Polyamines are known to play important roles in plant stress tolerance but it has been difficult to determine precise functions
for each type of polyamine and their interrelationships. To dissect the roles of putrescine from the higher polyamines spermidine
and spermine, we generated transgenic rice plants constitutively expressing a heterologous
S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (SAMDC) gene from
Datura stramonium so that spermidine and spermine levels could be investigated while maintaining a constant putrescine pool. Whereas transgenic
plants expressing
arginine decarboxylase (ADC) produced higher levels of putrescine, spermidine and spermine, and were protected from drought stress, transgenic plants
expressing SAMDC produced normal levels of putrescine and showed drought symptoms typical of wild type plants under stress,
but the transgenic plants showed a much more robust recovery on return to normal conditions (90% full recovery compared to
25% partial recovery for wild type plants). At the molecular level, both wild type and transgenic plants showed transient
reductions in the levels of endogenous
ADC1 and
SAMDC mRNA, but only wild type plants showed a spike in putrescine levels under stress. In transgenic plants, there was no spike
in putrescine but a smooth increase in spermine levels at the expense of spermidine. These results confirm and extend the
threshold model for polyamine activity in drought stress, and attribute individual roles to putrescine, spermidine and spermine.
Keywords Abiotic stress tolerance - Arginine decarboxylase - Polyamines - Rice -
S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase - Transgene expression