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Plant Physiol, January 2000, Vol. 122, pp. 15-24
Identification by Large-Scale Screening of Phytochrome-Regulated
Genes in Etiolated Seedlings of Arabidopsis Using a Fluorescent
Differential Display Technique1
Norihito
Kuno,
Takamichi
Muramatsu,
Fumiaki
Hamazato, and
Masaki
Furuya*
Hitachi Advanced Research Laboratory, Hatoyama, Saitama 350-0395,
Japan.
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ABSTRACT |
Phytochrome A (PhyA)-regulated genes
in 6-d-old etiolated seedlings of Arabidopsis Landsberg
erecta were identified by fluorescent differential
display. To screen for PhyA-regulated genes, mRNA fingerprints of the
wild type and the phyA-201 mutant were compared from
samples prepared 4 h after far-red light irradiation.
Approximately 30,000 bands of cDNA were displayed by fluorescent
differential display, and 24 differentially expressed bands were
observed. Sequence analysis revealed that they represent 20 distinct
genes. Among them, 15 genes were confirmed as PhyA regulated by
northern-blot (or reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction)
analysis. Thirteen up-regulated genes included 12 known genes that
encode nine photosynthetic proteins, two enzymes involved in the
biosynthesis of chlorophyll, one DNA damage repair/toleration-related
protein, and one unknown gene. Two down-regulated genes were identified as encoding a xyloglucan endotransglycosylase-related protein and a
novel member of the ASK protein kinase family. In the
phyA-201 mutant and the phyA-201phyB-1
double mutant, expression of all of these genes was photoreversibly up-
or down-regulated by type II phytochromes. The results indicate that
modes of photoperception differ between PhyA and PhyB, but that both
types of phytochromes have overlapping effects on the photoregulation
of gene expression.
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INTRODUCTION |
Developmental responses of plants to environmental light are
mediated by at least four different photoreceptor systems: phytochromes (Sage, 1992 ), cryptochromes (Ahmad and Cashmore, 1996a ), UV-A receptors
(Young et al., 1992 ), and UV-B receptors (Christie and Jenkins, 1996 ).
The red/far-red light-sensing phytochromes are the best characterized
of these photoreceptors (Quail et al., 1995 ). Phytochrome molecules
exist in two spectrally distinct, photointerconvertible forms: a red
light-absorbing form (Pr) and a far-red light-absorbing form (Pfr).
Although it was formerly believed that Pr was biologically inactive and
Pfr active, spectrophotometrically detectable levels of Pfr were found
to be inconsistent with physiological responses in most studies
performed during the past four decades (Furuya, 1993 ).
Phytochrome apoproteins are now known to be encoded by five different
genes in Arabidopsis: PHYA, PHYB, PHYC
(Sharrock and Quail, 1989 ), PHYD, and PHYE (Clack
et al., 1994 ). Investigations of the biological functions of individual
phytochromes have been helped by studies of phytochrome A-deficient
(phyA) mutants (Dehesh et al., 1993 ; Nagatani et al., 1993 ;
Parks and Quail, 1993 ; Whitelam et al., 1993 ), phytochrome B-deficient
(phyB) mutants (Koornneef et al., 1980 ; Reed et al., 1993 ),
and phytochrome D-deficient (phyD) mutants (Aukerman et al.,
1997 ) of Arabidopsis. Recent physiological studies of these
phytochrome-deficient mutants have allowed the identification of
individual phytochromes that are responsible for different phytochrome
effects. For example, in the photoinduction of seed germination,
phytochrome A (PhyA) mediates the photo-irreversible response to
very-low-fluence (VLF) light at 300 to 800 nm, while phytochrome B
(PhyB) controls the low-fluence (LF) response that exhibits red/far-red
reversibility (Shinomura et al., 1996 ). Consequently, differences in
the functions of the various phytochromes are associated with
differences in requirements for both fluence and wavelength.
In the past two decades, the regulation by light of gene expression in
higher plants has been the focus of extensive studies, and various
nuclear genes have been identified as being light regulated (Tobin and
Silverthorne, 1985 ; Thompson and White, 1991 ). The regulation by
phytochrome of the expression of the genes (Lhcb) for the
light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein
of photosystem II (PSII) has been analyzed in detail (Silverthorne and
Tobin, 1987 ; Tobin and Kehoe, 1994 ). In several plant species,
expression of Lhcb genes can be induced via either a VLF or
a LF response pathway (Kaufman et al., 1984 ; Horwitz et al., 1988 ;
Wehmeyer et al., 1990 ). A recent study of the fluence and wavelength
requirements for expression of the Lhcb gene in Arabidopsis
demonstrated clearly that PhyA photo-irreversibly mediates the VLF
response, while PhyB and the other phytochromes photoreversibly
regulate the LF response that leads to induction of expression of the
Lhcb gene (Hamazato et al., 1997 ). However, we know very
little about the roles of each phytochrome in the expression of genes
other than Lhcb (Reed et al., 1994 ; Hamazato et al., 1997 ),
Athb-2 (Carabelli et al., 1996 ), and tub1 (Leu et
al., 1995 ). Clearly, the identification of phytochromes that control
the expression of particular genes is essential if we are to
fully understand phytochrome-regulated gene expression. To define the
phytochromes involved in gene expression, we attempted to identify
entire groups of PhyA-regulated genes instead of investigating
previously characterized "light-response" genes on a gene-by-gene basis.
The differential display of mRNA is a powerful tool for studying
differential gene expression (Liang and Pardee, 1992 ). This technique
has several advantages over conventional methods such as subtractive
hybridization and differential hybridization. The main advantages are
that multiple samples of RNA can be compared simultaneously and that
both up-regulated and down-regulated genes can be detected.
Nevertheless, the utility of earlier versions of the differential
display technique was limited by the low reproducibility of
fingerprints and the high frequency (>70%) of false positive clones
(Debouck, 1995 ). The more recently developed fluorescent differential
display (FDD) technique overcomes these problems (Ito et al., 1994 ).
The use of modified anchor primers with a fluorescent label and an
automated fluorescent DNA sequencer for detection results in high
reproducibility, high throughput, and operational safety. With these
tools, we were able to perform a rapid and large-scale screening for
differentially expressed genes.
Using the FDD technique, we attempted a large-scale screen for
Phy-regulated genes. In this study, the FDD signals obtained from
phyA mutant seedlings exposed to far-red light were compared with those obtained from wild-type seedlings to identify a collection of PhyA-responsive genes. We identified 15 genes whose expression was
regulated by PhyA through the VLF response. In addition, we showed that
the expression of these 15 genes was also regulated by PhyB and other
phytochromes through the LF response.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Materials
The wild type and the phyA-201 (Nagatani et al., 1993 )
and phyA-201phyB-1 mutants (Hamazato et al., 1997 ) of
Arabidopsis Landsberg erecta were used in all analyses.
Seeds were surface-sterilized and plated on filter paper on top of
0.2× Murashige-Skoog agar medium (Murashige and Skoog, 1962 )
supplemented with 0.6% (w/v) Suc. Immediately after plating,
seeds of the wild type and the phyA-201 were exposed to
far-red light (25 µmol m 2
s 1) for 10 min to inhibit dark germination.
After subsequent imbibition for 16 h in darkness at 23°C ± 1°C in a temperature-controlled chamber (Koito-toron FR-6113W, Koito,
Tokyo), seeds were exposed to red light (30 µmol
m 2 s 1) for 8 h to
induce germination and then kept in total darkness at 23°C ± 1°C for 5 d. Seeds of the phyA-201phyB-1 double
mutant were sown and incubated under continuous white light (12 W
m 2) for 60 h to induce germination. The
germinated seedlings were kept in total darkness at 23°C ± 1°C for 3.5 d.
Light Treatment
Etiolated 6-d-old seedlings were irradiated with a pulse of
far-red light or red light and then returned immediately to darkness. Four hours after the light irradiation, seedlings were harvested and quickly frozen in liquid nitrogen. Far-red light was obtained by
filtering light from far-red fluorescent tubes (FL20S.FR-74, Toshiba,
Tokyo) through a 3-mm-thick far-red acrylic plate (Deraglass 102, Asahikasei, Tokyo). Red light was obtained by filtering light from
white fluorescent tubes (FL20SSW/18[G], Hitachi, Tokyo) through a 3-mm-thick red acrylic plate (Shinkolite A102, Mitsubishi Rayon, Tokyo). Fluence rates were measured with an optical power meter (1830-C, Newport, Irvine, CA).
Isolation of RNA and Northern-Blot Analysis
Total RNA was isolated from etiolated seedlings by the
phenol/SDS/LiCl method (Verworerd et al., 1989 ). For northern-blot analysis, total RNA (10 µg) was subjected to electrophoresis on a
1.5% (w/v) agarose gel that contained 0.66 M
formaldehyde in 20 mM MOPS buffer, and transferred to a
nylon membrane (Hybond-N, Amersham-Pharmacia Biotech, Uppsala).
Northern blots were hybridized with random-prime
32P-labeled probes that corresponded to fragments
of cloned cDNAs for 16 h at 45°C in hybridization buffer (50%
[v/v] formamide; 5× SSPE; 5× Denhardt's solution; 50 µg/mL denatured salmon-sperm DNA; and 0.5% [w/v]
SDS). After hybridization, filters were washed with 2× SSC and
0.1% (w/v) SDS for 15 min at room temperature, twice with 2×
SSC and 0.1% (w/v) SDS at 55°C for 15 min, and with 0.2× SSC
and 0.1% (w/v) SDS at 55°C for 30 min. Hybridization levels
were quantified with an image analyzer (BAS 1000, Fujifilm, Tokyo). The
amount of total RNA loaded in each lane was normalized by reference to
results of hybridization with a gene for 18S rRNA from pea (Jorgensen
et al., 1987 ). The sizes of transcripts were determined by comparison
of mobilities with those of RNA standards (0.16- to 1.77-kb
RNA Ladder, GIBCO-BRL, Rockville, MD). Northern-blot analysis was
performed at least twice to confirm the reproducibility of the results.
FDD
FDD was performed as described previously (protocol II from Ito et
al., 1994 ) with some modifications. Total RNA was treated with
RNase-free DNase (Ambion, Austin, TX) for 30 min to remove contaminating genomic DNA. First-strand cDNAs were synthesized from
each total RNA (2.5 µg) using three different Texas Red-labeled 3'-anchored oligo(dT) primers (5'-Texas
Red-GT15N-3', n = G, C, or A,
Yukigouseikagaku, Tokyo) and a SuperScript Preamplification System
(GIBCO-BRL). cDNAs produced from 25 ng of total RNA were amplified by
PCR using combinations of Texas Red-labeled anchored and arbitrary
10-mer primers (kit B, D, F, and X, Operon Technologies, Alameda, CA).
The conditions for PCR were as follows: 94°C for 3 min, 40°C for 5 min, and 72°C for 5 min, followed by 24 cycles of 94°C for 15 s, 40°C for 2 min, and 72°C for 1 min, with an additional extension
step at 72°C for 5 min. Electrophoresis and detection of the PCR
products were performed with a automated fluorescent DNA sequencer
(SQ5500, Hitachi, Tokyo).
Cloning of the cDNAs of Interest
Preparative electrophoresis was performed to isolate the cDNAs of
interest. The differential display patterns visualized by the
fluorescent image analyzer (FMBIO II Multi-View, Takara, Shiga, Japan)
were printed true to size. The gel on the lower of the two glass plates
was laid over the printed image and the band of interest was excised.
After excision of bands, the gel was scanned again to confirm the
excision of each band. The cDNAs were eluted into distilled water by
several rounds of freezing and thawing, and then reamplified by PCR
with the appropriate pairs of primers. Products of reamplification were
purified with a PCR purification kit (Qiagen, Chatsworth, CA) and
subcloned into the pGEM-T vector (Promega, Madison, WI). For each
reamplified fragment, several independent Escherichia coli
colonies were chosen, and inserted fragments from these colonies were
amplified by PCR. The sizes of inserted fragments were determined by
comparison of mobilities with the isolated band of the original FDD
samples using a fluorescent DNA sequencer. Several independent clones with inserts of the expected size were selected and sequenced. To
identify contaminating cDNAs (false positive clones) that possess the
same sizes but distinct sequences, individual cloned fragments were
used as probes for Southern-blot analysis of the original products from
FDD. The cDNA clones with the same banding patterns as those obtained
by FDD analysis were selected.
Reverse Transcription (RT)-PCR Analysis
RT-PCR analysis of clones 9, 13, and 15 was performed using
gene-specific primers. PCR primers used to detect mRNAs of the clones were as follows: clone 9-forward (F),
5'-GCGAAAGCTCCACAACATTCATA-3'; clone 9-reverse (R),
5'-GAAGGGATCGATCGATAAACAAT-3'; clone 13-F, 5'-TGTTTTGATTGATAATATTACACA-3'; clone 13-R, 5'-CTTTCGGACAAATCGGATT-3'; clone 15-F, 5'-ACGT- AAAGATACAAGGAGATTGA-3'; clone 15-R,
5'-GCTTT- GATGATGATGAGGAAG-3'. Total RNA was treated with RNase-free
DNase (Ambion) and reverse transcribed to first-strand cDNAs using
oligo(dT) primer (SuperScript Preamplification System, GIBCO-BRL).
cDNAs produced from 25 ng of total RNA were used as templates in 20 µL of PCR mixture. The conditions for PCR were as follows: 20 cycles
(for clone 9 and 13) or 23 cycles (for clone 15) of 94°C for 15 s, 50°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 1 min, with an additional extension step at 72°C for 5 min. The Arabidopsis actin 8 gene (ACT8) was used as a positive internal control (An et al.,
1996 ). PCR primers for detection of ACT8 mRNAs were
5'-ATGAAGATTAAGGTCGTGGC-3' and 5'-TCCGAGTT- TGAAGAGGCTAC-3' (Aida et
al., 1997 ). The amplified PCR products (10 µL) were electrophoresed
on a 3% (w/v) agarose gel (NuSieve 3:1, FMC BioProducts,
Rockland, ME), stained with ethidium bromide, and scanned using the
fluorescent image analyzer.
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RESULTS |
Screening of PhyA-Regulated Genes
Six-day-old etiolated wild-type and phyA-201 mutant
seedlings were irradiated with 10 mmol m 2
far-red light for 5 min and then kept in darkness for 4 h. Total RNA was isolated from both far-red light-treated and untreated samples,
and then mRNA fingerprints were generated by PCR with arbitrary
primers. Comparison of fingerprints from wild type and the
phyA mutant identified bands that were differentially
expressed in a PhyA-dependent manner; an example of such fingerprints
is shown in Figure 1. In this figure,
each lane contains more than 150 bands of cDNAs that range in size from
100 to 800 bp. The majority of bands had the same intensities in all
samples (Fig. 1, lanes D/W, D/A , FR/W, and
FR/A ). We PCR-amplified with three different
anchored oligo(dT) primers, each in combination with 80 arbitrary
10-mer primers, and screened approximately 30,000 cDNA bands. The FDD
analysis of candidate PhyA-regulated cDNA bands was repeated at least
twice using independently prepared samples of total RNA to confirm the
differentially expressed banding patterns. The cDNA bands that were
consistently associated with differential expression were isolated and
analyzed in further detail.

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Figure 1.
Image of a typical FDD gel. cDNAs that had been
reverse transcribed from mRNAs isolated from wild-type and
phyA mutant (phyA-201) etiolated
seedlings of Arabidopsis with or without a prior pulse of far-red light
were compared. Total RNA isolated from 6-d-old wild-type (W) and
phyA201 (A ) etiolated seedlings that had
been kept in total darkness (D) or exposed to 10 mmol m 2
far-red light (FR) was subjected to FDD analysis using 10 different
primer sets (numbers above each group). The DNA size markers were
included for the estimation of the length of cDNAs of interest. A
differentially expressed band is indicated by the oval.
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We identified a total of 24 cDNA bands that were differentially
expressed between wild type and the phyA mutant (Fig. 1;
Table I). Twenty-one bands increased in
intensity upon far-red irradiation of wild-type but not of
phyA mutant seedlings. Three bands decreased in intensity
upon far-red irradiation of the wild type but not of the
phyA mutant. All 24 candidate cDNAs were recovered from gels
and re-amplified with the same primer set as used for the initial
amplification. The re-amplified fragments were subcloned into the TA
cloning vector and sequenced. The comparative sequence analysis of the
cloned cDNA fragments revealed that the 24 cDNAs represent 20 distinct
mRNA species. Two different mRNA species were amplified twice with
different sets of primers. One mRNA species was detected as three cDNA
fragments with different sizes, each amplified with the same set of
primers (Table II). All cloned cDNA
fragments contained sequences that corresponded to the particular oligo(dT) primers and the arbitrary 10-mer primers used for PCR (data
not shown). Thus, we isolated 24 cDNA fragments by FDD, and those 24 cDNAs represent 20 distinct mRNA species.
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Table I.
Results of FDD screening for PhyA-regulated genes in
etiolated seedlings of Arabidopsis
mRNA expression patterns of 6-d-old etiolated seedlings of wild type
(WT) and phyA-201 mutant (phyA) were compared by
FDD. The etiolated seedlings were kept in darkness (D) or exposed to 10 mmol m 2 far-red light (FR).
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PhyA-Dependent Expression of the Candidate Clones
To confirm that the cloned cDNA fragments represented the
PhyA-regulated genes, we used the 20 representative clones as probes in
northern-blot analysis of the total RNA that had been subjected to the
initial FDD screening (Fig. 2A). RT-PCR
analysis using gene-specific primers was performed for the detection of
the eight cloned cDNAs that did not yield signals on northern blots
(Fig. 2B). As shown in Figure 2, the abundance of mRNAs that
corresponded to up-regulated cDNAs (clones 1-13) was 1.5- to 2.0-fold
higher in far-red light-treated wild-type seedlings (lane 2, WT/FR)
than in untreated control seedlings (lane 1, WT/D), whereas the
abundance did not differ significantly between far-red light-treated
samples and untreated samples in the phyA mutant (lanes 3 and 4; phyA/D and phyA/FR).

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Figure 2.
Northern-blot analysis (A) and RT-PCR analysis (B)
confirming the PhyA-regulated expression of the genes that correspond
to 14 cloned cDNAs. A, Total RNA (10 µg per lane) from the wild type
(WT) and the phyA mutant (phyA) that had been subjected
to FDD was hybridized with cDNA probes generated from each cloned cDNA.
The sizes of transcripts were estimated from mobilities of RNA size
markers. The signal for hybridized 18S rRNA is included for
normalization of results. B, cDNAs corresponding to 25 ng of total RNA
were used as templates for PCR. The ACT8 gene was used
as a positive internal control (An et al., 1996 ). The amplified PCR
products were electrophoresed on a 3% (w/v) agarose gel,
stained with ethidium bromide, and scanned with the fluorescent image
analyzer.
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The abundance of mRNAs that corresponded to two down-regulated cDNAs
declined approximately 2-fold (clone 14) and 1.2-fold (clone 15),
respectively (Fig. 2). The patterns of expression of mRNAs observed by
northern-blot or RT-PCR analysis faithfully reflected the FDD banding
patterns (Fig. 1). The PhyA-dependent induction of expression of clone
7, which was identical to the Lhcb1*3 gene (formerly named
cab1) that had been analyzed previously (Hamazato et al.,
1997 ). The results clearly demonstrate that the expression of the mRNAs
that corresponded to the 15 cloned cDNAs was mediated by PhyA upon
far-red irradiation of etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings. Five cDNAs that
could be detected only by RT-PCR analysis did not show differential
expression in the wild type compared with the phyA mutant.
Finally, we identified 15 genes that were regulated by PhyA; of these,
13 were up-regulated and two were down-regulated. These 15 genes were
represented by 19 cloned FDD cDNAs from etiolated seedlings of
Arabidopsis (Table II).
The Up-Regulated Genes by PhyA
The sequences of the 15 isolated clones were used to search for
similar sequences in the EMBL/GenBank databases. The results are
summarized in Table II. The 13 up-regulated clones included nine known
genes of Arabidopsis, three homologs of plant genes from other
organisms, and one unknown gene. Nine known genes of Arabidopsis
included such six genes for photosynthetic-proteins as
Lhca1*1 (Jensen et al., 1992 ), Lhcb1*3 (Leutwiler
et al., 1986 ), glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase subunit A
(gapA; Shih et al., 1991 ), subunit K of photosystem I (PSI)
(psaK; Ikeuchi et al., 1990 ), subunit G of PSI
(psaG; Okkels et al., 1992 ), subunit P of PSII
(psbP; Kochhar, 1996 ), two genes for enzymes involved in
biosynthesis of chlorophyll; geranylgeranyl reductase (Keller et al.,
1998 ), Mg chelatase (CHL H; Gibson et al., 1996 ), and one
gene for DNA damage repair/toleration-related protein
(Drt112; Pang et al., 1993 ).
Three other cloned cDNAs represent Arabidopsis homologs of nuclear
genes for photosynthetic proteins in other plants. The 5' region
(nucleotides 1-475) of clone 4 was 72.8% similar to the spinach gene
(psbS) that encodes a 22-kD protein in PSII. The identity at
the deduced amino acid level was 89.0% in this region (Fig.
3A; Wedel et al., 1992 ). The 5' region
(nucleotides 1-113) of clone 5 (accession no. AB015860) was 78.7%
similar to the barley gene for subunit E of PSI (psaE) at
the nucleotide level and 84.2% similar at the deduced amino acid level
(Fig. 3B; Okkels et al., 1988 ). Clone 6 (accession no. AB015861) was
75.4% similar at the nucleotide level and 86.8% similar at the
deduced amino acid level to the spinach gene for subunit L of PSI
(psaL; Fig. 3C; Fliger et al., 1993 ). Clone 13 (accession no. AB015862) was very similar (95.5%) to an Arabidopsis cDNA clone
(GenBank accession no. T45262) that exhibited no significant similarity
to any known genes in the database, suggesting that this clone
represents a novel gene. Thus, the majority of up-regulated genes were
identical to the nuclear genes for plastid proteins involved in
photosynthesis and the biosynthesis of chlorophyll.

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Figure 3.
The deduced amino acid sequence of three
PhyA-regulated genes. A comparison of clones 4, 5, and 6 with the
C-terminal regions of spinach psbS (A), barley
psaE (B), and spinach psaL (C) is shown.
The dashes ( ) represent identical amino acids, the asterisk indicates
a stop codon, and the numbering is as previously described (Okkels et
al., 1988 ; Wedel et al., 1992 ; Fliger et al., 1993 ).
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The Down-Regulated Genes by PhyA
Two down-regulated clones showed significant similarity to
Arabidopsis genes. Clone 14 showed 98.9% similarity to a xyloglucan endotransglycosylase-related gene (XTR7; Xu et al., 1996 ).
The sequence of clone 15 was 95.9% identical to a part of a deduced open reading frame in the Arabidopsis genome database (GenBank accession no. AB005234). This open reading frame is predicted to be a
novel member (ASK3) of the ASK protein kinase family (Park et al.,
1993 ). In contrast to the up-regulated genes, the two down-regulated
genes encode proteins functionally distinct from plastid proteins.
Overlapping Effects of Phytochromes on Expression of mRNAs
To examine whether phytochromes other than PhyA might be
involved in regulation of the expression of the above-described 15 distinct genes, we irradiated 6-d-old etiolated seedlings of the wild
type, the phyA mutant, and a phyAphyB double
mutant with 1 mmol m 2 red light, with 1 mmol
m 2 red light followed by 3 mmol
m 2 far-red light, or with 3 mmol
m 2 far-red light. Total RNA was isolated from
the seedlings 4 h after the light treatments, and the expression
of mRNAs that correspond to the 15 isolated genes was investigated by
northern-blot or RT-PCR analysis. Representative results of the
expression of nine selected genes (Lhca1*1,
Drt112, gapA, psbS, psaE,
psaL XTR7, clone 13, and ASK3) are shown in
Figure 4.

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Figure 4.
Northern-blot analysis (A) and RT-PCR analysis (B)
of red/far-red reversible effects on expression of genes that
correspond to nine selected genes in the wild-type, the
phyA mutant, and phyAphyB double mutant
seedlings. Etiolated seedlings of the wild type (WT), the
phyA-201 mutant (phyA), and the
phyA-201phyB-1 double mutant (phyAphyB)
were kept in total darkness (D) or exposed to red light (R; 1 mmol
m 2), or to red light followed by far-red light (R/FR; 1 mmol m 2/3 mmol m 2), or to far-red light
only (FR; 3 mmol m 2). A, Total RNA (10 µg per lane) was
allowed to hybridize with cDNA probes generated from each cloned cDNA.
The signal for hybridized 18S rRNA is included for normalization of
results. B, cDNAs corresponding to 25 ng of total RNA were used as
templates for PCR. The ACT8 gene was used as a positive
internal control (An et al., 1996 ). The amplified PCR products were
electrophoresed on a 3% (w/v) agarose gel, stained with ethidium
bromide, and scanned with the fluorescent image analyzer.
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In the phyA mutant, the expression of the selected genes was
induced or repressed by 1 mmol m 2 red light
(Fig. 4, lanes phyA, D and R) and the extent of induction (1.6- to 3-fold) or repression (4-fold for XTR7, 1.25-fold
for ASK3) was reduced by subsequent irradiation with far-red
light (Fig. 4, lane phyA, R/FR). The results indicate that,
in addition to PhyA, other phytochromes photoreversibly regulate
the expression of these mRNAs. Moreover, changes in expression of the
selected genes by red light and red/far-red reversibility of those
changes were also observed when we examined the phyAphyB
double mutant (Fig. 4, lanes phyAphyB, D, R, and R/FR). The
extent of changes of induction (1.2- to 1.5-fold) or repression
(1.3-fold for XTR7, 1.2-fold for ASK3) by red
light in the phyAphyB double mutant (Fig. 4, lanes
phyAphyB, R) was lower than that in the phyA
mutant (Fig. 4, lanes phyA, R). The five remaining
up-regulated genes (geranylgeranyl reductase, CHL H,
psaK, psaG, and psbP) also showed similar changes of expression (data not shown). The function of phytochromes other than PhyA on induction of expression of the Lhcb1*3 gene (clone 7) has been well studied previously
(Hamazato et al., 1997 ). The results presented here indicate that PhyB
and phytochromes other than PhyA and PhyB also photoreversibly regulate the expression of the 15 genes from this study in etiolated seedlings of Arabidopsis.
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DISCUSSION |
Identification of PhyA-Regulated Genes by Large-Scale Screening
In the present study, we screened approximately 30,000 cDNAs by
FDD using 240 combinations of primers. If the total number of genes in
Arabidopsis is somewhere between 16,000 and 33,000 (Gibson and
Somerville, 1993 ; Meyerowitz, 1994 ) and if about 15% of all of the
genes are expressed at a particular time in a eukaryotic cell (Liang
and Pardee, 1992 ), we would expect 2,500 to 5,000 mRNAs to be
transcribed at any particular time in any particular Arabidopsis
tissue. For the display of all mRNAs in the present FDD system, about
60 combinations of primers should be sufficient for detection of each
Arabidopsis mRNA, at least once with 95% probability (Bauer et al.,
1993 ). We used four times the number of primer sets than should be
required to display all expressed species of mRNA in Arabidopsis. The
sensitivity of FDD is similar to that of the original differential
display technique (Ito et al., 1994 ). Wan et al. demonstrated that both
abundant and rare mRNAs are identified by differential display (Wan et
al., 1996 ). Therefore, we probably screened the majority of mRNA
species that are expressed in etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings 4 h
after irradiation with far-red light, since both abundant and rare
mRNAs should have been displayed in our FDD screening.
We identified 19 differentially displayed bands of cDNA that correspond
to 15 PhyA-regulated genes, 13 are up-regulated and two are
down-regulated (Table II). The 19 differentially expressed bands
represent a very small fraction of the total number of bands displayed,
indicating that the present FDD method is a highly reliable technique
for detection of rare differentially expressed genes among genes with
only a few differences in their profiles of expression. In addition,
the Lhcb1*3 gene (clone 7; Hamazato et al., 1997 ) and the
gapA gene (clone 3; Dewdney et al., 1993 ), which have
already been well characterized as VLF response genes in Arabidopsis,
were identified as PhyA-regulated gene by our FDD screening. In spite
of using 240 primer sets in present study, however, we failed to detect
the Fd gene that was previously reported as a VLF-inducible gene
(Caspar and Quail, 1993 ). Therefore, the present large-scale FDD
screening would not cover all of the expressed mRNA in etiolated
Arabidopsis seedlings.
Assignment of Phytochromes to the Control of Expression of
Specific Light-Dependent Genes
The expression of PhyA-regulated genes such as Lhcb1*3
is induced upon far-red irradiation of etiolated wild-type plants but not of phyA mutant plants (Hamazato et al., 1997 ). We
compared levels of RNAs in samples of wild-type and phyA
mutant seedlings that had or had not been irradiated with far-red light
(Fig. 1; Table I). We were able to eliminate from consideration those faint bands that were generated sporadically by PCR, and confirmed the
differentially expressed bands of cDNA as representative of PhyA-regulated genes.
The high irradiance response to far-red light (FR-HIR) is known to be a
PhyA-mediated response, as is the VLF response (Smith and Whitelam,
1990 ). Accumulation of Lhcb1*3 transcripts in etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings requires a fluence of far-red light from 1 µmol
m 2 to 10 mmol m 2
(Hamazato et al., 1997 ). Therefore, we used high-fluence far-red light
(10 mmol m 2) for light treatment to induce
maximum changes in the abundance of mRNAs of candidate genes. However,
the fluence and the duration of far-red irradiation that we used were
insufficient to induce the FR-HIR. Thus, the isolated genes were
exclusively VLF response genes that are regulated by PhyA in etiolated
seedlings of Arabidopsis. The combination of the FDD technique with
utilization of the phyA mutant and far-red light irradiation
was the key to the successful large-scale screening for PhyA-regulated genes.
The Role of PhyA in Gene Expression in Etiolated Seedlings
Twelve of the 13 up-regulated genes were identical to known
nuclear genes for photosynthetic or chloroplast proteins (Table II),
even though the expression of only three of the genes, Arabidopsis Lhcb1*3, Arabidopsis gapA, and spinach
psbS, had previously been reported to be regulated through
VLF response pathway (Dewdney et al., 1993 ; Adamska et al., 1996 ;
Hamazato et al., 1997 ). Regulation by light of the expression of the
psaL gene of cucumber and the geranylgeranyl reductase gene
of Arabidopsis has been reported, but it is not yet clear whether
phytochromes are involved in those phenomena (Toyama et al., 1996 ;
Keller et al., 1998 ). In addition, regulation by phytochrome of the
seven other genes in Arabidopsis (Lhca1*1,
Drt112, psaE, CHL H, psaK,
psaG, and psbP) has not previously been reported.
Accordingly, the present study allows, for the first time to our
knowledge, the assignment of PhyA to the regulation of the induction of
nine genes for photosynthetic or chloroplast proteins in etiolated
seedlings of Arabidopsis.
To date, most genes for plastid proteins have been shown to exhibit the
LF response, while a limited number of genes exhibit the VLF response
in etiolated tissues (Thompson and White, 1991 ). Among previously
reported VLF-responsive genes other than the Lhcb genes,
only the gene for the early light-inducible protein (ELIP; Adamska et
al., 1995 ) and the psbS gene encode plastid proteins
(Adamska et al., 1996 ). However, our results show clearly that the
expression of genes for other plastid proteins, in addition to
the Lhcb1*1 genes, is also controlled by the PhyA-mediated VLF response in etiolated seedlings of Arabidopsis.
The expression of the Drt112 gene, whose product may be
involved in ctDNA resistance to photodamage (Pang et al., 1993 ), was also induced by PhyA through the VLF response. It has been proposed that the PsbS protein, which is also the product of a VLF
response gene, plays a significant role in protection against light
stress (Adamska et al., 1995 ). These results suggest that the genes not only for photosynthetic proteins but also for photodamage-related proteins are included among the genes for plastid proteins that exhibit
the VLF response.
Induction of expression of the genes for photosynthetic proteins and
photodamage-related proteins by PhyA through the VLF response suggests
the biological significance of PhyA in etiolated tissue. VLF light
conditions might be present below the surface of the soil during seed
germination. Plants need to rapidly produce both the components of
photosystems for the effective absorption of light energy and the
proteins required for protection against light stress prior to
emergence of the seedling from the soil. Thus, the elevated
photosensitivity of PhyA would be advantageous for the survival of
germinating seeds or young seedlings.
Although most of the genes reported previously as being phytochrome
regulated showed up-regulation of expression, a few genes, including
genes for PHYA (Lissemore et al., 1988 ), NPR1
(Okubara et al., 1991 ), TUB1 (Leu et al., 1995 ), and
ATHB2 (Carabelli et al., 1996 ), are down-regulated by
phytochromes. Photoregulated expression of the XTR7 gene has
also been reported, but the photoreceptor(s) involved in this
regulation remains unknown (Xu et al., 1996 ). Expression analysis in
this study clearly demonstrated that down-regulated expression of the
XTR7 gene is controlled by PhyA through the VLF response in
etiolated seedlings of Arabidopsis. Although five of the seven members
of XTR gene family show down-regulated expression by light
in green plants of Arabidopsis (Xu et al., 1996 ), only XTR7
was identified as down-regulated gene by FDD screening in etiolated
seedlings. This result suggests that XTR7 might be a major
xyloglucan endotransglycosylase mediating cell wall alterations required for elongation of etiolated plants.
Clone 15 corresponds to a novel member (ASK3) of the Arabidopsis ASK
kinase family (ASK1 and ASK2) which contain highly acidic domains at
the C terminus (Park et al., 1993 ). Expression of genes for ASK1 and
ASK2 kinases was induced by light and was highest in the leaf (Park et
al., 1993 ). In contrast to these two genes, clone 15 showed
down-regulated expression that was mediated by PhyA. Although the
tissue specific expression of clone 15 was not investigated in this
study, the difference in the regulation of expression by light might
suggest specific roles of this novel ASK kinase in etiolated plants.
The identification of genes which had been previously unreported as
PhyA-regulated genes such as XTR7, ASK3, and the
novel gene (clone 13) suggests a new aspect of the role of PhyA in
etiolated tissue.
Overlapping Effects of Different Phytochromes
The expression of all 15 PhyA-regulated genes characterized in
this study was also regulated by PhyB and phytochromes other than PhyA
and PhyB (Fig. 4). In other words, none of the identified genes was
regulated exclusively in a PhyA-specific manner. Although photoperception by PhyA and PhyB is quite different in terms of both
fluence and wavelength, both regulated expression of the same genes.
This result is consistent with results of previous studies of the
phytochrome regulation of Lhcb1*3 gene expression (Reed et
al., 1994 ; Anderson et al., 1997 ; Hamazato et al., 1997 ). Moreover,
Cerdán et al. (1997) reported that a 146-bp fragment of the
tobacco Lhcb1*2 promoter responds to all three modes of phytochrome action (VLF response, LF response, and HIR) in etiolated transgenic tobacco seedlings. Overlapping effects of phytochromes have
also been observed in several phytochrome-related responses, such as
regulation of the photoinduction of seed germination (Shinomura et al.,
1996 ), hypocotyl elongation, promotion of cotyledon expansion, and
flowering (Reed et al., 1994 ). Thus, the overlapping effects of
phytochromes might be a general phenomenon, suggesting that the various
signal transduction pathways converge at the same places.
Some recently isolated mutants exhibit specific alterations in response
to either PhyA or PhyB. For example, fhy1, fhy3
(Whitelam et al., 1993 ; Barnes et al., 1996 ), spa1 (Hoecker
et al., 1998 ), vlf1, and vlf2 (Yanovsky et al.,
1997 ), in the PhyA response, and pef2, pef3
(Ahmad and Cashmore, 1996b ), and red1 (Wagner et al., 1997 ),
in the case of the PhyB response. The existence of such mutants
suggests the existence of PhyA- and PhyB-specific signal transduction
pathways. Thus, at least some events in PhyA and PhyB signal
transduction appear to be distinct and specific to either PhyA or PhyB.
To uncover the mechanisms of the overlapping effects of each
phytochrome, further analysis of the signal transduction pathways of
phytochrome-regulated responses is obviously necessary. The
identification of a group of PhyA-regulated genes provides useful
molecular markers for the study of signal transduction pathways from
photoperception by phytochromes to the regulation of gene expression.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
The authors thank Dr. Joel Kreps (The Scripps Research
Institute, La Jolla, CA) for providing the plasmid that carried pea rDNA and for critically reading the manuscript, and Dr. John G. Jelesko
(University of California, Berkeley) and Dr. Charles P. Scutt (Leeds
University, UK) for their helpful suggestions. We also thank Ryoko
Katayanagi for assistance with plant cultivation.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received June 7, 1999; accepted August 11, 1999.
1
This work was partly supported by grants to M.F.
from the Hitachi Advanced Research Laboratory (B2023) and the Program
for Promotion of Basic Research Activities for Innovative Biosciences.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail mfuruya{at}harl.hitachi.co.jp; fax
81-492-96-7511.
 |
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