Ethylene signals modulate the survival of Arabidopsis leaf explants

Cited 7 time in scopus
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Title
Ethylene signals modulate the survival of Arabidopsis leaf explants
Author(s)
Seung Yong Shin; Chae-Min Lee; Hyun-Soon Kim; C Kim; Jae Heung Jeon; Hyo Jun Lee
Bibliographic Citation
BMC Plant Biology, vol. 23, pp. 281-281
Publication Year
2023
Abstract
Background: Leaf explants are major materials in plant tissue cultures. Incubation of detached leaves on phytohormone-containing media, which is an important process for producing calli and regenerating plants, change their cell fate. Although hormone signaling pathways related to cell fate transition have been widely studied, other molecular and physiological events occurring in leaf explants during this process remain largely unexplored. Results: Here, we identified that ethylene signals modulate expression of pathogen resistance genes and anthocyanin accumulation in leaf explants, affecting their survival during culture. Anthocyanins accumulated in leaf explants, but were not observed near the wound site. Ethylene signaling mutant analysis revealed that ethylene signals are active and block anthocyanin accumulation in the wound site. Moreover, expression of defense-related genes increased, particularly near the wound site, implying that ethylene induces defense responses possibly by blocking pathogenesis via wounding. We also found that anthocyanin accumulation in non-wounded regions is required for drought resistance in leaf explants. Conclusions: Our study revealed the key roles of ethylene in the regulation of defense gene expression and anthocyanin biosynthesis in leaf explants. Our results suggest a survival strategy of detached leaves, which can be applied to improve the longevity of explants during tissue culture.
Keyword
EthyleneSurvival of explantsDefense gene expressionAnthocyaninArabidopsis
ISSN
1471-2229
Publisher
Springer-BMC
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12870-023-04299-4
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Division of Research on National Challenges > Plant Systems Engineering Research > 1. Journal Articles
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