Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Pathology and Center for Plant Cell Biology, University of California, Riverside, California 92521
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Infections of plants by the oomycete
Phytophthora infestans
typically result from zoospores, which develop from sporangia at cold temperatures. To help understand the relevant cold-induced signaling pathway, factors regulating the transcription of the zoosporogenesis-specific NIF (nuclear LIM-interactor-interacting factor) gene family were examined. Sequences required for inducing
PinifC3
were identified by analyzing truncated and mutated promoters using the β-glucuronidase reporter in stable transformants. A 7-nucleotide (nt) sequence located 139 bases upstream of the major transcription start point (GGACGAG) proved essential for the induction of
PinifC3
when sporangia were shifted from ambient to cold temperatures. The motif, named the cold box, also conferred cold inducibility to a promoter normally activated only during sexual development. An identical motif was detected in the two other zoosporogenesis-specific NIF genes from
P. infestans
and three
Phytophthora sojae
orthologues, and a closely related sequence was found in
Phytophthora ramorum
orthologues. The 7-nt motif was also found in the promoters of other zoosporogenesis-induced genes. The presence of a cold box-interacting protein in nuclear extracts of
P. infestans
sporangia was demonstrated using electrophoretic mobility shift assays. Furthermore, zoospore release and cold box-regulated transcription were stimulated by the membrane rigidizer dimethyl sulfoxide and inhibited by the membrane fluidizer benzyl alcohol. The data therefore delineate a pathway in which sporangia perceive cold temperatures through membrane rigidity, which activates signals that drive both zoosporogenesis and cold-box-mediated transcription.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology