Coordinated plant defense responses in <i>Arabidopsis</i> revealed by microarray analysis

Peer M. Schenk(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), Kemal Kazan(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), Iain W. Wilson(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), Jonathan P. Anderson(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), Todd Richmond(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), Shauna Somerville(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), John M. Manners(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
October 10, 2000
Cited by 1,369Open Access
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Abstract

Disease resistance is associated with a plant defense response that involves an integrated set of signal transduction pathways. Changes in the expression patterns of 2,375 selected genes were examined simultaneously by cDNA microarray analysis in Arabidopsis thaliana after inoculation with an incompatible fungal pathogen Alternaria brassicicola or treatment with the defense-related signaling molecules salicylic acid (SA), methyl jasmonate (MJ), or ethylene. Substantial changes (up- and down-regulation) in the steady-state abundance of 705 mRNAs were observed in response to one or more of the treatments, including known and putative defense-related genes and 106 genes with no previously described function or homology. In leaf tissue inoculated with A. brassicicola, the abundance of 168 mRNAs was increased more than 2.5-fold, whereas that of 39 mRNAs was reduced. Similarly, the abundance of 192, 221, and 55 mRNAs was highly (>2.5-fold) increased after treatment with SA, MJ, and ethylene, respectively. Data analysis revealed a surprising level of coordinated defense responses, including 169 mRNAs regulated by multiple treatments/defense pathways. The largest number of genes coinduced (one of four induced genes) and corepressed was found after treatments with SA and MJ. In addition, 50% of the genes induced by ethylene treatment were also induced by MJ treatment. These results indicated the existence of a substantial network of regulatory interactions and coordination occurring during plant defense among the different defense signaling pathways, notably between the salicylate and jasmonate pathways that were previously thought to act in an antagonistic fashion.


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