A new model involving ethylene, nitric oxide and Fe to explain the regulation of Fe-acquisition genes in Strategy I plants
Author
García del Rosal, María José
Suárez, V.
Romera, Francisco Javier
Alcántara, Esteban
Pérez-Vicente, Rafael
Publisher
ElsevierDate
2011Subject
ArabidopsisCucumber
Ethylene
FIT
Iron
Nitric oxide
Phloem Fe
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In previous work it has been shown that both ethylene and NO (nitric oxide) participate in a similar way
in the up-regulation of several Fe-acquisition genes of Arabidopsis and other Strategy I plants. This raises
the question as to whether NO acts through ethylene or ethylene acts through NO, or whether both act in
conjunction. One possibility is that NO could increase ethylene production. Conversely, ethylene could
increase NO production. By using Arabidopsis and cucumber plants, we have found that both possibilities
occur: NO greatly induces the expression in roots of genes involved in ethylene synthesis: AtSAM1,
AtSAM2, AtACS4, AtACS6, AtACO1, AtACO2, AtMTK; CsACS2 and CsACO2; on the other hand, ethylene greatly
enhances NO production in the subapical region of the roots. These results suggest that each substance
influences the production of the other and that both substances could be necessary for up-regulation of
Fe-acquisition genes. This has been further confirmed in experiments with simultaneous application of
the NO donor GSNO (S-nitrosoglutathione) and ethylene inhibitors; or with simultaneous application
of the ethylene precursor ACC (1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid) and an NO scavenger. Both
GSNO and ACC enhanced ferric reductase activity in control plants, but not in those plants simultaneously
treated with the ethylene inhibitors or the NO scavenger, respectively. To explain all these results
and previous ones we have proposed a new model involving ethylene, NO, and Fe in the up-regulation of
Fe-acquisition genes of Strategy I plants.

