EVIDENCE THAT HEAT AND ULTRAVIOLET-RADIATION ACTIVATE A COMMON STRESS-RESPONSE PROGRAM IN PLANTS THAT IS ALTERED IN THE UVH6 MUTANT OF ARABIDOPSIS-THALIANA

Citation
Me. Jenkins et al., EVIDENCE THAT HEAT AND ULTRAVIOLET-RADIATION ACTIVATE A COMMON STRESS-RESPONSE PROGRAM IN PLANTS THAT IS ALTERED IN THE UVH6 MUTANT OF ARABIDOPSIS-THALIANA, Plant physiology, 115(4), 1997, pp. 1351-1358
Citations number
46
Journal title
ISSN journal
00320889
Volume
115
Issue
4
Year of publication
1997
Pages
1351 - 1358
Database
ISI
SICI code
0032-0889(1997)115:4<1351:ETHAUA>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
The uvh6 mutant of Arabidopsis was previously isolated in a screen for increased sensitivity to ultraviolet (UV) radiation. uvh6 mutant plan ts were killed by incubation at 37 degrees C for 4 d, a treatment not lethal to wild-type plants. Furthermore, under permissive conditions, uvh6 plants were yellow-green with an approximately one-third lower ch lorophyll content. Genetic analysis of the uvh6 mutant strongly sugges ted that all three mutant phenotypes were due to mutation at the same genetic locus. To understand UVH6 function more fully, the response of wild-type plants to growth at elevated temperatures and exposure to U V radiation was analyzed. Wild-type plants grown at 30 degrees C were as UV-hypersensitive and yellow-green as uvh6 mutant plants grown at 2 4 degrees C. Mutant uvh6 plants induced heat-shock protein HSP21 at a lower threshold temperature than wild-type plants, indicating that the uvh6 mutant was exhibiting signs of heat stress at a 4 to 5 degrees C lower temperature than wild-type plants. We propose that UV damage an d heat induce a common stress response in plants that leads to tissue death and reduced chloroplast function, and that the UVH6 product is a negative regulator of this response.