Abstract
Jasmonic acid (JA) is an established wound signal and also plays a role in plant-pathogen interactions. Application of JA to tobacco leaf explants, tobacco seedlings or to intact leaves via the petiole resulted in an increase in the specific activity of acid phosphatase (AP) and a reduction in overall protein content. Similar changes in AP activity were observed in wounded tissue and in tissue undergoing a hypersensitive response (HR) following infiltration with avirulent bacteria. The AP activity increase was restricted to wounded tissue and HR lesions and was absent from unwounded or uninfiltrated tissue on the same leaf. The JA response (AP increase and protein loss combined) was investigated pharmacologically. Co-incubation with EGTA, ruthenium red, LaCl 3 and (±)-verapamil blocked the JA response suggesting a requirement for Ca 2+ mobilization. Similarly, okadaic acid, cantharidin and microcystin LR abrogated the response to JA implicating a protein phosphatase in the JA signal transduction mechanism(s). No evidence was found for kinase involvement as a mediator of JA signalling in this system.
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