Abstract

Jasmonate (JA) and auxin are essential hormones in plant development and stress responses. While the two govern distinct physiological processes, their signaling pathways interact at various levels. Recently, members of the Arabidopsis indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) amidohydrolase (IAH) family were reported to metabolize jasmonoyl-isoleucine (JA-Ile), a bioactive form of JA. Here, we characterized three IAH members, ILR1, ILL6, and IAR3, for their function in JA and IAA metabolism and signaling. Expression of all three genes in leaves was up-regulated by wounding or JA, but not by IAA. Purified recombinant proteins showed overlapping but distinct substrate specificities for diverse amino acid conjugates of JA and IAA. Perturbed patterns of the endogenous JA profile in plants overexpressing or knocked-out for the three genes were consistent with ILL6 and IAR3, but not ILR1, being the JA amidohydrolases. Increased turnover of JA-Ile in the ILL6- and IAR3-overexpressing plants created symptoms of JA deficiency whereas increased free IAA by overexpression of ILR1 and IAR3 made plants hypersensitive to exogenous IAA conjugates. Surprisingly, ILL6 overexpression rendered plants highly resistant to exogenous IAA conjugates, indicating its interference with IAA conjugate hydrolysis. Fluorescent protein-tagged IAR3 and ILL6 co-localized with the endoplasmic reticulum-localized JA-Ile 12-hydroxylase, CYP94B3. Together, these results demonstrate that in wounded leaves JA-inducible amidohydrolases contribute to regulate active IAA and JA-Ile levels, promoting auxin signaling while attenuating JA signaling. This mechanism represents an example of a metabolic-level crosstalk between the auxin and JA signaling pathways.

Highlights

  • Hormones co-ordinate developmentally programmed processes as well as responses that are induced by external stimuli

  • Transcripts of IAALEU RESISTANT1 (ILR1), ILL6, and IAA-ALA RESISTANT3 (IAR3) are induced by JA or wounding but not by indole-3-acetic acid (IAA)

  • Wounding induced expression of IAR3, ILL6, and ILR1, and, ILL5, which is a pseudogene in the Col-0 ecotype (LeClere et al, 2002; Widemann et al, 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

Hormones co-ordinate developmentally programmed processes as well as responses that are induced by external stimuli. Different hormones govern distinct biological processes, the final outcome is often the result of complex interactions among multiple hormone pathways. Deciphering the molecular mechanism of this crosstalk has been an important trend in plant hormone research (Santner and Estelle, 2009; Wasternack and Hause, 2013). This includes studies of auxin and jasmonate (JA), which carry out many indispensable functions throughout a plant’s life cycle. JA, on the other hand, is best known for its role in plant resistance to insects and fungal pathogens (Howe and Jander, 2008; Wasternack and Hause, 2013)

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