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Dive into the research topics where Morten Petersen is active.

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Featured researches published by Morten Petersen.


Cell | 2000

Arabidopsis MAP Kinase 4 Negatively Regulates Systemic Acquired Resistance

Morten Petersen; Peter Brodersen; Henrik Næsted; Erik Andreasson; Ursula Lindhart; Bo Johansen; Henrik Bjørn Nielsen; Michelle Lacy; Mark J. Austin; Jane E. Parker; Sashi B. Sharma; Daniel F. Klessig; Robert A. Martienssen; Ole Mattsson; Anders Boeck Jensen; John Mundy

Transposon inactivation of Arabidopsis MAP kinase 4 produced the mpk4 mutant exhibiting constitutive systemic acquired resistance (SAR) including elevated salicylic acid (SA) levels, increased resistance to virulent pathogens, and constitutive pathogenesis-related gene expression shown by Northern and microarray hybridizations. MPK4 kinase activity is required to repress SAR, as an inactive MPK4 form failed to complement mpk4. Analysis of mpk4 expressing the SA hydroxylase NahG and of mpk4/npr1 double mutants indicated that SAR expression in mpk4 is dependent upon elevated SA levels but is independent of NPR1. PDF1.2 and THI2.1 gene induction by jasmonate was blocked in mpk4 expressing NahG, suggesting that MPK4 is required for jasmonic acid-responsive gene expression.


Annual Review of Plant Biology | 2010

Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Signaling in Plants

Maria Cristina Suarez Rodriguez; Morten Petersen; John Mundy

Eukaryotic mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades have evolved to transduce environmental and developmental signals into adaptive and programmed responses. MAPK cascades relay and amplify signals via three types of reversibly phosphorylated kinases leading to the phosphorylation of substrate proteins, whose altered activities mediate a wide array of responses, including changes in gene expression. Cascades may share kinase components, but their signaling specificity is maintained by spaciotemporal constraints and dynamic protein-protein interactions and by mechanisms that include crossinhibition, feedback control, and scaffolding. Plant MAPK cascades regulate numerous processes, including stress and hormonal responses, innate immunity, and developmental programs. Genetic analyses have uncovered several predominant MAPK components shared by several of these processes including the Arabidopsis thaliana MAPKs MPK3, 4, and 6 and MAP2Ks MKK1, 2, 4, and 5. Future work needs to focus on identifying substrates of MAPKs, and on understanding how specificity is achieved among MAPK signaling pathways.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

The MAP kinase substrate MKS1 is a regulator of plant defense responses

Erik Andreasson; Thomas Jenkins; Peter Brodersen; Stephan Thorgrimsen; N. Petersen; Shijiang Zhu; Jin-Long Qiu; Pernille Ollendorff Micheelsen; Anne Rocher; Morten Petersen; Mari-Anne Newman; Henrik Bjørn Nielsen; Heribert Hirt; Imre E. Somssich; Ole Mattsson; John Mundy

Arabidopsis MAP kinase 4 (MPK4) functions as a regulator of pathogen defense responses, because it is required for both repression of salicylic acid (SA)‐dependent resistance and for activation of jasmonate (JA)‐dependent defense gene expression. To understand MPK4 signaling mechanisms, we used yeast two‐hybrid screening to identify the MPK4 substrate MKS1. Analyses of transgenic plants and genome‐wide transcript profiling indicated that MKS1 is required for full SA‐dependent resistance in mpk4 mutants, and that overexpression of MKS1 in wild‐type plants is sufficient to activate SA‐dependent resistance, but does not interfere with induction of a defense gene by JA. Further yeast two‐hybrid screening revealed that MKS1 interacts with the WRKY transcription factors WRKY25 and WRKY33. WRKY25 and WRKY33 were shown to be in vitro substrates of MPK4, and a wrky33 knockout mutant was found to exhibit increased expression of the SA‐related defense gene PR1. MKS1 may therefore contribute to MPK4‐regulated defense activation by coupling the kinase to specific WRKY transcription factors.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2011

Morphological classification of plant cell deaths

W.G. van Doorn; Eric P. Beers; Jeffery L. Dangl; Vernonica E. Franklin-Tong; Patrick Gallois; Ikuko Hara-Nishimura; Alan M. Jones; M Kawai-Yamada; Eric Lam; John Mundy; Luis A. J. Mur; Morten Petersen; Andrei P. Smertenko; Michael Taliansky; F Van Breusegem; T Wolpert; Ernst J. Woltering; Boris Zhivotovsky; Peter V. Bozhkov

Programmed cell death (PCD) is an integral part of plant development and of responses to abiotic stress or pathogens. Although the morphology of plant PCD is, in some cases, well characterised and molecular mechanisms controlling plant PCD are beginning to emerge, there is still confusion about the classification of PCD in plants. Here we suggest a classification based on morphological criteria. According to this classification, the use of the term ‘apoptosis’ is not justified in plants, but at least two classes of PCD can be distinguished: vacuolar cell death and necrosis. During vacuolar cell death, the cell contents are removed by a combination of autophagy-like process and release of hydrolases from collapsed lytic vacuoles. Necrosis is characterised by early rupture of the plasma membrane, shrinkage of the protoplast and absence of vacuolar cell death features. Vacuolar cell death is common during tissue and organ formation and elimination, whereas necrosis is typically found under abiotic stress. Some examples of plant PCD cannot be ascribed to either major class and are therefore classified as separate modalities. These are PCD associated with the hypersensitive response to biotrophic pathogens, which can express features of both necrosis and vacuolar cell death, PCD in starchy cereal endosperm and during self-incompatibility. The present classification is not static, but will be subject to further revision, especially when specific biochemical pathways are better defined.


The EMBO Journal | 2008

Arabidopsis MAP kinase 4 regulates gene expression through transcription factor release in the nucleus

Jin-Long Qiu; Berthe Katrine Fiil; Klaus Petersen; Henrik Bjørn Nielsen; Christopher J. Botanga; Stephan Thorgrimsen; Kristoffer Palma; Maria Cristina Suarez-Rodriguez; Signe Sandbech-Clausen; Jacek Lichota; Peter Brodersen; Klaus D. Grasser; Ole Mattsson; Jane Glazebrook; John Mundy; Morten Petersen

Plant and animal perception of microbes through pathogen surveillance proteins leads to MAP kinase signalling and the expression of defence genes. However, little is known about how plant MAP kinases regulate specific gene expression. We report that, in the absence of pathogens, Arabidopsis MAP kinase 4 (MPK4) exists in nuclear complexes with the WRKY33 transcription factor. This complex depends on the MPK4 substrate MKS1. Challenge with Pseudomonas syringae or flagellin leads to the activation of MPK4 and phosphorylation of MKS1. Subsequently, complexes with MKS1 and WRKY33 are released from MPK4, and WRKY33 targets the promoter of PHYTOALEXIN DEFICIENT3 (PAD3) encoding an enzyme required for the synthesis of antimicrobial camalexin. Hence, wrky33 mutants are impaired in the accumulation of PAD3 mRNA and camalexin production upon infection. That WRKY33 is an effector of MPK4 is further supported by the suppression of PAD3 expression in mpk4–wrky33 double mutant backgrounds. Our data establish direct links between MPK4 and innate immunity and provide an example of how a plant MAP kinase can regulate gene expression by releasing transcription factors in the nucleus upon activation.


Cell | 2009

Autophagic Components Contribute to Hypersensitive Cell Death in Arabidopsis

Daniel Hofius; Torsten Schultz-Larsen; Jan Joensen; Dimitrios I. Tsitsigiannis; N. Petersen; Ole Mattsson; Lise Bolt Jørgensen; Jonathan D. G. Jones; John Mundy; Morten Petersen

Autophagy has been implicated as a prosurvival mechanism to restrict programmed cell death (PCD) associated with the pathogen-triggered hypersensitive response (HR) during plant innate immunity. This model is based on the observation that HR lesions spread in plants with reduced autophagy gene expression. Here, we examined receptor-mediated HR PCD responses in autophagy-deficient Arabidopsis knockout mutants (atg), and show that infection-induced lesions are contained in atg mutants. We also provide evidence that HR cell death initiated via Toll/Interleukin-1 (TIR)-type immune receptors through the defense regulator EDS1 is suppressed in atg mutants. Furthermore, we demonstrate that PCD triggered by coiled-coil (CC)-type immune receptors via NDR1 is either autophagy-independent or engages autophagic components with cathepsins and other unidentified cell death mediators. Thus, autophagic cell death contributes to HR PCD and can function in parallel with other prodeath pathways.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

Autoimmunity in Arabidopsis acd11 is mediated by epigenetic regulation of an immune receptor.

Kristoffer Palma; Stephan Thorgrimsen; Frederikke Gro Malinovsky; Berthe Katrine Fiil; H. Bjørn Nielsen; Peter Brodersen; Daniel Hofius; Morten Petersen; John Mundy

Certain pathogens deliver effectors into plant cells to modify host protein targets and thereby suppress immunity. These target modifications can be detected by intracellular immune receptors, or Resistance (R) proteins, that trigger strong immune responses including localized host cell death. The accelerated cell death 11 (acd11) “lesion mimic” mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana exhibits autoimmune phenotypes such as constitutive defense responses and cell death without pathogen perception. ACD11 encodes a putative sphingosine transfer protein, but its precise role during these processes is unknown. In a screen for lazarus (laz) mutants that suppress acd11 death we identified two genes, LAZ2 and LAZ5. LAZ2 encodes the histone lysine methyltransferase SDG8, previously shown to epigenetically regulate flowering time via modification of histone 3 (H3). LAZ5 encodes an RPS4-like R-protein, defined by several dominant negative alleles. Microarray and chromatin immunoprecipitation analyses showed that LAZ2/SDG8 is required for LAZ5 expression and H3 lysine 36 trimethylation at LAZ5 chromatin to maintain a transcriptionally active state. We hypothesize that LAZ5 triggers cell death in the absence of ACD11, and that cell death in other lesion mimic mutants may also be caused by inappropriate activation of R genes. Moreover, SDG8 is required for basal and R protein-mediated pathogen resistance in Arabidopsis, revealing the importance of chromatin remodeling as a key process in plant innate immunity.


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2009

Gene regulation by MAP kinase cascades

Berthe Katrine Fiil; Klaus Petersen; Morten Petersen; John Mundy

Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades are signaling modules that transduce extracellular stimuli to a range of cellular responses. Research in yeast and metazoans has shown that MAPK-mediated phosphorylation directly or indirectly regulates the activity of transcription factors. Plant MAPK cascades have been implicated in development and stress responses, but little is known about the specific downstream targets they control. Recent studies have begun to identify direct MAPK transcriptional targets, and provide insights into the mechanisms by which MAPK signaling networks regulate gene expression.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1996

Isolation and characterisation of a pod dehiscence zone-specific polygalacturonase fromBrassica napus

Morten Petersen; Lilli Sander; Robin Child; Harry Van Onckelen; Peter Ulvskov; Bernhard Borkhardt

Seven distinct partial cDNAs, similar in sequence to previously described polygalacturonases (PGs), were amplified from cDNA derived from rape pod wall, dehiscence zone and leaves by the polymerase chain reaction. Northern analysis showed that one clone, PG35-8, was expressed at low levels in the dehiscence zone during the first five weeks after anthesis but was very abundantly expressed at week 6. In contrast, no PG35-8-related RNA was detected in the pod wall. Our data suggest that there are temporal and spatial correlations between the breakdown of the middle lamella, of the dehiscence zone cells and the pattern of synthesis of PG35-8 transcripts which may indicate a role for this particular PG in rape pod dehiscence.PG35-8 was used to isolate five cDNA clones from a rape dehiscence zone cDNA library. Restriction enzyme analysis and partial sequencing revealed that they were derived from four highly homologous transcripts which are probably allelic forms of a single gene. One full-length clone, RDPG1, was completely sequenced. The predicted protein of RDPG1 showed its highest identity with PG from apple fruit with an identity of 52%.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2012

MAP Kinase Cascades in Arabidopsis Innate Immunity.

Magnus Wohlfahrt Rasmussen; Milena Roux; Morten Petersen; John Mundy

Plant mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades generally transduce extracellular stimuli into cellular responses. These stimuli include the perception of pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) by host transmembrane pattern recognition receptors which trigger MAPK-dependent innate immune responses. In the model Arabidopsis, molecular genetic evidence implicates a number of MAPK cascade components in PAMP signaling, and in responses to immunity-related phytohormones such as ethylene, jasmonate, and salicylate. In a few cases, cascade components have been directly linked to the transcription of target genes or to the regulation of phytohormone synthesis. Thus MAPKs are obvious targets for bacterial effector proteins and are likely guardees of resistance proteins, which mediate defense signaling in response to the action of effectors, or effector-triggered immunity. This mini-review discusses recent progress in this field with a focus on the Arabidopsis MAPKs MPK3, MPK4, MPK6, and MPK11 in their apparent pathways.

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Daniel Hofius

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Shoaib Afzal

Copenhagen University Hospital

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