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Dissection of Root Transcriptional Responses to Low pH, Aluminum Toxicity and Iron Excess Under Pi-Limiting Conditions in Arabidopsis Wild-Type and stop1 Seedlings

Acidic soils constrain plant growth and development in natural and agricultural ecosystems because of the combination of multiple stress factors including high levels of Fe(3+), toxic levels of Al(3+), low phosphate (Pi) availability and proton rhizotoxicity. The transcription factor SENSITIVE TO PR...

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Autores principales: Ojeda-Rivera, Jonathan Odilón, Oropeza-Aburto, Araceli, Herrera-Estrella, Luis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7550639/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33133111
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.01200
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author Ojeda-Rivera, Jonathan Odilón
Oropeza-Aburto, Araceli
Herrera-Estrella, Luis
author_facet Ojeda-Rivera, Jonathan Odilón
Oropeza-Aburto, Araceli
Herrera-Estrella, Luis
author_sort Ojeda-Rivera, Jonathan Odilón
collection PubMed
description Acidic soils constrain plant growth and development in natural and agricultural ecosystems because of the combination of multiple stress factors including high levels of Fe(3+), toxic levels of Al(3+), low phosphate (Pi) availability and proton rhizotoxicity. The transcription factor SENSITIVE TO PROTON RHIZOTOXICITY (STOP1) has been reported to underlie root adaptation to low pH, Al(3+) toxicity and low Pi availability by activating the expression of genes involved in organic acid exudation, regulation of pH homeostasis, Al(3+) detoxification and root architecture remodeling in Arabidopsis thaliana. However, the mechanisms by which STOP1 integrates these environmental signals to trigger adaptive responses to variable conditions in acidic soils remain to be unraveled. It is unknown whether STOP1 activates the expression of a single set of genes that enables root adaptation to acidic soils or multiple gene sets depending on the combination of different types of stress present in acidic soils. Previous transcriptomic studies of stop1 mutants and wild-type plants analyzed the effect of individual types of stress prevalent in acidic soils. An integrative study of the transcriptional regulation pathways that are activated by STOP1 under the combination of major stresses common in acidic soils is lacking. Using RNA-seq, we performed a transcriptional dissection of wild-type and stop1 root responses, individually or in combination, to toxic levels of Al(3+), low Pi availability, low pH and Fe excess. We show that the level of STOP1 is post-transcriptionally and coordinately upregulated in the roots of seedlings exposed to single or combined stress factors. The accumulation of STOP1 correlates with the transcriptional activation of stress-specific and common gene sets that are activated in the roots of wild-type seedlings but not in stop1. Our data indicate that perception of low Pi availability, low pH, Fe excess and Al toxicity converges at two levels via STOP1 signaling: post-translationally through the regulation of STOP1 turnover, and transcriptionally, via the activation of STOP1-dependent gene expression that enables the root to better adapt to abiotic stress factors present in acidic soils.
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spelling pubmed-75506392020-10-29 Dissection of Root Transcriptional Responses to Low pH, Aluminum Toxicity and Iron Excess Under Pi-Limiting Conditions in Arabidopsis Wild-Type and stop1 Seedlings Ojeda-Rivera, Jonathan Odilón Oropeza-Aburto, Araceli Herrera-Estrella, Luis Front Plant Sci Plant Science Acidic soils constrain plant growth and development in natural and agricultural ecosystems because of the combination of multiple stress factors including high levels of Fe(3+), toxic levels of Al(3+), low phosphate (Pi) availability and proton rhizotoxicity. The transcription factor SENSITIVE TO PROTON RHIZOTOXICITY (STOP1) has been reported to underlie root adaptation to low pH, Al(3+) toxicity and low Pi availability by activating the expression of genes involved in organic acid exudation, regulation of pH homeostasis, Al(3+) detoxification and root architecture remodeling in Arabidopsis thaliana. However, the mechanisms by which STOP1 integrates these environmental signals to trigger adaptive responses to variable conditions in acidic soils remain to be unraveled. It is unknown whether STOP1 activates the expression of a single set of genes that enables root adaptation to acidic soils or multiple gene sets depending on the combination of different types of stress present in acidic soils. Previous transcriptomic studies of stop1 mutants and wild-type plants analyzed the effect of individual types of stress prevalent in acidic soils. An integrative study of the transcriptional regulation pathways that are activated by STOP1 under the combination of major stresses common in acidic soils is lacking. Using RNA-seq, we performed a transcriptional dissection of wild-type and stop1 root responses, individually or in combination, to toxic levels of Al(3+), low Pi availability, low pH and Fe excess. We show that the level of STOP1 is post-transcriptionally and coordinately upregulated in the roots of seedlings exposed to single or combined stress factors. The accumulation of STOP1 correlates with the transcriptional activation of stress-specific and common gene sets that are activated in the roots of wild-type seedlings but not in stop1. Our data indicate that perception of low Pi availability, low pH, Fe excess and Al toxicity converges at two levels via STOP1 signaling: post-translationally through the regulation of STOP1 turnover, and transcriptionally, via the activation of STOP1-dependent gene expression that enables the root to better adapt to abiotic stress factors present in acidic soils. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7550639/ /pubmed/33133111 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.01200 Text en Copyright © 2020 Ojeda-Rivera, Oropeza-Aburto and Herrera-Estrella http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Plant Science
Ojeda-Rivera, Jonathan Odilón
Oropeza-Aburto, Araceli
Herrera-Estrella, Luis
Dissection of Root Transcriptional Responses to Low pH, Aluminum Toxicity and Iron Excess Under Pi-Limiting Conditions in Arabidopsis Wild-Type and stop1 Seedlings
title Dissection of Root Transcriptional Responses to Low pH, Aluminum Toxicity and Iron Excess Under Pi-Limiting Conditions in Arabidopsis Wild-Type and stop1 Seedlings
title_full Dissection of Root Transcriptional Responses to Low pH, Aluminum Toxicity and Iron Excess Under Pi-Limiting Conditions in Arabidopsis Wild-Type and stop1 Seedlings
title_fullStr Dissection of Root Transcriptional Responses to Low pH, Aluminum Toxicity and Iron Excess Under Pi-Limiting Conditions in Arabidopsis Wild-Type and stop1 Seedlings
title_full_unstemmed Dissection of Root Transcriptional Responses to Low pH, Aluminum Toxicity and Iron Excess Under Pi-Limiting Conditions in Arabidopsis Wild-Type and stop1 Seedlings
title_short Dissection of Root Transcriptional Responses to Low pH, Aluminum Toxicity and Iron Excess Under Pi-Limiting Conditions in Arabidopsis Wild-Type and stop1 Seedlings
title_sort dissection of root transcriptional responses to low ph, aluminum toxicity and iron excess under pi-limiting conditions in arabidopsis wild-type and stop1 seedlings
topic Plant Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7550639/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33133111
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.01200
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