puc-header

The Calcium-Responsive Phospholipid-Binding BONZAI Proteins Control Global Osmotic Stress Responses in Plants Through Repression of Immune Signaling

57 Pages Posted: 20 Apr 2020 Publication Status: Published

See all articles by Kong Chen

Kong Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

Jinghui Gao

Northwest Agricultural and Forestry University

Shujing Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

Zhengjing Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

Bo Yu

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

Jun Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

Changgen Xie

Purdue University

Guojun Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

Pengcheng Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

Ray A. Bressan

Purdue University

Jian Hua

Cornell University - School of Integrative Plant Sciences

Jian-Kang Zhu

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

Yang Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

More...

Abstract

SummaryHyperosmotic stress caused by drought and salinity is a significant environmental factor that limits plant growth and agricultural productivity. Plants respond to osmotic stress by activating Ca2+ signaling, accumulating the stress hormone abscisic acid (ABA), reprogramming gene expression and altering growth. Despite intensive efforts, no global regulators of all of these responses have been identified. Here, we show that the Ca2+-responsive phospholipid binding BONZAI proteins are critical for Ca2+ signaling, ABA accumulation, gene expression reprogramming and plant growth under osmotic stress by antagonizing plant immune responses mediated by intracellular immune receptor NLRs. Using a Ca2+-imaging-based forward genetic screen, we found that the Arabidopsis osmo1/bon1 mutant plants display a reduced cytosolic Ca2+ signal in response to hyperosmotic stress. The bon1/bon2/bon3 triple mutants are impaired in osmotic stress induction of gene regulation and ABA accumulation. Importantly, the bon mutants are hypersensitive to osmotic stress inhibition of plant growth. These defects were suppressed by mutations in the immunity regulator SNC1 or PAD4. Our findings suggest that that BON proteins function as global regulators of plant osmotic stress responses by repressing immune signaling.

Keywords: Osmotic stress, Abscisic acid, Ca2+ signaling, defense response

Suggested Citation

Chen, Kong and Gao, Jinghui and Sun, Shujing and Zhang, Zhengjing and Yu, Bo and Li, Jun and Xie, Changgen and Li, Guojun and Wang, Pengcheng and Bressan, Ray A. and Hua, Jian and Zhu, Jian-Kang and Zhao, Yang, The Calcium-Responsive Phospholipid-Binding BONZAI Proteins Control Global Osmotic Stress Responses in Plants Through Repression of Immune Signaling. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3569555 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3569555
This version of the paper has not been formally peer reviewed.

Kong Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

China

Jinghui Gao

Northwest Agricultural and Forestry University

Yangling, Shaanxi 712100
China

Shujing Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

China

Zhengjing Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

China

Bo Yu

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

China

Jun Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

China

Changgen Xie

Purdue University

610 Purdue Mall
West Lafayette, IN INDIANA 47907
United States

Guojun Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

China

Pengcheng Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

China

Ray A. Bressan

Purdue University

610 Purdue Mall
West Lafayette, IN INDIANA 47907
United States

Jian Hua

Cornell University - School of Integrative Plant Sciences

United States

Jian-Kang Zhu

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology

China

Yang Zhao (Contact Author)

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology ( email )

China

Click here to go to Cell.com

Paper statistics

Downloads
51
Abstract Views
1,158
PlumX Metrics