Publication | Open Access
Hydrogen Peroxide Acts Upstream of Nitric Oxide in the Heat Shock Pathway in Arabidopsis Seedlings
144
Citations
55
References
2014
Year
BotanyNitric OxideGeneticsRedox BiologyOxidative StressHeat Shock PathwayAbiotic StressReactive Nitrogen SpeciePlant StressPlant-abiotic InteractionBiochemistryPlant MetabolismBiologyArabidopsis ThalianaNatural SciencesPhysiologyArabidopsis SeedlingsMetabolismMedicineNitrosative StressPlant Physiology
We previously reported that nitric oxide (NO) functions as a signal in thermotolerance. To illustrate its relationship with hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂) in the tolerance of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) to heat shock (HS), we investigated the effects of heat on Arabidopsis seedlings of the following types: the wild type; three NADPH oxidase-defective mutants that exhibit reduced endogenous H₂O₂ levels (atrbohB, atrbohD, and atrbohB/D); and a mutant that is resistant to inhibition by fosmidomycin (noa1, for nitric oxide-associated protein1). After HS, the NO levels in atrbohB, atrbohD, and atrbohB/D seedlings were lower than that in wild-type seedlings. Treatment of the seedlings with sodium nitroprusside or S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine partially rescued their heat sensitivity, suggesting that NO is involved in H₂O₂ signaling as a downstream factor. This point was verified by phenotypic analyses and thermotolerance testing of transgenic seedlings that overexpressed Nitrate reductase2 and NOA1, respectively, in an atrbohB/D background. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays, western blotting, and real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction demonstrated that NO stimulated the DNA-binding activity of HS factors and the accumulation of HS proteins through H₂O₂. These data indicate that H₂O₂ acts upstream of NO in thermotolerance, which requires increased HS factor DNA-binding activity and HS protein accumulation.
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