Abstract
Background: Riverine ecosystems, highly sensitive to climate change and human activities, are characterized by rapid environmental change to fluctuating water levels and siltation, causing stress on their biological components. We have little understanding of mechanisms by which riverine plant species have developed adaptive strategies to cope with stress in dynamic environments while maintaining growth and development.Results: We report that poplar (Populus spp.) has evolved a systems level "stress proteome" in the leaf-stem-root apoplast continuum to counter biotic and abiotic factors. To obtain apoplast proteins from P. deltoides, we developed pressure-chamber and water-displacement methods for leaves and stems, respectively. Analyses of 303 proteins and corresponding transcripts coupled with controlled experiments and bioinformatics demonstrate that poplar depends on constitutive and inducible factors to deal with water, pathogen, and oxidative stress. However, each apoplast possessed a unique set of proteins, indicating that response to stress is partly compartmentalized. Apoplast proteins that are involved in glycolysis, fermentation, and catabolism of sucrose and starch appear to enable poplar to grow normally under water stress. Pathogenesis-related proteins mediating water and pathogen stress in apoplast were particularly abundant and effective in suppressing growth of the most prevalent poplar pathogen Melampsora. Unexpectedly, we found diverse peroxidases that appear to be involved in stress-induced cell wall modification in apoplast, particularly during the growing season. Poplar developed a robust antioxidative system to buffer oxidation in stem apoplast.Conclusion: These findings suggest that multistress response in the apoplast constitutes an important adaptive trait for poplar to inhabit dynamic environments and is also a potential mechanism in other riverine plant species.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 674 |
Journal | BMC Genomics |
Volume | 11 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Nov 29 2010 |
Funding
We thank Y. Kang, M. Monroe, G. Pelletier, K-H. Han, and J-H. Ko for assistance, and J. Kreuzwieser, V. Chiang, and S. Strauss for discussions on the manuscript. MS was conducted at the Life Sciences and Biotechnology Institute, Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station, Mississippi State University. S.J. and T.J.T. were supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research. Oak Ridge National Laboratory is managed by UT-Battelle, LLC, for the U.S. Department of Energy under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725. This work was funded by NSF (DBI-0501890 and IOS-0845834) to C. Y.
Funders | Funder number |
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National Science Foundation | IOS-0845834, DBI-0501890 |
U.S. Department of Energy | |
Directorate for Biological Sciences | 0845834, 0501890 |
Office of Science | |
Biological and Environmental Research | |
Oak Ridge National Laboratory | DE-AC05-00OR22725 |