Arabidopsis leaf membranes appeared to be very resistant to water deficit, as shown by their capacity to maintain their polar lipid contents and the stability of their lipid composition under severe water loss conditions. Moreover, arabidopsis displayed several characteristics indicative of a so far unknown adaptation capacity to drought-stress at the cellular level, such as an increase in the DGDG : MGDG ratio and fatty acid unsaturation.
Membranes are main targets of drought, and there is growing evidence for the involvement of membrane lipid in plant adaptation to such an environmental stress. Biosynthesis of the galactosylglycerolipids, monogalactosyl-diacylglycerol (MGDG) and digalactosyl-diacylglycerol (DGDG), which are the main components of chloroplast envelope and thylakoid membranes, could be important for plant tolerance to water deficit and for recovery after rehydration. In this study, galactolipid (GL) biosynthesis in cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp) leaves was analysed during drought stress and subsequent rewatering. Comparison of two cowpea cutivars, one drought tolerant and the other drought susceptible submitted to moderate drought stress, revealed patterns associated with water-deficit tolerance: increase in DGDG leaf content, stimulation of DGDG biosynthesis in terms of (14)C-acetate incorporation and messenger accumulation corresponding to four genes coding for GL synthases (MDG1, MGD2, DGD1 and DGD2). Similar to phosphate starvation, lack of water enhanced DGDG biosynthesis and it was hypothesized that the drought-induced DGDG accumulated in extrachloroplastic membranes, and thus contributes to plant tolerance to arid environments.
International audienceSoil fauna activities are probably more important than currently acknowledged in determining individual plant response to stresses and overall plant diversity. Here we demonstrate that the positive effect of earthworms on rice could be the result of a systemic effect on plant physiology. Moreover, this effect could improve tolerance to stressors such as parasitic nematodes. In a controlled experiment, an 82% decrease in the production of infested plants was suppressed when earthworms were present. Earthworms had no direct effect on nematode population size. In their presence, however, root biomass was not affected by nematodes and the expected inhibition of photosynthesis was suppressed. In the leaves, the expression of three stress-responsive genes (coding for lipoxygenase, phospholipase D and cysteine protease) was modulated by the presence of belowground invertebrate activities. We document conflicting systemic effects of parasitic nematodes and beneficial earthworms, although we cannot precisely identify the mechanism involved. These results reveal the importance of nontrophic belowground/aboveground interactions for plant health and response to stresses
14C‐labelled polar lipids (monogalactosyl‐diacylglycerol [MGDG], digalactosyl‐diacylglycerol [DGDG], phosphatidylcholine [PC] and phosphatidylglycerol [PG]), purified from Vigna unguiculata leaves, were used as substrates to study the lipolytic activities of Vigna unguiculata leaf extracts. Analysis of the radioactive degradation products revealed the presence of at least three enzyme activities contributing to the hydrolysis of the four main leaf membrane lipids: Lipolytic acyl hydrolase (LAH) activities responsible for the deacylation of galactolipids and phospholipids, phospholipase D (PLD, EC 3.1.4.4) activity which gives rise to phosphatidic acid, and as suggested by the presence of diacylglycerols in minor quantities after phospholipid hydrolysis, phosphatidate phosphohydrolase (PAP, EC 3.1.3.4) and/or phospholipase C (PLC, EC 3.1.4.3.) activity. Under the conditions described in the present paper, the presence of phospholipase A (PLA1, EC 3.1.1.3 and PLA2, EC 3.1.1.4) activities remains hypothetical, due to the absence of lysophospholipids. LAH and PLD were partially soluble and partially associated with the membranes. When Vigna unguiculata plants were submitted to drought, the enzymatic degradation of galactolipids and phospholipids increased. The stimulation of lipolytic activities was greater in the drought‐sensitive cultivar of Vigna unguiculata (cv. 1183) than in the drought‐tolerant (cv. EPACE‐1) one. In cv. 1183, MGDG‐ and DGDG‐LAH activities in the membrane fractions were dramatically stimulated at a rather moderate water deficit (−0.75 MPa). A sharp increase in membrane phospholipolytic activities was also observed at mild drought stress (−1.2 MPa). In contrast, in cv. EPACE‐1, the stimulation of lipolytic activities was less drastic and occurred at lower leaf water potentials (below −1.2 MPa for galactolipases, and below −1.4 MPa for phospholipases). Our results confirm the presence in leaves of higher plants of a very active LAH acting on galactolipids, whereas PLD is the main enzyme responsible for the degradation of phospholipids, particularly when plants are submitted to drought stress. The differences in stimulation of lipolytic activities between the two Vigna cultivars was in accordance with the different levels of membrane lipid degradation shown previously and could explain their different capacity to sustain drought.
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