GLR‐dependent calcium and electrical signals are not coupled to systemic, oxylipin‐based wound‐induced gene expression in Marchantia polymorpha
Slow wave potentials
0303 health sciences
03 medical and health sciences
Marchantia/genetics; Marchantia/physiology; Oxylipins/metabolism; Gene Expression Regulation, Plant; Calcium Signaling; Calcium/metabolism; Receptors, Glutamate/metabolism; Receptors, Glutamate/genetics; Plant Proteins/metabolism; Plant Proteins/genetics; Plant Leaves/metabolism; Plant Leaves/genetics; Marchantia; calcium signalling; oxylipins; slow wave potentials; vasculature; wound
Calcium signalling
Wound
Marchantia
Vasculature
Oxylipins
DOI:
10.1111/nph.19803
Publication Date:
2024-05-10T07:30:14Z
AUTHORS (10)
ABSTRACT
Summary
In angiosperms, wound‐derived signals travel through the vasculature to systemically activate defence responses throughout the plant. In Arabidopsis thaliana, activity of vasculature‐specific Clade 3 glutamate receptor‐like (GLR) channels is required for the transmission of electrical signals and cytosolic Ca2+ ([Ca2+]cyt) waves from wounded leaves to distal tissues, triggering activation of oxylipin‐dependent defences.
Whether nonvascular plants mount systemic responses upon wounding remains unknown. To explore the evolution of systemic defence responses, we investigated electrical and calcium signalling in the nonvascular plant Marchantia polymorpha.
We found that electrical signals and [Ca2+]cyt waves are generated in response to mechanical wounding and propagated to nondamaged distal tissues in M. polymorpha. Functional analysis of MpGLR, the only GLR encoded in the genome of M. polymorpha, indicates that its activity is necessary for the systemic transmission of wound‐induced electrical signals and [Ca2+]cyt waves, similar to vascular plants. However, spread of these signals is neither coupled to systemic accumulation of oxylipins nor to a transcriptional defence response in the distal tissues of wounded M. polymorpha plants.
Our results suggest that lack of vasculature prevents translocation of additional signalling factors that, together with electrical signals and [Ca2+]cyt waves, contribute to systemic activation of defences in tracheophytes.
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