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ELECTRIC TOMATOES
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
RALEIGH, NC (June 26, 1997) The surprising discovery that tomatoes
utilize electrical signals to signal gene expression provides a new research
avenue for helping commercial crops fight off insect attackers.
In a recent study a North Carolina State University botanist demonstrated
for the first time that electrical signals can trigger rapid gene expression
in plants. The experiments showed that when an electric stimulus is used
to wound a tomato leaf, bioelectrical signals are rapidly transmitted from
the injured cells to other cells throughout the plant. These signals,
known as action potentials, alert the cells to increase their production
of naturally occurring chemicals called proteinase inhibitors (pin), which
boost the plant's resistance to insect feeding.
First reports of the tomatoes natural defense system came more than
20 years ago. However, until recently, most plant physiologists believed
the intercellular warning signals were chemical in nature.
"Proving that a genuine electrical signal can turn on genes is important
because it raises the possibility that we may be able to use electrical
stimulation as an environmentally sound means for increasing crop resistance
to pests," says Dr. Eric Davies, professor and head of NC State's Department
of Botany.
Davies and colleagues coauthor found that pin levels rose three- to
five-fold throughout the plant within 15 minutes of an electrical stimulation,
and up to 15-fold within a hour. Levels began to revert within two
hours.
The researchers found that wounding a leaf with a low flame also could
spur large, rapid increases in temporary pin production. However,
this seemed to occur via a separate signaling mechanism. The sudden
loss of hydraulic tension in the dead tissue of the burned cells causes
a plant-wide hydraulic pressure surge
which triggers an electrical reaction -- called a variation potential
-- in adjacent living cells. Unlike action potentials, which spur
uniform pin production plant-wide, variation potentials were found to promote
varying
levels of pin production, with the highest levels occurring in cells
nearest the wound.
The researchers also found that variation potentials may spur systemic
expression of calmodulin, a gene that plays a key role in initiating many
information processes in plants, including their responses to cold and
heat, gravity and touch.
To rule out the possibility the signals were chemical in nature, researchers
attached a cooling ring to leaf petioles prior to wounding them.
This prevented the leaves from transmitting chemicals out through their
phloem, or vascular system. The researchers also analyzed the electrical
signals transmitted from the wounded leaf.
"We found that if you cut the leaf off before the electrical signal
was transmitted, there was no change in gene expression outside the wounded
leaf itself. But if we cut it off after the transmission of the signal
it made no difference. Gene expression throughout the plant was neither
stopped nor reduced," Davies says.
In the short term, the findings are likely to increase understanding
of the fundamental intercellular communication processes used by plants.
In the longer term plant biologists will evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness
of
electrically stimulated gene expression as a means of strengthening
crop resistance to pests.
"By proving that both electrical and hydraulic signals can trigger gene-specific
expression, we show that plants are a bit more complex than we once thought.
They can distinguish between various environmental stimuli
and respond with the most appropriate type of intercellular signaling
mechanism -- be it chemical, electrical, hydraulic or a combination thereof,"
he said, adding:
"We need to broaden the scope of our investigations and give these so-called
'lower life forms' a bit more respect. It's only when we recognize and
understand the full range of sophisticated intercellular communication
processes employed by plants that we will best understand how to manipulate
and modify them."
The study appears in the June 1997 issue of the the European science
journal Planta.
Related information on the Internet
AE: RNA Tomato
Vaccine
AE: Fruit
Flavored Pesticide
Green
Gene Overview
Agriculture and Biotechnology
tomato.org
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