Abstract

SummaryThe barley aleurone layer is a terminally differentiated secretory tissue whose activity is hormonally controlled. The plant hormone gibberellic acid (GA) stimulates the secretion of hydrolytic enzymes and triggers the onset of programmed cell death (PCD). Abscisic acid (ABA) antagonizes the effects of GA and inhibits enzyme secretion and PCD. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are key players in many types of PCD, and data presented here implicate ROS in hormonally regulated death of barley aleurone cells. Incubation of aleurone layers or protoplasts in H2O2‐containing media results in death of GA‐treated but not ABA‐treated aleurone cells. Cells that are programmed to die are therefore less able to withstand ROS than cells that are programmed to remain alive. Illumination of barley aleurone protoplasts with blue or UV‐A light results in a rapid increase in intracellular H2O2 production. GA‐treated protoplasts die rapidly in response to this increase in intracellular H2O2 production, but ABA‐treated protoplasts do not die. The rate of light‐induced death could be slowed by antioxidants, and incubating protoplasts in the dark with the antioxidant butylated hydroxy toluene reduces the rate of hormonally induced death. Taken together, these data demonstrate that GA‐treated aleurone protoplasts are less able than ABA‐treated protoplasts to tolerate internally generated or exogenously applied H2O2, and strongly suggest that ROS are components of the hormonally regulated cell death pathway in barley aleurone cells.

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