Senescence is the final developmental stage of every plant organ, which leads to cell death. It is a highly regulated process, involving differential gene expression and outstanding increment in the rate of protein degradation. Senescence-associated proteolysis enables the remobilization of nutrients, such as nitrogen (N), from senescent tissues to developing organs or seeds. In addition to the nutrient recycling function, senescence-associated proteases are also involved in the regulation of the senescence process. Nearly, all protease families have been associated with some aspects of plant senescence, and numerous reports addressing the new identification of senescence-associated proteases are published every year. Here, we provide an updated report with the most recent information published in the field, focusing on senescence-associated proteases presumably involved in N remobilization.
Solar ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B) can have large impacts on the interactions between plants and herbivorous insects. Several studies have documented effects of UV-B-induced changes in plant tissue quality on the feeding performance of insect larvae. In contrast, the effects of UV-B-induced plant responses on the behavior of adult insects have received little attention. We carried out a series of field and glasshouse experiments using the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana L. and the crucifer-specialist insect Plutella xylostella L. (diamondback moth) to investigate the effects of UV-B on natural herbivory and plant-insect interactions. Natural herbivory under field conditions was less severe on plants exposed to ambient UV-B than on plants grown under filters that attenuated the UV-B component of solar radiation. This reduced herbivory could not be accounted for by effects of UV-B on larval feeding preference and performance, as P. xylostella caterpillars did not respond to changes in plant quality induced by UV-B. In contrast, at the adult stage, the insects presented clear behavioral responses: P. xylostella moths deposited significantly more eggs on plants grown under attenuated UV-B levels than on plants exposed to ambient UV-B. The deterring effect of UV-B exposure on insect oviposition was absent in jar1-1, a mutant with impaired jasmonic acid (JA) sensitivity, but it was conserved in mutants with altered ethylene signaling. The jar1-1 mutant also presented reduced levels of UV-absorbing phenolic compounds than the other genotypes that we tested. Our results suggest that variations in UV-B exposure under natural conditions can have significant effects on insect herbivory by altering plant traits that female adults use as sources of information during the process of host selection for oviposition. These effects of natural UV-B on plant quality appear to be mediated by activation of signaling circuits in which the defense-related hormone JA plays a functional role.
The effect of different N supply on amino acid export to the phloem was studied in young plants of wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Klein Chamaco), using the exudation in EDTA technique. Plants were grown in a growth cabinet in pots with sand, and supplied with nutrient solutions of different NO3− concentrations. When plants were grown for 15 days with nutrient solutions containing 1.0, 3.0, 5.0, 10.0, 15.0 or 20.0 mM KNO3, the exudation rate of sugars from the phloem was unaffected by N supply, but sugars accumulated in the leaf tissue when the N supply was limiting for growth. On the other hand, the rate of exudation of amino acids was proportional to the NO3− concentration in the nutrient solution. When the supply of N to plants grown for 15 days with 15.0 mM NO3− was interrupted, the exudation of sugars was again unaffected, but there was a fast decrease in the amount of amino acids exudated, and of the concentration of amino acids and nitrogen in the tissues. Also, when 10‐day‐old plants grown without N were supplied with 15.0 mM NO3−, there was a sharp increase in the exudation of amino acids, without changes in the amount of sugar exudated. The rate of exudation of amino acids to the phloem was independent of the concentration of free amino acids in the leaves in all three types of experiment. Asp was the most abundant amino acid in the leaf tissue, while Glu was the one most abundant in the phloem exudate. Asp and Ala were exported to the phloem at a rate lower than expected from their leaf tissue concentrations, indicating some discrimination. On the contrary, Glu showed a preferential export at low N supply. It is concluded that the rate of amino acid export from the leaf to the phloem is dependent on the N available to the plant. This N is used for synthesis of leaf protein when the supply is low, exported to the phloem when supply is adequate, and accumulated in the storage pool when supply is above plant demand.
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