4.6 Article

MEK/ERK inhibitor U0126 enhanced salt stress-induced programmed cell death in Thellungiella halophila suspension-cultured cells

Journal

PLANT GROWTH REGULATION
Volume 63, Issue 3, Pages 207-216

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10725-010-9517-2

Keywords

Apoptosis; Cytochrome c; Hydrogen peroxide; Mitogen-activated protein kinase; Salt stress

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [40825001, 30870425]

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Programmed cell death (PCD) is an active cellular suicide that occurs both in animals and plants throughout development and in response to abiotic or biotic stress. In contrast to plant hypersensitive response-like cell death, little is known about the molecular machinery that regulates the halophyte plant PCD under high salinity stress. Since mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) are involved in plant response/tolerance to salt stress, and plant MAPK genes belong to the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) subfamily, we have investigated the role of ERK-like enzymes in high salinity stress-induced cell death in Thellungiella halophila. The data showed that ERK-like enzymes were early (10 min) and transiently activated under 300 mM NaCl stress. Pretreatment with 10 mu M U0126, a special MEK/ERK inhibitor, resulted in a small but statistically significant increase of the percentage of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labelling (TUNEL)-positive nuclei in contrast to salt alone. The effects of U0126 on H(2)O(2) production and cytochrome c (cyt c) release were also investigated. We found that the pretreatment with U0126 accelerated H(2)O(2) production as well as cyt c release, and eventually enhanced cell death. The results suggest that ERK-like enzymes in Thellungiella halophila may act as a positive regulator of salt tolerance, as illustrated by pretreatment with U0126 which enhanced cell death under high salinity stress.

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