Closely Related NAC Transcription Factors of Tomato Differentially Regulate Stomatal Closure and Reopening during Pathogen Attack 

Minmin Du(Northeast Agricultural University), Qingzhe Zhai(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lei Deng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shuyu Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hongshuang Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Liuhua Yan(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhuo Huang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Wang Bao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hongling Jiang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Tingting Huang(Qingdao Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Changbao Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jianing Wei(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Le Kang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jingfu Li(Northeast Agricultural University), Chuanyou Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
The Plant Cell
July 1, 2014
Cited by 191Open Access
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Abstract

To restrict pathogen entry, plants close stomata as an integral part of innate immunity. To counteract this defense, Pseudomonas syringae pv tomato produces coronatine (COR), which mimics jasmonic acid (JA), to reopen stomata for bacterial entry. It is believed that abscisic acid (ABA) plays a central role in regulating bacteria-triggered stomatal closure and that stomatal reopening requires the JA/COR pathway, but the downstream signaling events remain unclear. We studied the stomatal immunity of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) and report here the distinct roles of two homologous NAC (for NAM, ATAF1,2, and CUC2) transcription factors, JA2 (for jasmonic acid2) and JA2L (for JA2-like), in regulating pathogen-triggered stomatal movement. ABA activates JA2 expression, and genetic manipulation of JA2 revealed its positive role in ABA-mediated stomatal closure. We show that JA2 exerts this effect by regulating the expression of an ABA biosynthetic gene. By contrast, JA and COR activate JA2L expression, and genetic manipulation of JA2L revealed its positive role in JA/COR-mediated stomatal reopening. We show that JA2L executes this effect by regulating the expression of genes involved in the metabolism of salicylic acid. Thus, these closely related NAC proteins differentially regulate pathogen-induced stomatal closure and reopening through distinct mechanisms.


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