Abstract
The elicitor-induced activation of the potato pathogenesis-related gene PR-10a is positively controlled by a protein kinase(s) that affects the binding of the nuclear factors PBF-1 (for PR-10a binding factor-1) and PBR-2 to an elicitor response element (ERE). In this study, we have identified a kinase that has properties similar to the conventional isoenzymes of the mammalian protein kinase C (PKC) family. the treatment of potato tuber discs with specific inhibitors of PKC abolished the elicitor-induced binding of the nuclear factor PBF-2 to the ERE. This correlated with a reduction in the accumulation of the PR-10a protein. In contrast, treatment of the tuber discs with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA), an activator of PKC, led to an increase in binding of PBF-2 to the ERE and the corresponding increase in the level of the PR-10a protein, mimicking the effect seen with the elicitor arachidonic acid. Biochemical characterization of proteins extracted from the particulate fraction of potato tubers demonstrated that a kinase belonging to the conventional isoforms of PKC is present. This was confirmed by immunoprecipitation with antibodies specific to the conventional isoforms of human PKC and in-gel kinase assays. The ability of the immunoprecipitates to phosphorylate the alpha-peptide (a PKC specific substrate) in the presence of the coactivators calcium, phosphatidylserine, and TPA strongly suggested that the immunoprecipitated kinase is similar to the kinase characterized biochemically. Finally, the similar effects of the various modulators of PKC activity on the elicitor-induced resistance against a compatible race of Phytophthora infestans implicate this kinase in the overall defense response in potato.
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