An extragenic second-site mutation in the jar1-1 mutant suppresses the response to photoperiod stress independent of jasmonic acid
Anne Cortleven, Silvia Nitschke, Venja Roeber-Terstegen, Cornelia Herrfurth, Ivo Feussner, Thomas Schmülling

TL;DR
A second mutation in a plant mutant reduces its stress response to extended light periods, and this effect is unrelated to a previously suspected compound.
Contribution
A novel extragenic mutation in the jar1-1 mutant is shown to suppress photoperiod stress independently of jasmonic acid.
Findings
The jar1-1 mutant shows reduced photoperiod stress, but this is not due to jasmonate signaling.
Other JAR1 mutant alleles do not alleviate the stress phenotype.
A second-site mutation in jar1-1 suppresses the stress response independently of jasmonic acid.
Abstract
Extension of the light period causes photoperiod stress in Arabidopsis thaliana. The photoperiod stress phenotype is characterized by an induction of stress and cell death marker genes, the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and enhanced formation of jasmonates during the night following the extended light period. Previously, experiments had shown that the jar1-1 mutant, carrying a point mutation in the jasmonoyl-isoleucine (JA-Ile) biosynthesis gene JAR1, showed a strongly reduced stress phenotype suggesting that JA-Ile is required for the stress response. Here, we have analyzed the roles of JA-Ile and JAR1 in more detail. While jar1-1 reduced the photoperiod stress phenotype indicating that JAR1 is required for the response to photoperiod stress, mutation of the ALLENE OXIDE SYNTHETASE (AOS) jasmonate biosynthesis gene did not rescue the stress phenotype. Further, analysis of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant Stress Responses and Tolerance · Insect-Plant Interactions and Control · Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms
