Microbial Elicitors Induce Activation and Dual Phosphorylation of the Arabidopsis thaliana MAPK 6*

Protein kinases related to the family of mitogen-activated kinases (MAPKs) have been established as signal transduction components in a variety of processes in plants. ForArabidopsis thaliana, however, although one of the genetically best studied plant species, biochemical data on activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases are lacking. A. thaliana MAPK 6 (AtMPK6) is the Arabidopsisorthologue of a tobacco MAPK termed salicylate-induced protein kinase, which is activated by general and race-specific elicitors as well as by physical stress. Using a C terminus-specific antibody, we show that AtMPK6 is activated in elicitor-treated cell cultures of A. thaliana. Four different elicitors from bacteria, fungi, and plants lead to a rapid and transient activation of AtMPK6, indicating a conserved signaling pathway. The induction was equally rapid as medium alkalinization, one of the earliest elicitor response observed in cell cultures. A similarly rapid activation of AtMPK6 was observed in elicitor-treated leaf strips, demonstrating that recognition of the elicitors and activation of the MAPK pathway occurs also in intact plants. We demonstrate by in vivo labeling that AtMPK6 is phosphorylated on threonine and tyrosine residues in elicited cells.

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