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Plant Physiol. (1998) 116: 871-877
Rearrangement of Actin Microfilaments in Plant Root Hairs
Responding to Rhizobium etli Nodulation
Signals1
Luis Cárdenas,
Luis Vidali,
Jimena Domínguez,
Héctor Pérez2,
Federico Sánchez,
Peter K. Hepler, and
Carmen Quinto*
Departamento de Biología Molecular de Plantas, Instituto de
Biotecnología, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico,
Apartado Postal 510-3, Cuernavaca Morelos 62271, Mexico (L.C., J.D.,
H.P., F.S., C.Q.); and Biology Department, Morrill Science Center,
University of Massachusetts, Box 35810, Amherst, Massachusetts
01003-5810 (L.V., P.K.H.)
 |
ABSTRACT |
The
response of the actin cytoskeleton to nodulation (Nod) factors secreted
by Rhizobium etli has been studied in living root hairs
of bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) that were microinjected
with fluorescein isothiocyanate-phalloidin. In untreated control cells or cells treated with the inactive chitin oligomer, the actin cytoskeleton was organized into long bundles that were oriented parallel to the long axis of the root hair and extended into the apical
zone. Upon exposure to R. etli Nod factors, the
filamentous actin became fragmented, as indicated by the appearance of
prominent masses of diffuse fluorescence in the apical region of the
root hair. These changes in the actin cytoskeleton were rapid, observed as soon as 5 to 10 min after application of the Nod factors. It was
interesting that the filamentous actin partially recovered in the
continued presence of the Nod factor: by 1 h, long bundles had
reformed. However, these cells still contained a significant amount of
diffuse fluorescence in the apical zone and in the nuclear area,
presumably indicating the presence of short actin filaments. These
results indicate that Nod factors alter the organization of actin
microfilaments in root hair cells, and this could be a prelude for the
formation of infection threads.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Bacterial species of the genera Rhizobium,
Bradyrhizobium, and Azorhizobium are
gram-negative soil bacteria that infect the roots of leguminous plants,
establishing a nitrogen-fixing symbiosis (Brewin, 1991 ; Hirsch, 1992 ;
Mylona et al., 1995 ). The interaction of rhizobia and legumes begins
with the production and recognition of signal molecules by their
respective eukaryotic and prokaryotic symbiotic partners (Fisher and
Long, 1992 ). Early events prior to nodule formation involve the
attachment of bacteria to the plant root hairs, root hair curling and
deformation, and penetration of the bacteria as they invade the plant
root hair cell by a newly formed infection thread. Simultaneously,
cortical cells are mitotically activated, giving rise to the nodule
primordium. Infection threads grow toward the primordium, and the
bacteria are then released into the cytoplasm of the host cells,
surrounded by a plant-derived peribacteroid membrane. The nodule
primordium then develops into a mature nodule, and the bacteria
differentiate into their endosymbiotic form that is capable of nitrogen
fixation (for review, see Mylona et al., 1995 ).
In the first part of the signal exchange, the plant roots secrete
flavonoids that lead to the activation of a set of rhizobial genes (the
nod genes), which are essential for infection, nodulation, and the control of host specificity. These genes are responsible for
the synthesis of LCOs, which are Nod factors that signal back to the
plant (for review, see Schultze et al., 1994 ; Mylona et al., 1995 ;
Dénarié et al., 1996 ). These Nod metabolites alone can
trigger several plant responses implicated in nodule morphogenesis, including alterations in root hair morphology (Lerouge et al., 1990 ;
Spaink et al., 1991 ; Price et al., 1992 ; Sanjuan et al., 1992 ; Schultze
et al., 1992 ; Mergaert et al., 1993 ; Heidstra et al., 1994 ), changes in
plant gene expression (Horvath et al., 1993 ; Journet et al., 1994 ; Cook
et al., 1995 ), cortical cell dedifferentiation and mitosis (Spaink et
al., 1991 ; Truchet et al., 1991 ; Relic et al., 1993 ), depolarization of
root hair cell membrane potential (Ehrhardt et al., 1992 ; Felle et al.,
1995 ; Kurkdjian, 1995 ), and, in some cases, the formation of mature structures resembling authentic nodules (Truchet et al., 1991 ; Mergaert
et al., 1993 ; Stokkermans and Peters, 1994 ; Cárdenas et al.,
1995 ). The root hair cells respond to Nod factors with morphological
changes such as nuclear migration to the base of the cell and
cytoplasmic bridges formed by cortical cells; these become the path of
tip growth of the infection thread (Van Brussel et al., 1992 ).
The cytoskeleton is thought to be important for the initiation,
development, and maintenance of the root nodules, as well as for root
hair cell growth and polarity (Brewin, 1991 ; Pérez et al., 1994 ;
Vidali et al., 1995 ). In the early stages of root nodule morphogenesis,
there is evidence that the actin cytoskeleton participates in the
formation of preinfection threads and induction of cortical cell
divisions (Bakhuizen, 1988 ). Ridge (1992) showed that the actin becomes
fragmented in curled root hairs of Vicia hirsuta infected
with Rhizobium spp. Examining alfalfa root hairs, Allen et
al. (1994) found that in curled hairs there were some actin foci close
to the tip when exposed to the Nod factors; disorganization of the
streaming patterns was also observed.
However, both Ridge (1992) and Allen et al. (1994) examined only curled
root hairs, which left unanswered the question of the response of the
actin cytoskeleton to Nod factors during the initial minutes of
exposure, well before root hair deformation. Determination of the
earliest responses during the interaction is important because it is
during this stage that the Nod signals secreted by Rhizobium
spp. can establish the infection process. It is well known that during
this stage the Nod factors induce membrane depolarization, ion
mobilization, and cytoplasmic alkalinization (Ehrhardt et al., 1992 ;
Felle et al., 1995 ). These processes could allow the bacteria to
initiate a controlled manipulation of the host cytoskeleton and begin
the events of infection thread formation.
By microinjecting FITC-phalloidin and examining the cells in the
confocal microscope, we were able to visualize the actin cytoskeleton
in living root hairs in the presence and absence of Rhizobium
etli Nod factors. We found that these Nod factors induce processes
that substantially modify the arrangement of actin microfilaments in
bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) root hair cells as soon as 5 min
after application of Nod factors. These changes are characterized by a
dramatic breakdown of the actin bundles during the first minutes and
recovery thereafter. Nod factors thus appear to induce rapid changes in
the actin cytoskeleton, and these events may be a necessary prelude to
the formation of infection threads.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Growth
Seeds of bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L. bv Negro Jamapa)
were surface sterilized, germinated, and grown as previously described (Cárdenas et al., 1995 ).
Mounting Living Root Hairs
Two-day-old seedlings were placed in liquid medium containing 2 mm CaCl2 and 2.5 mm Mes,
pH 6.2. After 8 h root hairs were usually well adapted to the
medium. Intact seedlings containing the growing root hairs were mounted
in chambers constructed on glass coverslips, forming a well, and were
then visualized under the microscope (Diaphot 300, Nikon) with a ×40
water immersion lens with a numerical aperture of 0.75 (Zeiss). No
mounting substance was needed and the well was filled with
approximately 0.5 mL of the same medium that was replaced every 15 min
to maintain the same calcium concentration during the microinjection.
Injection of FITC-Phalloidin
Microneedles were pulled in a vertical pipette puller (model 700D,
David Kopf Instruments, Tujunga, CA) from filamented capillaries. FITC-phalloidin (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) was prepared as a
20-µm solution in 10% (v/v) methanol. Before use, the
FITC-phalloidin was sonicated and centrifuged at 20,000g to
remove insoluble particles. The microneedle was back-filled with 1 µL
of the dye and microinjected into root hairs by hydraulic pressure.
Microinjections were made with the help of a second micromanipulator
that held a blunt needle to support the hair cells during impalement.
Based on calculations from other plant cell systems, we estimated that
there was at least a 100-fold dilution upon injection. Thus, the final
phalloidin concentration was at most 200 nm.
Root hairs were treated with either the Rhizobium etli Nod
factors or penta-N-acetylchitopentaose (a control factor;
see below) prior to each microinjection. The living root hairs were
selected before they were loaded with FITC-phalloidin by observing the normal cytoplasmic streaming (average 0.4 µm/s) and tip growth, which
we have determined to be 0.4 µm/min. Microinjections were carried out
anywhere in the root hair except its tip dome. Microinjected cells were
scanned under the confocal microscope (MRC-600, Bio-Rad) and
photographed within the 1st min after the dye was loaded to record the
response of the actin cytoskeleton immediately.
Incubation of Root Hairs with Nod Factors
R. etli Nod factors were purified by HPLC as previously
described (Cárdenas et al., 1995 ), resuspended in 1% (w/v) Chaps (the nondenaturing, zwitterionic detergent
[3-{3-cholamidopropyl}-dimethylammonio]-1-propane-sulfonate) and diluted to 0.01% with the Nod factor at a final
concentration of 10 8 m (the
optimal concentration to induce root hair deformation). In contrast to
alfalfa root hairs, which induce nodule-like structures when provided
with 10 10 m Nod factor (Ehrhardt et
al., 1996 ), bean root hairs require concentrations that are
10 8 m or higher (Martinez et al.,
1993 , 1995 ; Cárdenas et al., 1995 ) for an equivalent response.
Before application, the Nod factors were mixed with 0.5 mL of 2 mm CaCl2 and 2.5 mm Mes,
pH 6.2, and were then added gently to the growing root hairs to replace
the Nod-factor-free medium. As a negative control we used
10 7 m
penta-N-acetylchitopentaose (Seikagaku America, St.
Petersburg, FL) dissolved in Chaps and under the same conditions as the
Nod factors. Even at a 10-fold higher concentration than the Nod
factors, the control chitin oligomer failed to induce an actin or
cytoplasmic response.
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RESULTS |
To determine the organization of actin microfilaments in P. vulgaris root hair cells, we microinjected FITC-phalloidin into the cytoplasm of individual living root hairs. FITC-phalloidin specifically stains F-actin microfilaments and permits their
visualization by confocal microscopy (Zhang et al., 1993 ; Miller et
al., 1996 ) (Fig. 1). Because phalloidin
eventually becomes toxic to the cell, presumably through its
stabilization of F-actin, all images were taken within 1 min from the
time of microinjection. At this time the root hairs appeared normal:
vigorous cytoplasmic streaming (approximately 0.4 µm/s) and normal
cytoplasmic morphology and growth rates (approximately 0.4 µm/min)
were observed.

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| Figure 1.
Organization of actin microfilaments in the root
hair cells of P. vulgaris in the absence of Nod factors
(A) and in the presence of penta-N-acetylchitopentaose
(B). FITC-phalloidin was microinjected into both cells and the outcome
was visualized by confocal microscopy. Both A and B show large actin
bundles running along the root hair (arrowheads) from the base to the
tip, and microfilaments surrounding the nucleus are also observed
(double arrowheads). A, Arrow indicates the nuclear area, and the
double arrowhead indicates one of the large actin bundles surrounding
the nucleus. B, Superimposition of 21 images acquired every 1 µm
along the z axis.
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With this procedure the cells were first treated with Nod factors or
chitin oligomers and then with FITC-phalloidin microinjection at
appropriate time intervals. Thereafter, images were acquired usually
within 1 min and certainly well before cytoplasmic streaming had
stopped, which generally occurred after 10 min. The efficiency of the
microinjections was approximately 20%; those that were unsuccessful,
e.g. the cell was injured or the FITC-phalloidin was delivered to the
vacuole, were easily detected by a clearly noncytoplasmic distribution
of the fluorescence (data not shown). To reduce damage, we
microinjected into the shank of the hair, as shown in Figure 3D (see
"n").

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| Figure 3.
Actin cytoskeleton visualized 30 to 60 min after
Nod factor treatment on four independent hairs. The actin
microfilaments have partially recovered to form large bundles running
along the length of the hair (arrowheads). Fragmented microfilaments
are still accumulated at the tip (asterisks). The bright, diffuse staining around the nucleus (arrows) suggests the presence of numerous
short microfilament fragments that appear to be associated with long
microfilament bundles (see C and D for detail). D, Superimposition of
21 images acquired every 1 µm. n, The site of microinjection.
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The distribution of actin microfilaments can be seen clearly in the
cells that had received the injections. In untreated cells lacking Nod
factors (Fig. 1A) or in the presence of the control factor
penta-N-acetylchitopentaosa (Fig. 1B), bundles of
microfilaments were observed running longitudinally from the base to
the tip of the root hair cell (Fig. 1A, arrowheads) in a path that
resembled the transvacuolar strands. Sometimes these bundles were quite thick, as depicted in Figure 1A (arrowheads), but more often they were
thin and flexible, as indicated by their curved profiles.
Microfilaments surrounding the nucleus were also observed (Fig. 1A,
arrow); these were usually thin but well defined, and in some instances
they seemed to be continuous with the thicker elements (Fig. 1A, double
arrowhead). Figure 1B is a sequence of 21 confocal images acquired at
1-µm intervals in the z axis and reconstructed to show the
complete actin network close to the tip and the actin filaments around
the nucleus (arrow). This projection image emphasizes the complexity of
the actin microfilament system and reveals how it permeates all of the
cytoplasmic domains of the root hair.
The Nod factors used in the present study, which had been previously
isolated from R. etli strain CE3 and characterized by MS (Cárdenas et al., 1995 ), are N-acetylglucosamine
pentasaccharides in which the nonreducing residue is
N-methylated and N-acylated with
cis-vaccenic acid (C18:1) or stearic acid (C18:0), and
carries a carbamoyl group at C4. The reducing end is substituted at the C6 position with O-acetylfucose. Analysis of their
biological activity on the host plant P. vulgaris showed
that these LCOs at a concentration of 10 7
m elicited the formation of nodule primordia, which
developed to the stage at which vascular bundles are formed
(Cárdenas et al., 1995 ). In this study, the optimal concentration
to induce root hair deformation was 10 8
m; a higher concentration gives the same results with
regard to the root hair response, and a lower concentration results in a diminished effect.
To test the effect of the R. etli Nod factors on the
structure and organization of the actin microfilaments in living root hair cells of P. vulgaris, we microinjected FITC-phalloidin
into root hairs that had already been exposed to these factors at a concentration of 10 8 m. During the
first 5 to 10 min after the application of Nod factors, there appeared
to be a rapid breakdown of the microfilament bundles, as evidenced by a
reduction in their number and length, concomitantly with a marked
increase in diffuse fluorescence toward the apex of the root hair (Fig.
2, asterisks). Because phalloidin does
not bind actin monomers, we attribute this high level of diffuse
fluorescence to the presence of very short filaments of actin. Longer
bundles of microfilaments are evident farther back from the apex, but
these are few in number and usually quite thin.

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| Figure 2.
Actin cytoskeleton stained as in Figure 1 but
after 5- to 15-min treatment with Nod factors at a final concentration
of 10 8 m on three independent root hairs (A,
B, and C). Toward the tip of the root hair the long bundles of actin
microfilaments are fragmented, which accounts for the high level of
diffuse fluorescence (asterisks). Large bundles of microfilaments are
also observed (arrowheads), but these are reduced in size, number, and
extent compared with the controls.
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After 1 h of Nod factor application, the structure of the
cytoskeleton partially recovered, as evidenced by the reappearance of
long actin microfilament bundles running from the base to near the tip
of the root hair cell. However, the recovering cells were different
from the initial controls in that they still possessed a high level of
fluorescence at the tip (Fig. 3,
asterisks). It was interesting that at this time the nucleus became
brighter compared with controls (Fig. 3, arrows), suggesting that there had been an increase of short actin filaments around it.
After 4 h of exposure to Nod factors, and when curling of the root
hair had become evident, we noted the appearance of punctate foci of
fluorescence in the apical region (Fig.
4, arrows). The elevated level of diffuse
fluorescence also persisted at the tip (Fig. 4, asterisks). At this
time the actin cytoskeleton was evident as long bundles running along
the root hair cell (Fig. 4B, arrowheads).

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| Figure 4.
Two different curled root hairs after 4- to 6-h
treatment (A and B) with Nod factor. The actin cytoskeleton is present
as long actin bundles that run along the hair (arrowheads), some short
actin microfilaments at the tip remain (asterisks), and there are
punctate foci of actin evident at the tip region and scattered around
the root hair (arrows).
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Because the Nod factors are structurally related to
chitin-oligosaccharide molecules, which have biological activity on
some plant cells (Boller, 1995 ), it is possible that they were degraded to chitin fragments at the plant surface and that these chitin fragments may be the active molecules stimulating the actin
reorganization. To rule out this possibility, phalloidin was
microinjected in the presence of 10 7
m penta-N-acetylchitopentaose, an inactive
analog of the active LCOs, into root hair cells (Fig. 1B). As when Nod
factors were absent, no changes were found in the organization of actin
microfilaments.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Our results show that there is a dramatic change in the actin
cytoskeleton in response to Nod factors. These responses were detected
after 5 to 10 min of exposure to Nod factors and were well
characterized by a rapid breakdown of the actin bundles. The most
dramatic effect was detected at the tip, which was visualized as a
region of abundant fluorescence, suggesting the presence of short actin
filaments. It was interesting that during the continued exposure to Nod
factors, bundles of actin microfilaments reappeared in the shank of the
root hair. However, a zone of short filaments remained at the tip.
It was proposed previously that the actin cytoskeleton could have a
pivotal role during the establishment of the interaction between
Rhizobium sp. and the legume plant. Ridge (1992) , using Rhizobium sp. bacteria to elicit a response, showed a
diffuse fluorescence in the deformed region of curled root hairs of
Vicia; no actin bundles were evident in the treated hairs.
He proposed that this area is a region where the actin could be
fragmented in response to the presence of the bacteria. In a further
study, Allen et al. (1994) , using the purified Nod factors from
Rhizobium meliloti, showed the presence of actin foci in
curled root hairs of alfalfa. These actin foci were not detected by
Ridge (1992) , perhaps because of the different approaches used in each
study, with bacteria in one (Ridge, 1992 ) and Nod factor in the other (Allen et al., 1994 ). However, these studies did not address the question of the response of actin cytoskeleton at the beginning of the
infection process by Rhizobium spp. Thus, the results herein reveal for the first time, to our knowledge, that the effects of Nod
factors are both dramatic in magnitude and fast, being evident within 5 to 10 min. In addition, it is important to note that the images shown
in this study were obtained from living cells and do not contain
artifacts arising from chemical fixation procedures.
We conclude that R. etli Nod factors induce substantial
alterations to the architecture of actin microfilaments in the root hair cells of the host plant. The root hair cells that are most susceptible to Rhizobium sp.-induced deformation and
infection thread development are those that are rapidly expanding
(Bhuvaneswari et al., 1981 ). This suggests that the inward growth of
infection threads may involve a reorganization of the normal processes
of cell growth. It has been proposed that attached rhizobia incite a
local stimulation in the rate of plant cell wall expansion (Callaham and Torrey, 1981 ; Ridge and Rolfe, 1985 ; Van Batenburg et al., 1986 ;
Van Spronsen et al., 1994 ).
Cytological examination of the apical growing tip of the uninfected
root hair revealed cytoskeletal connections between the nucleus and the
growing root hair tip (Lloyd et al., 1987 ). It is known, for instance,
that the infection process uncouples the nucleus from the tip and that
the uncoupled nucleus guides the infection thread toward the base of
the cell (Fahraeus, 1957 ; Nutman, 1959 ). Presumably, the initiation of
an inwardly growing infection thread is brought about by a
reorganization of the cytoskeleton that targets cytoplasmic vesicles
containing wall components to the growing point of the cell (Brewin,
1991 ) and regulates the nucleus-to-tip distance (Lloyd et al., 1987 ).
In this respect, it is interesting to note that the nucleus is usually
found surrounded by microfilaments, which may be necessary for the
subsequent movement of the nucleus and the advancing infection thread.
Many bacteria have the capacity to enter and live within
eukaryotic cells by triggering the host's signal transduction
mechanism, which usually involves kinases or messengers such as calcium
and inositol phosphates (Rosenshine and Finlay, 1993 ). These induce rearrangements of the host cytoskeleton, thereby facilitating bacteria
uptake (Theriot, 1995 ). It is reasonable to suggest that Rhizobium spp. and other nodulating bacteria possess these
same characteristics.
It has been proposed that the increases in the intracellular
level of calcium triggered by Nod factors could participate in the
modulation of the actin cytoskeleton (Sánchez et al., 1991 ; Allen
et al., 1994 ). Specifically, it seems plausible that the appearance of
the short filaments soon after the application of Nod factor is due to
a calcium elevation. In support of this proposal is the observation
that alfalfa root hairs exhibit oscillatory increases in intracellular
calcium in response to Nod factors (Ehrhardt et al., 1996 ).
Furthermore, in tip-growing pollen tubes, elevated levels of calcium
induce fragmentation of F-actin (Kohno and Shimmen, 1987 ) and cause an
arrest of cytoplasmic streaming (Kohno and Shimmen, 1988 ). Cytosolic
alkalinization (Felle et al., 1996 ) and membrane depolarization
(Ehrhardt et al., 1992 ; Felle et al., 1995 ) in root hairs exposed to
Nod factor have been reported. Although their role in the infection
process remains to be elucidated, it is possible that they affect the
structure and distribution of actin. Note, for example, the pronounced
effect that elevated pH has on the remodeling of actin in
Dictyostelium sp. (Edmonds et al., 1995 ).
Experiments are in progress to investigate the factors that trigger the
actin cytoskeleton response and to correlate them with effects on
cytoplasmic streaming and other cellular processes. Although the
detailed processes are not yet established, it seems likely that the
dramatic reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton depicted in the
present study participates in a fundamental way in controlling the
apical root hair deformation and curling that precede bacterial
infection and Nod.
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FOOTNOTES |
1
This research was supported by grants from
Dirección General de Asuntos del Personal
Académico/Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
(DGAPA-UNAM; nos. IN202595 and IN200196) and Consejo Nacional de
Ciencia y Tecnológia (CONACYT), México (no. N-9608 to
C.Q.), and by grants from the National Science Foundation (no. MCB-9601087 to P.K.H.; no. BBS-8714235 to the Microscopy Facility, University of Massachusetts, Amherst). L.C. and L.V. were supported by
fellowships from CONACYT and DGAPA-UNAM, respectively.
2
This article is dedicated to our dear friend and
colleague Héctor Pérez, who passed away on November 10, 1996.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail quinto{at}ibt.unam.mx; fax
52-73-136600.
Received August 21, 1997;
accepted November 24, 1997.
 |
ABBREVIATIONS |
Abbreviations:
F-actin, filamentous actin.
FITC, fluorescein
isothiocyanate.
LCO, lipochitin-oligosaccharide.
Nod, nodulation.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
The authors are grateful to Drs. B. Barkla, G. Cassab, O. Pantoja, and M.A. Villanueva for critical reading of the manuscript. We
also thank the central microscopy facility at the University of
Massachusetts, Amherst, for the use of the confocal microscope.
 |
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