Annexin1-mediated calcium signalling controls plant responses to ozone

Lead Research Organisation: Lancaster University
Department Name: Lancaster Environment Centre

Abstract

Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.

Technical Summary

Ozone is a significant phytotoxic pollutant that is predicted to inflict increasing economic damage to agriculture in a changing climate. A transient increase in cytosolic free calcium that acts as a second messenger is one of the earliest plant response to ozone. We have identified an Arabidopsis calcium channel mutant in which the calcium signal is abolished in response to 300 ppb ozone. The calcium signal in the wild type is known to control production of reactive oxygen species and links to cell death. Our recent work has shown that the calcium signal also directs the transcriptional response to ozone in Arabidopsis.

In this project we will first establish which cells are responsible for generating the calcium signal in wild type Arabidopsis by using lines expressing aequorin or yellow cameleon 3.6 as cytosolic free calcium indicators. We shall then compare to the equivalent mutant lines in a dose-response study to determine the operational range of the channel in the ozone response. Electrophysiological studies will be undertaken for tractable cell types (supporting the calcium signal in wild type) to confirm that the channel is ozone-responsive. The effect of the mutation on the stomatal response to ozone will be determined under normal and droughted conditions. The consequences for water-use efficiency, gas exchange and productivity will also be determined. Leaf cell death assays will be undertaken to test whether the loss of calcium signal in the mutant protects against cell death. Finally, comparative transcriptomic analysis of wild type against mutant will delineate the extent to which the channel and calcium signal command the genetic response to ozone.

Planned Impact

Ozone is an increasing threat to crop, pasture and forest productivity. This project addresses critical and fundamental events in the plant response to ozone pollution which might be exploited commercially for the development of crops with improved ozone tolerance. We will identify the mechanism by which an ozone-induced calcium signal is generated in plants and its role in the transcriptional response to ozone and the initiation of cell death. We shall also link calcium signalling to water-use efficiency and productivity. The outputs of this research will have an immediate impact on researchers and stakeholders engaged in plant cell biology, calcium signalling, stress responses, immunity and the effects of ozone on plant productivity. In the longer term, the overall outputs will have an impact for plant breeders, those in the agriculture, horticulture and forestry sectors and also policy makers concerned with the control of ozone pollution. The work is relevant to UK and European food security and highly relevant to the sustainability of crop production in Asia where farming practices put harvests at risk of ozone stress. We shall utilise our University Research Services plus our existing links to stakeholder networks, industry and policy makers to disseminate our findings, thus ensuring best possible impact in a timely manner whilst also protecting IP as appropriate.

How will academic and commercial stakeholders benefit?

We will identify which cells of the plant are important in sensing ozone and signalling its presence via calcium, allowing future researchers to use these as targets for manipulating the ozone tolerance of crops. These studies will benefit from the availability of a mutant which does not exhibit an ozone- calcium signal and which we can use to delineate the calcium-dependent transcriptomic response to ozone (without recourse to a pharmacological dissection). This will inform how the remodelling of the transcriptome by ozone might be exploited to improve crop ozone tolerance. The increased understanding of the routes by which ozone induces cell death resulting from our research will provide data that could be utilised in future to mitigate the deleterious effects of ozone. This also has relevance for the use of ozone fumigation in post-harvest protection of foodstuffs. The studies of stomatal responses to ozone under drought stress that we propose will address a new area of ozone research that is highly relevant for the development of predictive models for crop productivity under climate change and for the development of robust crops. In addition, the similarity between the responses triggered by ozone and plant immune responses highlight the potential for cross-over of the results of our research with research into plant defence and its applications. That our work is on Arabidopsis is an advantage in that we will be generating data from a tractable plant that provides a basis for crop improvement (Nature Biotechnology 30,360).

Wider impact

We shall engage a range of strategies to ensure that our research has an impact on the school community and general public, detailed in the "Pathways to Impact". In addition to standard outreach practices for local schools, we shall work with the Science and Plants for Schools project in order to contribute to national teaching resources. We shall disseminate our findings during National Science Week and also seek to engage the public through Royal Society outreach events.

Publications

10 25 50
publication icon
Richards SL (2015) The hydroxyl radical in plants: from seed to seed. in Journal of experimental botany

 
Description Ground-level ozone (O3) pollution is an increasing threat to food security, forest productivity and natural ecosystems. O3 decreases photosynthesis, impairs metabolism and causes cell death. Plants respond to O3 stress with a transient increase in cytosolic free calcium ([Ca2+]cyt) that leads to both transcriptional change and cell death. The [Ca2+]cyt increase is caused by Ca2+ influx across the plasma membrane by an unidentified mechanism. In Arabidopsis thaliana, the Ca2+- and phospholipid-binding protein Annexin1 mediates plasma membrane Ca2+ influx in response to apoplastic reactive oxygen species (ROS). As O3 generates apoplastic ROS, it follows that Annexin1 could contribute to O3-induced [Ca2+]cyt signalling. Here, not only did loss of Annexin1 function significantly impair the O3-induced [Ca2+]cyt signal but it also limited both damage to PSII and cell death. Identification of Annexin1 in a pathway to O3-induced cell death may aid identification of other components and the generation of more O3-tolerant plants.
Exploitation Route Dissemination of research data in peer-reviewed journals (ongoing).
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment