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First published online December 19, 2002; 10.1105/tpc.007468 American Society of Plant Biologists ETHYLENE RESPONSE FACTOR1 Integrates Signals from Ethylene and Jasmonate Pathways in Plant DefenseDepartamento de Genética Molecular de Plantas, Centro Nacional de BiotecnologíaConsejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Campus Universidad Autónoma, 28049 Madrid, Spain 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail rsolano{at}cnb.uam.es; fax 34-91-5854506
Cross-talk between ethylene and jasmonate signaling pathways determines the activation of a set of defense responses against pathogens and herbivores. However, the molecular mechanisms that underlie this cross-talk are poorly understood. Here, we show that ethylene and jasmonate pathways converge in the transcriptional activation of ETHYLENE RESPONSE FACTOR1 (ERF1), which encodes a transcription factor that regulates the expression of pathogen response genes that prevent disease progression. The expression of ERF1 can be activated rapidly by ethylene or jasmonate and can be activated synergistically by both hormones. In addition, both signaling pathways are required simultaneously to activate ERF1, because mutations that block any of them prevent ERF1 induction by any of these hormones either alone or in combination. Furthermore, 35S:ERF1 expression can rescue the defense response defects of coi1 (coronative insensitive1) and ein2 (ethylene insensitive2); therefore, it is a likely downstream component of both ethylene and jasmonate signaling pathways. Transcriptome analysis in Col;35S:ERF1 transgenic plants and ethylene/jasmonate-treated wild-type plants further supports the notion that ERF1 regulates in vivo the expression of a large number of genes responsive to both ethylene and jasmonate. These results suggest that ERF1 acts downstream of the intersection between ethylene and jasmonate pathways and suggest that this transcription factor is a key element in the integration of both signals for the regulation of defense response genes.
Plants have developed both constitutive and inducible barriers for defense against pest and pathogen attack. Some of the inducible defenses have been shown to depend on the concerted action of two phytohormones, ethylene and jasmonate (Feys and Parker, 2000
In response to different pathogens, jasmonate and ethylene cooperate to synergistically induce defense genes such as PR1b, PR5 (osmotin), and PDF1.2 (Xu et al., 1994
In addition, work with transgenic plants also supports the implication of these hormones in resistance against different pathogens. Constitutive expression of ETHYLENE RESPONSE FACTOR1 (ERF1), a downstream component of the ethylene signaling pathway (Solano et al., 1998
In addition to their role in the response to pathogen attack, ethylene and jasmonate regulate a wide variety of physiological processes in plants, including the activation of specific responses to different types of stress. How the plant selects the correct set of responses to a particular stress using the same two hormones (ethylene and jasmonate) remains poorly understood. The emerging picture is that the type of interaction that is established between these hormones after a given stress determines the type of responses that will be activated. Different types of interactions (both positive and negative) between ethylene and jasmonate have been described. For instance, ethylene is required for ozone-induced cell death in Arabidopsis, and this effect is antagonized by jasmonate (Rao and Davis, 1999
The reciprocal type of negative interaction between these hormones (ethylene repressing jasmonate-dependent responses) also can be exemplified in the case of the wound response in Arabidopsis. In this plant, wounding promotes the synthesis of both jasmonate and ethylene. Jasmonate systemically induces the expression of several wound-responsive genes, whereas the ethylene synthesized locally represses the expression of these genes at the wound site. This negative interaction between the two hormones ensures the correct spatial pattern of expression of systemically induced genes (Rojo et al., 1999
By contrast, a positive interaction between jasmonate and ethylene is responsible for the induction of proteinase inhibitors (PIN) genes after wounding in tomato. Although ethylene alone is not able to induce PIN expression, it cooperates with jasmonate to synergistically induce these genes (O'Donnell et al., 1996 In summary, increasing evidence suggests that the set of defenses activated in plants in response to different types of stress (or developmental cues) finally depends on the type of interaction (positive or negative) between these hormonal signaling pathways rather than on the independent contribution of each hormone. However, in spite of the accumulating data, the molecular mechanisms that underlie these positive or negative interactions are largely unknown. Thus, a thorough knowledge at the molecular level of how cross-talk between ethylene and jasmonate pathways is regulated appears essential to understanding how plants activate the correct responses to a given stress, which is a necessary step to rationally improve these responses.
We have shown previously that ERF1 is a key element in the response to different necrotrophic pathogens. ERF1 is upregulated upon the infection of Arabidopsis by B. cinerea, and its constitutive expression in transgenic Arabidopsis plants is sufficient to confer resistance to several necrotrophic fungi, such as B. cinerea and P. cucumerina (Berrocal-Lobo et al., 2002
ERF1 Is Upregulated by Jasmonate Because the induction of the pathogenesis-related (PR) gene PDF1.2, a likely target of ERF1 (Solano et al., 1998
A similar effect of ethylene and jasmonate also was observed for b-CHI, a PR gene that is a likely target of ERF1 (Solano et al., 1998
The expression of PDF1.2 was induced at 6 h after jasmonate treatment, but no induction by ethylene was observed during the first 10 h. A synergistic effect of ethylene and jasmonate on the induction of PDF1.2 was observed at later times (24 to 48 h after hormone application; data not shown) (Penninckx et al., 1998 These results indicate that ERF1 is an early ethylene- and jasmonate-responsive gene and suggest that ERF1 may be a common component of both the ethylene and jasmonate signaling pathways.
ERF1 Induction by Ethylene or Jasmonate Requires Both Hormone-Signaling Pathways
Similar results were obtained for the ERF1 target b-CHI (Figure 2). Mutations at EIN2 or COI1 prevented the upregulation of b-CHI by ethylene or jasmonate and their synergy. These results indicate that both signaling pathways are required simultaneously for the activation of ERF1 and ERF1 targets. This apparent paradox (the simultaneous requirement of both pathways for ERF1 expression, when each hormone alone is sufficient to induce its expression independently) can be explained by invoking a basal level of activity in both pathways in the wild type that is not sufficient to activate ERF1 expression but that is required for responsiveness to either hormone. Such basal activities would be compromised in the respective insensitive mutants, preventing responses to either of the hormones.
ERF1 Is Sufficient to Restore PR Gene Expression in coi1
In contrast to these apparently additive phenotypes of 35S:ERF1 and coi1, ERF1 expression bypassed the need for COI1 in the expression of PR genes. As shown in Figure 3B, expression of b-CHI, PDF1.2, and ERF1 was induced in wild-type plants after 24 h of treatment with ethylene and jasmonate, whereas mutations in COI1 fully prevented the induction of these three genes by these hormones. However, as in the case of ERF1 expression in wild-type plants, transgenic ERF1 expression in coi1 mutants resulted in the constitutive expression of both b-CHI and PDF1.2 in nontreated plants (Figure 3B, lines 1, 3, and 4). In transgenic line 2, which did not show detectable levels of ERF1, none of the targets was expressed either, further supporting the notion that the expression of b-CHI and PDF1.2 in the transgenic plants depends on ERF1.
These results demonstrate that 35S:ERF1 can rescue the defense response defects of coi1, as has been shown for ein2 (Solano et al., 1998
Transcriptome Analysis of Col-0;35S:ERF1 Plants
As shown in Figure 4A, 164 genes were constitutively expressed in Col-0;35S:ERF1 plants (136 in group II plus 28 in group III), and 77 genes were upregulated after 6 h of treatment with ethylene and jasmonate in wild-type plants (49 in group I plus 28 in group III), both compared with nontreated wild-type plants. Twenty-eight genes (group III) were common to both groups; therefore, >36% of the genes induced by ethylene/jasmonate in wild-type plants were expressed constitutively in Col-0;35S:ERF1. Moreover, a high percentage of the genes in group III (71.4%; 20 genes) and in group II (39.7%; 54 genes) have been shown previously to be involved in plant defense (Table 1). Two major conclusions can be drawn from these results: (1) ERF1 plays a major role in the regulation of the expression of ethylene/jasmonate-responsive genes; and (2) a high number of the ERF1-regulated genes are related to defense.
The overlap between ERF1- and ethylene/jasmonate-regulated genes does not apply only to upregulated genes but to downregulated genes as well. As shown in Figure 4B, 35 genes were constitutively repressed in Col-0;35S:ERF1 plants (28 in group II plus 7 in group III) (Table 2), whereas 70 genes were repressed by ethylene/jasmonate treatment in wild-type Col-0 plants (63 in group I plus 7 in group III). Thus, 20% of the genes repressed in Col-0;35S:ERF1 plants also were repressed by ethylene and jasmonate (6 h of treatment) in wild-type plants.
The high number of defense-related genes whose expression was upregulated by ERF1 is fully consistent with our previous results demonstrating that ERF1-overexpressing plants are resistant to several pathogens (Berrocal-Lobo et al., 2002 The reliability of the microarray data was confirmed further by analysis of the expression of genes from different groups in response to ethylene, jasmonate, or both in wild-type, coi1, and ein2 plants. In all cases in which the intensity of the chip signal was high (see supplemental data online), a very good correlation between chip and RNA gel blot data was observed. However, when the intensity of the hybridization in the chip was low (see genes 20420at and 19121at in the supplemental data online), hybridization could not be detected by RNA gel blot techniques.
Genes AAC78548 and AAB95283 (Anthocyanin Acyl Transferase) represent examples of genes not regulated by ERF1 (not expressed in 35S:ERF1 plants but induced by ethylene/jasmonate treatment in wild-type plants; group I). As shown in Figure 5
, these two genes were shown to be induced by ethylene in wild-type plants and coi1 mutants, but not in ein2, and were not expressed in Col-0;35S:ERF1 plants. These genes were not upregulated by jasmonate, which suggests, together with the results presented previously, that genes constitutively expressed in 35S:ERF1 plants may be only those induced simultaneously by ethylene and jasmonate but not regulated differentially by these hormones. This hypothesis was further supported by the expression of genes in group III and VSP. All genes from group III tested (
The cytochrome P450 CYP76C2 and CHI are examples of genes specifically upregulated by ERF1 but not induced in ethylene/jasmonate-treated wild-type plants. Although genes in this group were not upregulated by ethylene/jasmonate after 6 h of treatment, the possibility cannot be excluded that, as with PDF1.2 (Figure 3B) (Solano et al., 1998 In summary, the transcriptional profiling analysis indicates that ERF1 plays a key role in the regulation in vivo of the expression of genes that are induced simultaneously by ethylene and jasmonate but not of genes regulated differentially by these hormones, which mainly represent defense-related genes.
Ethylene and jasmonate are involved in the activation of defense responses to different plant pathogens. Here, we demonstrate that (1) transcription factor ERF1 is a downstream component of both ethylene and jasmonate pathways; (2) ERF1 expression requires both signaling pathways simultaneously; and (3) ERF1 is responsible for the transcriptional activation of ethylene/jasmonate-dependent defense-related genes. Together, these results suggest that ERF1 is a key integrator of ethylene and jasmonate signals in the regulation of ethylene/jasmonate-dependent defenses.
ERF1 Is a Common Component of the Ethylene and Jasmonate Pathways
In spite of the accumulating data regarding cross-talk between ethylene and jasmonate pathways, no molecular mechanism has been proposed to explain these interactions; in fact, very limited data are available about molecular mechanisms of any type of cross-talk in plant signaling (for an example, see Blazquez and Weigel, 2000
The fact that ERF1 induction by jasmonate is dependent on EIN2 and that ERF1 induction by ethylene is dependent on COI1 demonstrates that both signaling pathways are required simultaneously for ERF1 activation and suggests that ERF1 is a downstream target of both the ethylene and jasmonate pathways, which act in parallel in the activation of this transcription factor to trigger defense responses. This idea is further supported by the synergistic induction of ERF1 by both hormones and is confirmed by the bypass, through ERF1 overexpression, of the requirement of COI1 and EIN2 for PDF1.2 and b-CHI expression (Solano et al., 1998
We demonstrated previously that necrotrophic pathogens, such as B. cinerea, induce the expression of ERF1 and that ERF1 is sufficient to confer resistance to these fungi (Berrocal-Lobo et al., 2002
ERF1-Regulated Genes Are Related Mainly to Defense More than one-third of the genes induced after 6 h of treatment with ethylene and jasmonate were expressed constitutively in ERF1-overexpressing plants, and more than two-thirds of these genes have been reported to be involved in defense responses (Table 1). In fact, this is an underestimation, because many of the genes analyzed do not have a known function. By contrast, only a low percentage (12.5%) of the genes induced by ethylene and jasmonate (after 6 h), but not by ERF1 overexpression (genes in group I), are defense-related genes. These data highlight the instrumental role of ERF1 in the regulation of ethylene/jasmonate-dependent pathogen response genes. In fact, considering the total number of defense-related genes induced by ethylene and jasmonate (after 6 h) in wild-type plants, only 20% are independent of ERF1, whereas 80% also are expressed constitutively in untreated Col;35S:ERF1 transgenic plants. Among the total number of defense-related genes expressed constitutively in Col;35S:ERF1 plants (74 genes), 54 belong to group II (not induced in Col-0 plants after 6 h of ethylene and jasmonate treatment). These genes might represent late defense response genes, which could be induced by ethylene and jasmonate at later times. This possibility is exemplified clearly here by CYP76C2, CHI, and PDF1.2.
These results reflect the surprisingly high percentage of ethylene/jasmonate-dependent responses, especially those related to defense, that may be explained by the mere expression of ERF1 and suggest a pivotal role of ERF1 in the regulation of ethylene/jasmonate-dependent defense responses. In agreement with these results, several different groups recently demonstrated that ERF1 is induced after the infection of Arabidopsis plants with different pathogens (Berrocal-Lobo et al., 2002
It is important to consider here that the ERF family is composed of a high number of genes in Arabidopsis; therefore, other members of this family, in addition to ERF1, could participate in vivo in the regulation of these defense-related genes. In fact, as with ERF1 (15.5-fold change), another member of the ERF family, AtERF2, was induced rapidly after ethylene and jasmonate treatment (3.5-fold change; see supplemental data online). This gene also was identified recently as a pathogen response gene, as was another member of the ERF family, AtERF1 (Chen et al., 2002
The participation of ERF1 in defense responses may not be restricted to fungal pathogens. In fact, among the genes upregulated by ERF1 are four enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of indole glucosinolates (ASA, InGPS, TSA, and CYP79B2), which have been implicated in defense against pathogens and herbivores, and the myrosinase binding protein, which is involved in the breakdown (and thus toxicity) of the glucosinolates (Halkier, 1999
A simplified picture of our current view of the ethylene/jasmonate-dependent defense responses is shown in Figure 6
. Challenge of Arabidopsis plants by some types of pathogens, such as the necrotrophic fungi described in the Introduction, or by some types of herbivores, starts a cascade of signaling events (black arrows) that involve the synthesis and subsequent activation of both the ethylene and jasmonate pathways simultaneously (Penninckx et al., 1998
Biological Materials and Growth Conditions The Columbia (Col-0) ecotype is the genetic background of all of the Arabidopsis thaliana plants used in this work (wild-type, coi1, ein2-5, and transgenic ERF1-expressing plants). The coi1;35S:ERF1 plants were obtained by transformation of coi1 heterozygous mutants with the 35S:ERF1-expressing construct (described previously by Solano et al., 1998
RNA Gel Blot Analysis
Chip Analysis Two replicate experiments were performed, and the results from both replicates were combined and classified using the comparison analysis algorithms provided with the Affymetrix software (MicroArray Suite MAS 4.0; http://www.affymetrix.com/products/software/specific/mas.affx) in the following manner. After global scaling of the arrays to an average intensity of 180 to 200 (to make all experiments comparable), genes were considered "induced" when they were determined to be "increased" in one replicate and "increased" or "marginal increased" in the other. "Repressed" genes were those determined to be "decreased" in one replicate and "decreased" or "marginal decreased" in the other. In addition, genes were considered "reliable induced genes" only if they were called "present" by the analysis software in the Experimental Channel in both replicates. Similarly, "reliable repressed genes" were those called "present" in the Baseline Channel in both replicates. Finally, only those genes whose expression difference increased or decreased twofold or greater in both replicates were included in the list of genes presented in Tables 1 and 2 and in the supplemental data online. To ensure the reliability of the data, mixtures of biological material were used in each replicate of the experiment. Upon request, all novel materials described in this article will be made available in a timely manner for noncommercial research purposes.
We thank J. Paz-Ares, C. Castresana, J.M. Martínez-Zapater, J.M. Alonso, and M. Pernas for critical reading of the manuscript and stimulating discussions. We also thank K.D. Harshman (genomics facility at the Centro Nacional de Biotecnología) and J.C. Oliveros (ALMA Bioinformatics SL, Tres Cantos, Madrid, Spain) for their advice and help in the transcriptome analysis, and P. Paredes for excellent technical assistance. Seeds from coi1 were kindly provided by J.G. Turner. This work was financed by Grants 07G/0048/2000 and BIO2001-0567 to R.S. from the Comunidad de Madrid and the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología, respectively.
Online version contains Web-only data. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.007468. Received September 3, 2002; accepted October 14, 2002.
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