Publication | Closed Access
Targeted alterations in iron homeostasis underlie plant defense responses
176
Citations
48
References
2007
Year
BotanyPlant Defense GeneIron MetabolismGeneticsPlant PathologyRedox BiologyOxidative StressPlant Defence ActivatorBulk SecretionPathogen AttackReactive Oxygen SpecieGene ExpressionCell BiologyBiologyPlant ImmunityNatural SciencesPathogenesisMicrobiologyMedicineReactive Fe3+Plant Physiology
Iron (Fe) is a ubiquitous redox-active element essential for most life. The formation of localized cell wall appositions, the oxidative burst and the production of pathogenesis-related proteins are hallmarks of plant defense responses. Here, we report that iron is a central mediator linking these three phenomena. We show that in response to pathogen attack, reactive Fe3+, but not Fe2+, is deposited at cell wall appositions where it accumulates and mediates the oxidative burst. We provide evidence that the bulk secretion of Fe3+ provoked by pathogen attack leads to intracellular iron depletion, and that H2O2 itself induces ATP-dependent intracellular iron efflux. Finally, we demonstrate that this intracellular iron depletion promotes the transcription of pathogenesis-related genes in concert with H2O2. This work identifies iron as an underlying factor associated with the oxidative burst and regulating cereal defenses, and establishes links between disease-related iron homeostasis in plants and animals.
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