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Plant Responses to Internal

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Title: Plant Responses to Internal


1
Plant Responses to Internal External Signals
  • Chapter 39

2
I. Signal Transduction and Plant Responses
  • Plants receive signals and respond to them
  • Receptors detect a change in the environment
  • Cells respond to this change and eventually a
    response occurs.

3
  • A potato left growing in darkness
  • Will produce shoots that do not appear healthy,
    and will lack elongated roots
  • These are morphological adaptations for growing
    in darkness
  • Collectively referred to as etiolation

(a) Before exposure to light. Adark-grown potato
has tall,spindly stems and nonexpandedleavesmor
phologicaladaptations that enable theshoots to
penetrate the soil. Theroots are short, but
there is littleneed for water absorptionbecause
little water is lost by theshoots.
Figure 39.2a
4
  • After the potato is exposed to light
  • The plant undergoes profound changes called
    de-etiolation, in which shoots and roots grow
    normally

5
  • The potatos response to light
  • Is an example of cell-signal processing

6
Reception
  • Signals are detected by receptors
  • Receptors - proteins that change shape in
    response to a specific stimulus
  • Receptor for greening in plants - phytochrome
    (contains a light-absorbing pigment attached to a
    specific protein)

7
Transduction
  • Secondary messengers - small, internally produced
    chemicals that transfer and amplify the signal
    from the receptor to proteins that cause the
    specific response.

8
  • An example of signal transduction in plants

Figure 39.4
9
  • Phytochrome - interacts with guanine-binding
    proteins (G-proteins).
  • In the greening response, a light-activated
    phytochrome interacts with an inactive G-protein,
    leading to the replacement of guanine diphosphate
    by guanine triphosphate on the G-protein.
  • This activates the G-protein, which activates
    guanyl cyclase, the enzyme that produces cyclic
    GMP, a second messenger.
  • Second messengers include two types of cyclic
    nucleotides, cyclic adenosine monophosphate
    (cyclic AMP) and cyclic guanosine monophosphate
    (cyclic GMP).

10
  • Phytochrome activation also induces changes in
    cytosolic Ca2.
  • Ca2 binds directly to small proteins called
    calmodulins which bind to and activate several
    enzymes, including several types of protein
    kinases.
  • Activity of kinases, through both the cyclic GMP
    and Ca2-calmodulin second messenger systems
    leads to the expression of genes for proteins
    that function in the greening response.

11
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12
Response
  • Have regulation of 1 or more activities
  • Usually - increased activity of certain enzymes.
  • This occurs through two mechanisms stimulating
    transcription of mRNA for the enzyme or by
    activating existing enzyme molecules
    (post-translational modification).

13
  • Transcriptional Regulation
  • Transcription factors bind directly to specific
    regions of DNA and control the transcription of
    specific genes
  • Some of the activated transcription factors
    increase transcription of specific genes, others
    deactivate negative transcription factors which
    decrease transcription

14
  • Post transcriptional modification of proteins
  • Involves the activation of existing proteins
    involved in the signal response
  • Modify mostly with phosphorylation

15
  • De-Etiolation Greeningproteins
  • Include enzymes that function in photosynthesis
    directly or that supply the chemical precursors
    for chlorophyll production.
  • Others affect the levels of plant hormones that
    regulate growth.

16
II. Plant Responses to Hormones
  • Hormones chemical signals that coordinate parts
    of an organism made at one part of the body and
    transported to another where it binds and causes
    a response
  • Only need a minute amount
  • Can change due to environment

17
Discovery of Plant Hormones
  • Discovered the use of hormones through many
    experiments
  • Plants always grow towards light
  • Phototropism - growth of a shoot toward light
  • Found that the coleoptile while growing will
    curve towards the light.

18
  • Darwin and his son did experiments
  • Observed that a grass seedling bent toward light
    only if the tip of the coleoptile was present.
  • This response stopped if the tip were removed or
    covered with an opaque cap (but not a transparent
    cap).
  • While the tip was responsible for sensing light,
    the actual growth response occurred some distance
    below the tip.
  • They postulated that some signal was transmitted
    from the tip downward.

19
Figure 39.5
20
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21
  • Peter Boysen-Jensen
  • Demonstrated that the signal was a mobile
    chemical substance.
  • Separated the tip from the remainder of the
    coleoptile by a block of gelatin, preventing
    cellular contact, but allowing chemicals to pass.
  • These seedlings were phototropic.
  • However, if the tip were segregated from the
    lower coleoptile by an impermeable barrier, no
    phototropic response occurred.

22
  • F.W. Went
  • Extracted the chemical messenger for phototropism
  • He named it auxin.
  • Modifying the Boysen-Jensen experiment, he placed
    excised tips on agar blocks, collecting the
    hormone.
  • If an agar block with this substance were
    centered on a coleoptile without a tip, the plant
    grew straight upward.
  • If the block were placed on one side, the plant
    began to bend away from the agar block

23
Figure 39.6
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25
Plant Hormones
  • Help coordinate growth and development by
    affecting division, elongation and
    differentiation
  • Help with responses to environmental stimuli
  • Produced in small amounts
  • All are small and can move through the cell walls
  • Each hormone has multiple effects, depending on
    its site of action, its concentration, and the
    developmental stage of the plant.

26
Plant Hormones(Table 39.1 page 808)
  • Auxin
  • Cytokinins
  • Gibbererellins
  • Abscisic Acid
  • Ethylene
  • Brassionosteroids

27
A Survey of Plant Hormones
28
Auxin
  • First plant hormone discovered
  • Promotes the elongation of coleoptiles in
    developing shoots
  • Transported directly through the parencyma tissue
    to other cells

29
  • Auxin transporters
  • Move the hormone out of the basal end of one
    cell, and into the apical end of neighboring cells

EXPERIMENT
Figure 39.7
30
Role of Auxin in Cell Elongation
  • Apical meristem major site of auxin synthesis
  • As auxin moves from the apex down to the region
    of cell elongation, the hormone stimulates cell
    growth.
  • Auxin stimulates cell growth only over a certain
    concentration range, from about 10-8 to 10-4 M.
  • At higher concentrations, auxins may inhibit cell
    elongation, probably by inducing production of
    ethylene, a hormone that generally acts as an
    inhibitor of elongation.

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32
  • Acid growth hypothesis
  • In a shoots region of elongation, auxin
    stimulates plasma membrane proton pumps,
    increasing the voltage across the membrane and
    lowering the pH in the cell wall.
  • Lowering the pH activates expansin enzymes that
    break the cross-links between cellulose
    microfibrils.
  • Increasing the voltage enhances ion uptake into
    the cell, which causes the osmotic uptake of
    water
  • Uptake of water with looser walls elongates the
    cell

33
  • Also alters gene expression rapidly, causing
    cells in the region of elongation to produce new
    proteins within minutes

34
  • Cell elongation in response to auxin

Figure 39.8
35
Lateral Adventitious Root Formation
  • Auxin helps with vegetative propagation
  • Used from plants after cutting
  • Using auxin causes roots to form near the cut
    surface

36
Auxins as Herbicides
  • 2,4-dinitrophenol (2,4-D) synthetic auxin
  • Monocots (maize or turfgrass) can rapidly
    inactivate these synthetic auxins.
  • Eudicots cannot and die from a hormonal overdose.

37
Other Effects of Auxins
  • Affects secondary growth by inducing cell
    division in cambium and by inducing
    differentiation of secondary xylem development
  • Developing seeds synthesize auxin, which promotes
    the growth of fruit
  • Ex if sprayed on tomato plants induces fruit
    development without the step of fertilization.
    Can grow seedless tomatoes.

38
Cytokinins
  • Growth regulators
  • Stimulate cytokinesis or cell division
  • Most common zeatin

39
Control of Cell Division and Differentiation
  • Are produced in actively growing tissues such as
    roots, embryos, and fruits
  • Work together with auxin
  • When used without auxin, they have no effect
  • Need to be in a specific ratio to work

40
Control of Apical Dominance
  • Cytokinins, auxin, and other factors interact in
    the control of apical dominance
  • The ability of a terminal bud to suppress
    development of axillary buds
  • Direct Inhibition Hypothesis - proposed that
    auxin and cytokinin act antagonistically in
    regulating axillary bud growth.
  • Auxin levels would inhibit axillary bud growth,
    while cytokinins would stimulate growth.

41
  • If the terminal bud is removed (auxin is removed)
  • Plants become bushier

Figure 39.9b
42
  • Hypothesis is not necessarily true
  • Recent studies have shown auxin levels increase
    in the axillary buds of decapitated plants

43
Anti-Aging Effects
  • Cytokinis retard the aging of some plant organs
    by inhibiting protein breakdown
  • Leaves removed from a plant and dipped in a
    cytokinin solution stay green much longer.
  • Slows deterioration of leaves on intact plants.
  • Florists use cytokinin sprays to keep cut flowers
    fresh.

44
Gibberellins
  • More than 100 different types
  • Chemical secreted that produces hyperelongation
    of stems
  • Such as stem elongation, fruit growth, and seed
    germination

45
Stem Elongation
  • Roots young leaves site of production
  • Gibberellins stimulate growth in both leaves and
    stems but have little effect on root growth.

46
  • In stems, gibberellins stimulate cell elongation
    and cell division.
  • One hypothesis proposes that gibberellins
    stimulate cell wall loosening enzymes that
    facilitate the penetration of expansin proteins
    into the cell well.
  • So auxin, by acidifying the cell wall and
    activating expansins, and gibberellins, by
    facilitating the penetration of expansins, act
    together to promote elongation.

47
  • Ex of gibberellins at work
  • After treatment with gibberellins, dwarf pea
    plant grow to normal height.
  • However, if applied to normal plants, there is
    often no response

48
Fruit Growth
  • Both auxin and gibberellins must be present for
    fruit to set.
  • Spray gibberellins to seedless grapes causing
    them to grow much larger

49
Germination
  • Embryo of seeds has a large supply of
    gibberellins
  • After hydration of the seed, the release of
    gibberellins from the embryo signals the seed to
    break dormancy and germinate
  • Support the growth of cereal seedlings by
    stimulating the synthesis of digestive enzymes
    that mobilize stored nutrients

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51
Brassinosteroids
  • Are similar to the sex hormones of animals
  • Induce cell elongation and division
  • Also stop leaf abscission and promote xylem
    differentiation

52
Abscisic Acid (ABA)
  • Slows down growth
  • Seed dormancy
  • Drought tolerance
  • Antagonizes the actions of the growth hormones
  • Ratio of abscisic acid to growth hormones that
    determines the growth

53
Seed Dormancy
  • Dormancy is important
  • Germinate only when conditions are right
  • ABA allows for dormancy by inhibiting germination
    and by producing enzymes to help control
    dehydrations
  • Many types of dormant seeds will germinate when
    ABA is removed or inactivated

54
  • Precocious germination is observed in maize
    mutants
  • That lack a functional transcription factor
    required for ABA to induce expression of certain
    genes

55
Drought Stem
  • ABA - primary internal signal that enables plants
    to withstand drought.
  • When a plant begins to wilt, ABA accumulates in
    leaves and causes stomata to close rapidly,
    reducing transpiration and preventing further
    water loss

56
Ethylene
  • Produced in response
  • Stress (drought)
  • Fruit ripening
  • Programmed cell death
  • To high concentration of externally applied auxin

57
Triple Response to Mechanical Stress
  • Allows a growing shoot to avoid obstacles
  • 3 parts to the response - stem elongation slows,
    the stem thickens, and curvature causes the stem
    to start growing horizontally

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59
  • Steps -
  • As the stem continues to grow horizontally, its
    tip touches upward intermittently.
  • If the probes continue to detect a solid object
    above, then another pulse of ethylene is
    generated and the stem continues its horizontal
    progress.
  • If upward probes detect no solid object, then
    ethylene production decreases, and the stem
    resumes its normal upward growth.

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61
  • Ethylene-insensitive mutants
  • Fail to undergo the triple response after
    exposure to ethylene
  • Lack a receptor

62
  • Other types of mutants
  • Undergo the triple response in air but do not
    respond to inhibitors of ethylene synthesis

Figure 39.14b
63
  • Other mutants undergo the triple response in the
    absence of physical obstacles.
  • Some mutants (eto) produce ethylene at 20 times
    the normal rate.
  • Other mutants (constitutive triple-response (ctr)
    mutants) undergo the triple response in air but
    do not respond to inhibitors of ethylene
    synthesis.
  • Ethylene signal transduction is permanently
    turned on even though there is no ethylene
    present

64
  • A summary of ethylene signal transduction mutants

Figure 39.15
65
Apoptosis - Programmed Cell Death
  • Burst of ethylene - the programmed destruction of
    cells, organs, or whole plants
  • New enzymes are made to help break down many
    chemical components, including chlorophyll, DNA,
    RNA, proteins, and membrane lipids

66
Loss of Leaves (abscission)
  • A change in the balance of ethylene and auxin
    controls abscission.
  • An aged leaf produces less and less auxin and
    this makes the cells of the abscission layer more
    sensitive to ethylene.

67
  • When an autumn leaf falls, the breaking point is
    an abscission layer near the base of the petiole.
  • The parenchyma cells here have very thin walls,
    and there are no fiber cells around the vascular
    tissue.
  • The abscission layer is further weakened when
    enzymes hydrolyze polysaccharides in the cell
    walls.
  • The weight of the leaf, with the help of the
    wind, causes a separation within the abscission
    layer.

68
Fruit Ripening
  • Immature fruits - tart, hard, and green but
    become edible at the time of seed maturation,
    triggered by a burst of ethylene production.
  • Enzymatic breakdown of cell wall components
    softens the fruit, and conversion of starches and
    acids to sugars makes the fruit sweet.

69
  • A chain reaction occurs during ripening ethylene
    triggers ripening and ripening, in turn, triggers
    even more ethylene production
  • Because ethylene is a gas, the signal to ripen
    even spreads from fruit to fruit.
  • One bad fruit can spoil others
  • By keeping ethylene from fruit, ripening is
    prevented till needed

70
Systems Biology and Hormone Interactions
  • Interactions between hormones and their signal
    transduction pathways
  • Make it difficult to predict what effect a
    genetic manipulation will have on a plant
  • Systems biology seeks a comprehensive
    understanding of plants
  • That will permit successful modeling of plant
    functions

71
III. Plant Responses to Light
  • Photomorphogenesis effects of light on plant
    morphology
  • Plants detect the light its direction,
    intensity wavelength
  • Action spectrum - the measure of physiological
    response to light wavelength
  • Photosynthesis has 2 peaks red and blue

72
  • Observations led researchers to two major classes
    of light receptors
  • Blue-light
  • Phytochromes - absorb mostly red light

73
Blue Light Photoreceptors
  • Control hypocotyl elongation, stomatal opening,
    and phototropism
  • 3 types of pigment that determine blue light
  • Cryptochromes (for the inhibition of hypocotyl
    elongation)
  • Phototropin (for phototropism),
  • Zeaxanthin (carotenoid-based photoreceptor for
    stomatal opening).

74
Phytochromes
  • Regulate many of a plants responses to light
    throughout its life

75
Switch and Seed Germination
  • Experiment - exposed seeds to a few minutes of
    monochromatic light of various wavelengths and
    stored them in the dark for two days and recorded
    the number of seeds that had germinated under
    each light regimen.
  • While red light increased germination, far red
    light inhibited it and the response depended on
    the last flash

76
During the 1930s, USDA scientists briefly
exposed batches of lettuce seeds to red light or
far-red light to test the effects on germination.
After the light exposure, the seeds were placed
in the dark, and the results were compared with
control seeds that were not exposed to light.
EXPERIMENT
The bar below each photo indicates the sequence
of red-light exposure, far-red light exposure,
and darkness. The germination rate increased
greatly in groups of seeds that were last
exposedto red light (left). Germination was
inhibited in groups of seeds that were last
exposed to far-red light (right).
RESULTS
Red light stimulated germination, and far-red
light inhibited germination.The final exposure
was the determining factor. The effects of red
and far-red light were reversible.
CONCLUSION
Figure 39.18
77
  • Photoreceptor responsible for these opposing
    effects of red and far-red light is a -
    phytochrome.
  • It consists of a protein (a kinase) covalently
    bonded to a nonprotein part that functions as a
    chromophore, the light absorbing part of the
    molecule.
  • The chromophore reverts back and forth between
    two isomeric forms with one (Pr) absorbing red
    light and becoming (Pfr), and the other (Pfr)
    absorbing far-red light and becoming (Pr).

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  • Interconversion between isomers acts as a
    switching mechanism that controls various
    light-induced events in the life of the plant.
  • The Pfr form triggers many of the plants
    developmental responses to light.
  • Exposure to far-red light inhibits the
    germination response.

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81
  • Plants synthesize phytochrome as Pr and if seeds
    are kept in the dark the pigment remains almost
    entirely in the Pr form.
  • If the seeds are illuminated with sunlight, the
    phytochrome is exposed to red light (along with
    other wavelengths) and much of the Pr is
    converted to (Pfr), triggering germination

82
Switch and Shade Avoidance
  • Provides plants with information about the
    quality of light.
  • During the day, with the mix of both red and
    far-red radiation, the Pr ltgtPfr photoreversion
    reaches a dynamic equilibrium.
  • Plants can use the ratio of these two forms to
    monitor and adapt to changes in light conditions

83
Biological Clocks
  • Many plant processes, such as transpiration and
    synthesis of certain enzymes, oscillate during
    the day.
  • Due to changes in light levels, temperature, and
    relative humidity that accompany the 24-hour
    cycle of day and night.
  • Even under constant conditions in a growth
    chamber, many physiological processes in plants
    continue to oscillate with a frequency of about
    24 hours.

84
  • Circadian rhythms - physiological cycles with a
    frequency of about 24 hours and that are not
    directly paced by any known environmental
    variable
  • All research thus far indicates that the
    oscillator for circadian rhythms is endogenous
    (internal).

85
  • If an organism is kept in a constant environment,
    its circadian rhythms deviate from a 24-hour
    period, with free-running periods ranging from 21
    to 27 hours
  • Not synchronized with the outside world
  • Can interrupt a biological rhythm but like
    clockwork it goes right back
  • May be due to a transcription factor by a
    positive feedback

86
  • Many legumes
  • Lower their leaves in the evening and raise them
    in the morning

Figure 39.21
87
Light Entrains the Biological Clock
  • Light controls the clock
  • Both phytochrome and blue-light photoreceptors
    can entrain circadian rhythms of plants
  • Involves turning cellular responses off and on by
    means of the Pr ltgt Pfr switch.

88
  • In darkness, the phytochrome ratio shifts
    gradually in favor of the Pr form
  • When the sun rises, the Pfr level suddenly
    increases This sudden increase in Pfr each day at
    dawn resets the biological clock.
  • Plants use the length of days to mark seasons

89
Photoperiodism
  • Physiological response to photoperiod (relative
    lengths of night and day)
  • Ex - flowering

90
Photoperiodism Control of Flowering
  • Flowering - requires a certain photoperiod
  • Garner Allard
  • Looked at a mutant variety of tobacco (Maryland
    Mammoth)
  • Seasoned in the winter instead of the summer
  • In light-regulated chambers, they discovered that
    this variety would only flower if the day length
    was 14 hours or shorter, which explained why it
    would not flower during the longer days of the
    summer

91
  • Short day plant - it required a light period
    shorter than a critical length to flower
  • Long day plant - will only flower when the light
    period is longer than a critical number of hours
  • Day-neutral plants - flower when they reach a
    certain stage of maturity, regardless of day
    length

92
Critical Night Length
  • 1940s - researchers discovered that it is
    actually night length, not day length, that
    controls flowering and other responses to
    photoperiod
  • Short-day plants are actually long-night plants,
    requiring a minimum length of uninterrupted
    darkness
  • Long-day plants are actually short-night plants.
  • A long-day plant grown on photoperiods of long
    nights that would not normally induce flowering
    will flower if the period of continuous darkness
    are interrupted by a few minutes of light

93
  • Long-day and short-day plants are distinguished
    not by an absolute night length but by whether
    the critical night lengths sets a maximum
    (long-day plants) or minimum (short-day plants)
    number of hours of darkness required for
    flowering
  • Red light - most effective color in interrupting
    the nighttime portion of the photoperiod
  • Plants measure night length very accurately
  • Humans can exploit the photoperiodic control of
    flowering to produce flowers out of season.

94
Is There a Flowering Hormone?
  • The flowering signal, not yet chemically
    identified
  • Is called florigen, and it may be a hormone or a
    change in relative concentrations of multiple
    hormones

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Meristem Transition
  • Outcome of flowering is the transition of a buds
    meristem from a vegetative state to a flowering
    state.
  • Requires that meristem-identity genes that
    specify that the bud will form a flower must be
    switched on.
  • Organ-identity genes are activated in the
    appropriate regions of the meristem.

97
Plant Responses to Gravity
  • Gravitropism responses to gravity
  • Roots demonstrate positive gravitropism
  • Shoots exhibit negative gravitropism.
  • Gravitropism ensures that the root grows in the
    soil and that the shoot reaches sunlight
    regardless of how a seed happens to be oriented
    when it lands
  • Auxin helps with this

98
  • Plants may detect gravity by the settling of
    statoliths
  • Specialized plastids containing dense starch
    grains

Figure 39.25a, b
99
Plant Responses to Mechanical Stimuli
  • Thigmomorphogenesis changes in form that result
    from mechanical perturbation
  • Plants are very sensitive to mechanical stress
  • Rubbing the stems of young plants a few times
    results in plants that are shorter than controls.

100
  • Mechanical stimulation activates a
    signal-transduction pathway that increase
    cytoplasmic calcium, which mediates the activity
    of specific genes, including some which encode
    for proteins that affect cell wall properties.

101
  • Thigmotropism directional growth in response to
    touch (vines)
  • Some plants undergo rapid leaf movement
  • When touched, collapses due to turgor pressure.

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103
Environmental Stresses
  • Drought
  • Plants respond to water deficit by reducing
    transpiration
  • Guard cell lose turgor and the stomata close.
  • Stimulates increased synthesis and release of
    abscisic acid in a leaf, which also signals guard
    cells to close stomata.
  • Deeper roots continue to grow in search of water

104
  • Flooding
  • Can suffocate because the soil lacks the air
    spaces that provide oxygen for cellular
    respiration in the roots.
  • Some plants are adapted to very wet habitats
    some plants may produce ethylene in the roots
    causing some cortical cells to undergo apoptosis,
    which creates air tubes that function as
    snorkels.

105
  • Salt Stresses
  • Excess of sodium chloride threatens plants
    because
  • They lower the water potential of the soil
    causing plants to lose water to the environment
    rather than absorb it.
  • Sodium and certain other ions are toxic to plants
    when their concentrations are relatively high.

106
  • Heat stresses
  • Heat harms and kills because denatures enzymes
    and damages the metabolism
  • Some plants have heat shock proteins plant
    cells begin to make these at about 40ÂșC help to
    prevent denaturing

107
  • Cold Stress
  • Causes a change in fluidity of the membranes
  • When the temperature becomes too cool, lipids are
    locked into crystalline structures and membranes
    lose their fluidity, solute transport and the
    functions of other membrane proteins are
    adversely affected.
  • One solution is to alter lipid composition in the
    membranes, increasing the proportion of
    unsaturated fatty acids, which have shapes that
    keep membranes fluid at lower temperatures.
  • Takes a couple of days for this

108
  • At subfreezing temperatures ice forms in the
    cells walls and intercellular spaces of most
    plants.
  • Solutes in the cytosol depress its freezing
    point.
  • This lowers the extracellular water potential,
    causing water to leave the cytoplasm and,
    therefore, dehydration.

109
V. Plant Defense
  • Need ways to protect themselves from pathogens

110
Plants Deter Herbivores
  • Do so both physically (thorns) and chemically
    (toxins)
  • Canavanine an amino acid
  • Some plants produce this
  • If an insect eats a plant containing canavanine,
    canavanine is incorporated into the insects
    proteins in place of arginine insect dies

111
  • Some plants even recruit predatory animals that
    help defend the plant against specific
    herbivores.
  • Some plants make a volatile molecules which are
    warning signs for nearby plants of the same
    species

112
Plants Use Multiple Lines of Defense
  • First line of defense epidermis periderm
  • Stuff can enter by injuries or openings
  • Second line of defense a chemical attack that
    occurs once the substance enters

113
Gene-for-Gene Recognition
  • Plants generally resistant to pathogens because
    can recognize pathogens
  • Virulent pathogen plant has little defense
    against
  • Avirulent pathogens - gain enough access to its
    host to perpetuate itself without severely
    damaging or killing the plant

114
  • Gene-for-gene recognition is a widespread form of
    plant disease resistance
  • That involves recognition of pathogen-derived
    molecules by the protein products of specific
    plant disease resistance (R) genes

115
Hypersensitive Response
  • Plants can initiate a chemical attack in response
    to molecular signals released from cells damaged
    by infection.
  • Molecules (elicitors - cellulose fragments called
    oligosaccharins released by cell-wall damage)
    induce the production of antimicrobial compounds
    (phytoalexins)

116
  • A pathogen is avirulent
  • If it has a specific Avr gene corresponding to a
    particular R allele in the host plant

Signal molecule (ligand) from Avr gene product
R
Avr allele
Avirulent pathogen
Plant cell is resistant
117
  • If the plant host lacks the R gene that
    counteracts the pathogens Avr gene
  • Then the pathogen can invade and kill the plant

R
118
Plant Response
  • Localized and specific
  • A hypersensitive response against an avirulent
    pathogen
  • Seals off the infection and kills both pathogen
    and host cells in the region of the infection
  • Elicitors cause a broad type of host defense
    response
  • Stimulate the production of phytoalexins
  • Also PR proteins are made by activated genes
    can attack molecules in the cell wall or spread
    the news

119
4 Before they die,infected cellsrelease a
chemicalsignal, probablysalicylic acid.
3 In a hypersensitiveresponse (HR), plantcells
produce anti-microbial molecules,seal off
infectedareas by modifyingtheir walls, andthen
destroythemselves. Thislocalized
responseproduces lesionsand protects
otherparts of an infectedleaf.
5 The signal is distributed to the
rest of the plant.
Signal
5
4
Signaltransductionpathway
6
Hypersensitiveresponse
3
6 In cells remote fromthe infection site,the
chemicalinitiates a signaltransductionpathway.
Signal transductionpathway
Acquiredresistance
2
7
2 This identification step triggers a
signal transduction pathway.
7 Systemic acquired resistance isactivated
theproduction ofmolecules that helpprotect the
cellagainst a diversityof pathogens forseveral
days.
1
Avirulentpathogen
1 Specific resistance is based on the
binding of ligands from the pathogen to
receptors in plant cells.
R-Avr recognition and hypersensitive response
Systemic acquired resistance
Figure 39.31
120
  • Infection also stimulates cross-linking of
    molecules in the cell wall and deposition of
    lignins.
  • This sets up a local barricade that slows spread
    of the pathogen to other parts of the plant.

121
  • If the pathogen is avirulent based on an R-Avr
    match, the localized defense response is more
    vigorous - hypersensitive response (HR).
  • Enhanced production of phytoalexins and PR
    proteins, and the sealing response that
    contains the infection is more effective.
  • After cells at the site of infection mount their
    chemical defense and seal off the area, they
    destroy themselves.

122
Systemic Acquired Resistance (SAR)
  • Nonspecific, providing protection against a
    diversity of pathogens for days
  • Production of chemical signals that spread
    throughout the plant, stimulating production of
    phytoalexins and PR proteins
  • Hypersensitive response, triggered by R-Avr
    recognition, results in localized production of
    antimicrobial molecules, sealing off the infected
    areas, and cell apoptosis

123
  • Hormone for activating SAR - salicylic acid
  • Similar to aspirin

124
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