Autoradiographic and biochemical evidence for the systemic translocation of systemin in tomato plants

The movement of systemin, the 18-amino-acid polypeptide inducer of proteinase inhibitors in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.) plants, was investigated in young tomato plants following the application of [14C]systemin to wounds on the surface of leaves. Whole-leaf autoradiographic analyses revealed...

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Veröffentlicht in:Planta 1995-02, Vol.195 (4), p.593-600
Hauptverfasser: Narvaez-Vasquez, J, Pearce, G, Orozco-Cardenas, M.L, Franceschi, V.R, Ryan, C.A. (Washington State Univ., Pullman (USA). Inst. of Biological Chemistry)
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The movement of systemin, the 18-amino-acid polypeptide inducer of proteinase inhibitors in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.) plants, was investigated in young tomato plants following the application of [14C]systemin to wounds on the surface of leaves. Whole-leaf autoradiographic analyses revealed that [14C]systemin was distributed throughout the wounded leaf within 30 min, and then during the next several hours was transported to the petiole, to the main stem, and to the upper leaves. The movement of [14C]systemin was similar to the movement of [14C]sucrose when applied to leaf wounds, except that sucrose was slightly more mobile than systemin. Analyses of the radioactivity in the petiole phloem exudates at intervals over a 5-h period following the application of [14C]systemin to a wound demonstrated that intact [14C]systemin was present in the phloem over the entire time, indicating that the polypeptide was either stable for long periods in the phloem or was being continually loaded into the phloem from the source leaf. The translocation pathway of systemin was also investigated at the cellular level, using light microscopy and autoradiography. Within 15 min after application of [3H]systemin to a wound on a terminal leaflet, it was found distributed throughout the wounded leaf and was primarily concentrated in the xylem and phloem tissues within the leaf veins. After 30 min, the radioactivity was found mainly associated with vascular strands of phloem tissue in the petiole and, at 90 min, label was found in the phloem of the main stem. Altogether, these and previous results support a role for systemin as a systemic wound signal in tomato plants.
ISSN:0032-0935
1432-2048
DOI:10.1007/BF00195720