Axial and Radial Oxylipin Transport.

Plant Physiol

Department of Plant Molecular Biology, University of Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland (D.G., A.Cha., I.F.A., A.K., S.S., A.Ché., E.E.F.); andSchool of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Geneva, University of Lausanne, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland (A.Cha., J.-L.W.)

Published: November 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Jasmonates are important lipid molecules in plants that help regulate defense mechanisms when cells are damaged.
  • Researchers used Arabidopsis mutants with impaired jasmonic acid synthesis to study how these compounds move within the plant.
  • Their findings revealed that jasmonates can travel from damaged shoots to healthy roots and also move between cells within leaves, indicating both axial and radial transport pathways are crucial for plant responses to injury.

Article Abstract

Jasmonates are oxygenated lipids (oxylipins) that control defense gene expression in response to cell damage in plants. How mobile are these potent mediators within tissues? Exploiting a series of 13-lipoxygenase (13-lox) mutants in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) that displays impaired jasmonic acid (JA) synthesis in specific cell types and using JA-inducible reporters, we mapped the extent of the transport of endogenous jasmonates across the plant vegetative growth phase. In seedlings, we found that jasmonate (or JA precursors) could translocate axially from wounded shoots to unwounded roots in a LOX2-dependent manner. Grafting experiments with the wild type and JA-deficient mutants confirmed shoot-to-root oxylipin transport. Next, we used rosettes to investigate radial cell-to-cell transport of jasmonates. After finding that the LOX6 protein localized to xylem contact cells was not wound inducible, we used the lox234 triple mutant to genetically isolate LOX6 as the only JA precursor-producing LOX in the plant. When a leaf of this mutant was wounded, the JA reporter gene was expressed in distal leaves. Leaf sectioning showed that JA reporter expression extended from contact cells throughout the vascular bundle and into extravascular cells, revealing a radial movement of jasmonates. Our results add a crucial element to a growing picture of how the distal wound response is regulated in rosettes, showing that both axial (shoot-to-root) and radial (cell-to-cell) transport of oxylipins plays a major role in the wound response. The strategies developed herein provide unique tools with which to identify intercellular jasmonate transport routes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4634084PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.15.01104DOI Listing

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