not known. To investigate the role of NO and JA in elicitor-induced hypericin production, we determined the effects of NO and JA inhibitors on elicitor-induced hypericin production. As shown in Figure 5, the elicitor-induced hypericin production was blocked by NO-specific scavenger cPITO (Fig. 5C), NOS inhibitor S,S'-1,3-phenylene-bis(1,2- ethanediyl)-bis-isothiourea (PBITU; Fig. 5D), and LOX inhibitors ibuprofen (IBU; Fig. 5E) and nordihydroguaiaretic (NDGA; Fig. 5F), showing that the elicitor-induced hypericin production was dependent on NO generation and JA biosynthesis, or the synthesis of NO and JA were two upstream signaling events essential for the elicitor-induced hypericin production. This conclusion gains further support from the finding that external application of MeJA and NO via its donor SNP reverses the inhibition of JA and NO biosynthesis inhibitors on elicitor-induced hypericin production (Fig. 5, GI).
Dependence of Elicitor-Induced JA Biosynthesis on NO To investigate the relationship between elicitor-induced JA biosynthesis and NO accumulation, we studied the effects of PBITU and cPITO on elicitor-induced JA biosynthesis and NDGA and IBU on elicitor-induced NO accumulation. As shown in Figure 6, the elicitor-induced JA biosynthesis was strongly inhibited by NOS inhibitor PBITU and cPITO (Fig. 6B), while JA biosynthesis inhibitors did not significantly affect the elicitor-induced NO generation (Fig. 6A). The results suggested that the elicitor-induced JA biosynthesis was dependent on NO generation, or the elicitor-induced NO generation was localized upstream of JA and controlled the biosynthesis of JA.
Dependence of NO-Induced Hypericin Production on JA Biosynthesis SNP is utilized as the donor of NO to investigate the effect of exogenous NO on hypericin production of H. perforatum cells. As shown in Figure 5, both SNP and MeJA induce hypericin production of H. perforatum cells in the absence of fungal elicitor (Fig. 5, J and P). SNP-induced hypericin production is blocked by IBU and NDGA (Fig. 5, L and M), while cPITO and PBITU do not inhibit MeJA-induced hypericin biosynthesis (Fig. 5, Q and R). The results indicate that NO triggers hypericin production dependent on JA existence. This conclusion gains further support from the finding that the inhibition of IBU and NDGA on SNP-induced hypericin production is abolished by external application of MeJA (Fig. 5, N and O).
This study shows that elicitors prepared from the cell walls of A. niger induce NO generation, JA accumulation, and hypericin production of H. perforatum cells. The elicitor-induced hypericin production is blocked by NO and JA inhibitors, showing that NO generation and JA biosynthesis are essential for elicitor-induced hypericin production. Pretreatment of cells with NO inhibitors not only suppresses the elicitor-induced NO generation but also inhibits the elicitor-induced JA biosynthesis, which implies that NO and JA act at least partially in the same signaling pathway within which NO is localized upstream of JA. NO-induced hypericin production is blocked by JA biosynthesis inhibitors, indicating that JA is involved in transducing the signal form NO to hypericin production. Thus, our results suggest that NO mediates the elicitor-induced hypericin production through a JA-dependent signaling pathway in H. perforatum cells.
So far, the source of NO in plants is far from fully understood. In animals, biosynthesis of NO is primarily catalyzed by the enzyme NOS that oxidizes L-Arg to L-citrulline and NO. In plants, NO can be synthesized either by enzymatic catalysis or by an inorganic nitrogen pathway. During the last few years, several groups have provided evidence for the existence of NOS-like activity in plants. NOS-like activities have been identified in several plant species such as tobacco, soybean, maize (Zea mays), pea (Pisum sativum), Lupinus albus, and Mucuna hassjoo (Neill et al., 2003
JA accumulation is another common response of plants to biotic and abiotic stresses. The accumulation of JA relatives occurred rapidly in plant tissues and cells after wounding and exposure to fungal elicitor (Mei, 2003
Although both JA accumulation and NO generation are two best-characterized reactions of plant cells to fungal elicitors and are demonstrated to be involved in elicitor-induced secondary metabolite biosynthesis (Modolo et al., 2002
Cell Line and Culture Conditions
The plant cell line for the study was induced from the young stems of Hypericum perforatum growing in Zhejiang Province in China with Murashige and Skoog medium (Murashige and Skoog, 1962
The elicitor was prepared from the liquid culture of the isolate of Aspergillum niger. Liquid cultures were initiated from 7-d potato dextrose agar by inoculating 2-cm3 squares of agar block to 150 mL of potato dextrose agar liquid medium. The flasks were incubated in the dark at 120 runs/min and 25°C for 5 d. The mycelia were collected by filtration, and the elicitor was prepared according to method described by Zhang et al. (2000)
Hypericin extraction and determination was carried out as the method reported by Micali et al. (1996)
Greiss reagent method and the hemoglobin assay are used to determine NO released by the cells (Delledonne et al., 1998
JA was extracted from the cells and quantified following the methods reported by Alami et al. (1999)
LOX was extracted from fresh mass of cells with 50 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) containing 1% (w/v) polybinylpolypyrrolidone and 10 mM mercaptoethanol. The cell mass was homogenized in the buffer with a pestle and mortar on ice and then centrifuged at 12,000g for 30 min at 4°C to retain a cell-free extract for assay. LOX activity was determined by measuring the formation of 13(S)-hydroperoxylinolenic acid at 25°C using linolenic acid as the substrate (Fournier et al., 1993
The NOS activity of H. perforatum cells with various treatments was determined by the citrulline assay method modified from Rees et al. (1995)
Chemicals used in the experiment were mainly obtained from Sigma-Aldrich (cPITO, PBITU, IBU, NDGA, and SNP) and other chemical companies. For the experiments of inhibitors on elicitor- or SNP-induced hypericin production of H. perforatum cells, PBITU, cPITO, IBU, and NDGA dissolved in water or 0.2% dimethyl sulfoxide solution and filtered through 0.22-µm sterile filters (Millipore) were added to 5-d-old cell cultures 20 min before addition of the fungal elicitor or SNP. The cells were filtered and washed with 50 mL of fresh medium to remove the inhibitors after 24 h at which the baseline levels of NO, NOS, and LOX were restored (Figs. 3 and 4) and then resuspended at 0.05 g fresh weight mL1 in fresh culture medium. The cells were harvested for determination of hypericin after 20 d on which the contents of hypericin reached the highest levels (Fig. 1). For the experiments of external NO and JA on hypericin biosynthesis of H. perforatum cells, 5-d-old cell cultures were treated with NO donor SNP and MeJA. After 24 h, the cells were filtered and washed with 50 mL of fresh medium to remove SNP and MeJA and then resuspended at 0.05 g fresh weight mL1 in fresh medium. The cells were then cultured for 20 d and harvested for determination of hypericin. Controls received equivalent volumes of vehicle solvent to ensure that they did not interfere with the experiments. Received May 31, 2005; returned for revision July 8, 2005; accepted July 8, 2005.
1 This work was supported by the Natural Science Foundation of China (grant nos. 3010015 and 30370876) and by the Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province (grant no. 302785). Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.105.066407. * Corresponding author; e-mail maojunxu{at}163.com; fax 8657188051629.
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