methyl-jasmonate has been researched along with 2-6-dichloroisonicotinic-acid* in 5 studies
5 other study(ies) available for methyl-jasmonate and 2-6-dichloroisonicotinic-acid
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Chemically induced expression of rice OSB2 under the control of the OsPR1.1 promoter confers increased anthocyanin accumulation in transgenic rice.
Anthocyanin pigmentation provides an excellent system with which to study the regulation of gene expression in higher plants. In this study, OsPR1.1 promoter was isolated and the promoter activity was monitored using a reporter gene OSB2, which encodes a transcription factor for anthocyanin synthesis in rice plants. We introduced PR::OSB2 plasmid into an isogenic Taichung 65, no. 99-962 T-65 CBA B9F5 (T65 CBA), rice line (Oryza sativa L.) and found that the transgenic rice plants exhibited anthocyanin accumulation by the induced expression of OSB2 after chemical treatments with methyl jasmonate (MeJA) and 2,6-dichloroisonicotinic acid (DCINA). The shoots of the PR::OSB2 transgenic rice plants changed color to red after application of the chemicals accompanying with the increased anthocyanin content to approximately 5-fold by MeJA and 2-fold by DCINA, respectively. The anthocyanin accumulation was consistent with the increase of the expression of OSB2 and anthocyanidin synthase (ANS). This color change system could provide a useful and easy way to produce transgenic plants for monitoring of chemicals in the environment. Topics: Acetates; Anthocyanins; Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors; Cyclopentanes; Gene Expression; Isonicotinic Acids; Oryza; Oxylipins; Plant Proteins; Plants, Genetically Modified; Promoter Regions, Genetic | 2007 |
Modulation of CYP79 genes and glucosinolate profiles in Arabidopsis by defense signaling pathways.
Glucosinolates are natural plant products that function in the defense toward herbivores and pathogens. Plant defense is regulated by multiple signal transduction pathways in which salicylic acid (SA), jasmonic acid, and ethylene function as signaling molecules. Glucosinolate content was analyzed in Arabidopsis wild-type plants in response to single or combinatorial treatments with methyljasmonate (MeJA), 2,6-dichloro-isonicotinic acid, ethylene, and 2,4-dichloro-phenoxyacetic acid, or by wounding. In addition, several signal transduction mutants and the SA-depleted transgenic NahG line were analyzed. In parallel, expression of glucosinolate biosynthetic genes of the CYP79 gene family and the UDPG:thiohydroximate glucosyltransferase was monitored. After MeJA treatment, the amount of indole glucosinolates increased 3- to 4-fold, and the corresponding Trp-metabolizing genes CYP79B2 and CYP79B3 were both highly induced. Specifically, the indole glucosinolate N-methoxy-indol-3-ylmethylglucosinolate accumulated 10-fold in response to MeJA treatment, whereas 4-methoxy-indol-3-ylmethylglucosinolate accumulated 1.5-fold in response to 2,6-dichloro-isonicotinic acid. In general, few changes were seen for the levels of aliphatic glucosinolates, although increases in the levels of 8-methylthiooctyl glucosinolate and 8-methylsulfinyloctyl glucosinolate were observed, particularly after MeJA treatments. The findings were supported by the composition of glucosinolates in the coronatine-insensitive mutant coi1, the ctr1 mutant displaying constitutive triple response, and the SA-overproducing mpk4 and cpr1 mutants. The present data indicate that different indole glucosinolate methoxylating enzymes are induced by the jasmonate and the SA signal transduction pathways, whereas the aliphatic glucosinolates appear to be primarily genetically and not environmentally controlled. Thus, different defense pathways activate subsets of biosynthetic enzymes, leading to the accumulation of specific glucosinolates. Topics: 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic Acid; Acetates; Arabidopsis; Arabidopsis Proteins; Cyclopentanes; Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System; Ethylenes; Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic; Gene Expression Regulation, Plant; Glucosinolates; Immunity, Innate; Indoleacetic Acids; Isoenzymes; Isonicotinic Acids; Mixed Function Oxygenases; Oxylipins; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction; Signal Transduction; Stress, Mechanical | 2003 |
OsBIMK1, a rice MAP kinase gene involved in disease resistance responses.
The activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) has been previously implicated in signal transduction during plant responses to pathogen attack as well as to various environmental stresses. We have isolated from rice a new MAPK cDNA, OsBIMK1 ( O ryza s ativa L. BTH-induced MAPK 1), which encodes a 369-amino-acid protein with moderate to high nucleotide sequence similarity to previously reported plant MAPK genes. OsBIMK1 contains all 11 of the MAPK conserved subdomains and the phosphorylation-activation motif, TEY. We analyzed in detail the expression of OsBIMK1 upon treatment with various chemical and biological inducers of resistance responses in rice and in both incompatible and compatible interactions between rice and Magnaporthe grisea. Expression of OsBIMK1 was activated rapidly upon treatment with benzothiadiazole (BTH) as well as with dichloroisonicotinic acid, probenazole, jasmonic acid and its methyl ester, Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae, or wounding. Expression of OsBIMK1 was induced rapidly during the first 36 h after inoculation with M. grisea in BTH-treated rice seedlings and in an incompatible interaction between M. grisea and a blast-resistant rice genotype. BTH treatment induced a systemic activation of OsBIMK1 expression. These results suggest that OsBIMK1 plays an important role in rice disease resistance. Topics: Acetates; Amino Acid Sequence; Base Sequence; Cloning, Molecular; Cyclopentanes; DNA, Complementary; Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic; Gene Expression Regulation, Plant; Immunity, Innate; Isonicotinic Acids; Magnaporthe; Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases; Molecular Sequence Data; Oryza; Oxylipins; Phylogeny; Plant Diseases; Pseudomonas; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; Signal Transduction; Stress, Mechanical; Thiadiazoles; Thiazoles | 2002 |
A 42 bp fragment of the pmas1' promoter containing an ocs-like element confers a developmental, wound- and chemically inducible expression pattern.
Synthesis of mannopine in plant tissues infected with Agrobacterium tumefaciens is controlled by a divergent promoter (pmas2' and pmas1') that in 479 bp contains all the cis-acting elements necessary to direct tissue-specific and wound-inducible expression. In this report, using transgenic tobacco plants harboring a pmas1'-beta-glucuronidase (GUS) gene fusion, we investigated the developmental expression pattern directed by pmas1' in the early stages of development and the responses of pmas1' to different chemical inducers. It was found that this promoter can respond to auxins, cytokinins, methyl jasmonate (MJ), salicylic acid (SA) and its analogue 2,6-dichloroisonicotinic acid (iNA). Treatment with chemical inducers also showed that the effects of iNA are organ-dependent, that wound-induction is a complex response mediated by at least two different chemical signals, and that MJ stimulates changes in the tissue-specific and developmental expression pattern directed by the ptmas1' promoter. Using chimeric promoters we demonstrate that an ocs-like element (ocs+1) directs MJ responses in an orientation-dependent manner and that sequences around the ocs+1 are important to maintain the inducible and developmental properties of this cis-regulatory element. Topics: Acetates; Agrobacterium tumefaciens; Amino Acid Oxidoreductases; Cyclopentanes; Cytokinins; DNA; Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental; Gene Expression Regulation, Plant; Genes, Plant; Glucuronidase; Histocytochemistry; Hydro-Lyases; Indoleacetic Acids; Isonicotinic Acids; Nicotiana; Oxylipins; Plant Leaves; Plant Roots; Plants, Genetically Modified; Plants, Toxic; Plasmids; Promoter Regions, Genetic; Recombinant Fusion Proteins; Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid; Salicylic Acid; Sequence Deletion | 1998 |
The promoter of the plant defensin gene PDF1.2 from Arabidopsis is systemically activated by fungal pathogens and responds to methyl jasmonate but not to salicylic acid.
The plant defensin PDF1.2 has previously been shown to accumulate systemically via a salicylic acid-independent pathway in leaves of Arabidopsis upon challenge by fungal pathogens. To further investigate the signalling and transcriptional processes underlying plant defensin induction, a DNA fragment containing 1184 bp and 1232 bp upstream of the transcriptional and translational start sites, respectively, was cloned by inverse PCR. To test for promoter activity this DNA fragment was linked to the beta-glucuronidase (GUS)-encoding region of the UidA gene as a translational fusion and introduced into Arabidopsis ecotype C-24. Challenge of the transgenic plants with the fungal pathogens Alternaria brassicicola and Botrytis cinerea resulted in both local and systemic induction of the reporter gene. Wounding of the transgenic plants had no effect on GUS activity. Treatment of the transgenic plants with either jasmonates or the active oxygen generating compound paraquat strongly induced the reporter gene. In contrast, neither salicylate nor its functional analogues 2,6-dichloroisonicotinic acid and 1,2,3-benzothiodiazole-7-carbothioic acid S-methyl ester resulted in reporter gene induction. These results are consistent with the existence of a salicylic acid-independent signalling pathway, possibly involving jasmonates as regulators, that is triggered by pathogen challenge but not by wounding. The transgenic plants containing the PDF1.2-based promoter-reporter construct will provide useful tools for future genetic dissection of this novel systemic signalling pathway. Topics: Acetates; Alternaria; Amino Acid Sequence; Antifungal Agents; Arabidopsis; Base Sequence; Botrytis; Cyclopentanes; Defensins; DNA Primers; Gene Expression Regulation, Plant; Genes, Reporter; Glucuronidase; Isonicotinic Acids; Molecular Sequence Data; Oligonucleotides, Antisense; Oxylipins; Plant Growth Regulators; Plant Leaves; Plant Proteins; Polymerase Chain Reaction; Promoter Regions, Genetic; Protein Biosynthesis; Recombinant Fusion Proteins; Salicylic Acid; Signal Transduction; Transcription, Genetic; Transcriptional Activation | 1998 |