Ethylene augments root hypoxia tolerance via growth cessation and reactive oxygen species amelioration

Author:

Liu Zeguang12ORCID,Hartman Sjon134ORCID,van Veen Hans1ORCID,Zhang Hongtao5ORCID,Leeggangers Hendrika A C F1ORCID,Martopawiro Shanice1,Bosman Femke1,de Deugd Florian1,Su Peng1ORCID,Hummel Maureen6,Rankenberg Tom1ORCID,Hassall Kirsty L7ORCID,Bailey-Serres Julia16ORCID,Theodoulou Frederica L5ORCID,Voesenek Laurentius A C J1,Sasidharan Rashmi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Plant-Environment Signaling, Institute of Environmental Biology, Utrecht University , Utrecht, 3584 CH, The Netherlands

2. Department of Botany and Plant Biology, University of Geneva , Geneva 1211, Switzerland

3. Plant Environmental Signalling and Development, Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg , Freiburg 79104, Germany

4. CIBSS–Centre for Integrative Biological Signalling Studies, University of Freiburg , Freiburg 79104, Germany

5. Plant Sciences and the Bioeconomy, Rothamsted Research , Harpenden AL5 2JQ, UK

6. Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, Center for Plant Cell Biology, University of California , Riverside, California 92521, USA

7. Intelligent Data Ecosystems, Rothamsted Research , Harpenden AL5 2JQ, UK

Abstract

Abstract Flooded plants experience impaired gas diffusion underwater, leading to oxygen deprivation (hypoxia). The volatile plant hormone ethylene is rapidly trapped in submerged plant cells and is instrumental for enhanced hypoxia acclimation. However, the precise mechanisms underpinning ethylene-enhanced hypoxia survival remain unclear. We studied the effect of ethylene pretreatment on hypoxia survival of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) primary root tips. Both hypoxia itself and re-oxygenation following hypoxia are highly damaging to root tip cells, and ethylene pretreatments reduced this damage. Ethylene pretreatment alone altered the abundance of transcripts and proteins involved in hypoxia responses, root growth, translation, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) homeostasis. Through imaging and manipulating ROS abundance in planta, we demonstrated that ethylene limited excessive ROS formation during hypoxia and subsequent re-oxygenation and improved oxidative stress survival in a PHYTOGLOBIN1-dependent manner. In addition, we showed that root growth cessation via ethylene and auxin occurred rapidly and that this quiescence behavior contributed to enhanced hypoxia tolerance. Collectively, our results show that the early flooding signal ethylene modulates a variety of processes that all contribute to hypoxia survival.

Funder

Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research

China Scholarship Council

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany’s Excellence Strategy (CIBSS–EXC-2189–Project ID

Rothamsted was funded by Centre for Sustainable Intensification of Agriculture

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) Tailoring Plant Metabolism Institute Strategic

US National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Genetics,Physiology

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