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Plant Physiol, February 2000, Vol. 122, pp. 527-534
Auxin-Regulated Genes Encoding Cell Wall-Modifying
Proteins Are Expressed during Early Tomato Fruit Growth
Carmen
Catalá,1
Jocelyn K.C.
Rose,1 and
Alan B.
Bennett*
Mann Laboratory, Department of Vegetable Crops, University of
California, Davis, California 95616.
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ABSTRACT |
An expansin gene,
LeExp2, was isolated from auxin-treated, etiolated
tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum cv T5) hypocotyls.
LeExp2 mRNA expression was restricted to the growing
regions of the tomato hypocotyl and was up-regulated during incubation
of hypocotyl segments with auxin. The pattern of expression of
LeExp2 was also studied during tomato fruit growth, a
developmental process involving rapid cell enlargement. The expression
of genes encoding a xyloglucan endotransglycosylase
(LeEXT1) and an endo-1,4- -glucanase
(Cel7), which, like LeExp2, are
auxin-regulated in etiolated hypocotyls (C. Catalá, J.K.C. Rose,
A.B. Bennett [1997] Plant J 12: 417-426), was also studied to
examine the potential for synergistic action with expansins.
LeExp2 and LeEXT1 genes were coordinately
regulated, with their mRNA accumulation peaking during the stages
of highest growth, while Cel7 mRNA abundance increased
and remained constant during later stages of fruit growth. The
expression of LeExp2, LeEXT1, and
Cel7 was undetectable or negligible at the onset of and
during fruit ripening, which is consistent with a specific role of
these genes in regulating cell wall loosening during fruit growth, not
in ripening-associated cell wall disassembly.
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INTRODUCTION |
Plant growth is controlled by numerous hormonal and environmental
stimuli that interact to regulate cell division and both the direction
and rate of cell expansion. Auxin has been implicated in the control of
cell elongation (Cleland, 1995 ), and auxin-induced elongation has been
extensively studied in excised stem and coleoptile segments. There is
also recent evidence to suggest that auxin is capable of promoting cell
elongation in intact plants (Yang et al., 1993 ; Romano et al., 1995 ;
Gray et al., 1998 ). Exogenous auxin is thought to induce rapid
elongation in plant tissues through an increase in the mechanical
extensibility of the cell wall (Taiz, 1984 ; Cosgrove, 1993 ). Several
changes in the architecture of the primary wall and in the apoplastic
environment have been associated with the action of auxin, including
cell wall acidification (Rayle and Cleland, 1992 ), modification of
specific cell wall polymers, and de novo polysaccharide synthesis
(Kutschera and Briggs, 1987 ; Talbott and Ray, 1992 ). Although still
somewhat controversial, the "acid growth" theory proposes that
auxin-induced cell wall acidification is an essential component of
auxin-induced cell expansion. The reduction in apoplastic pH has been
suggested to induce wall loosening through the activation of cell
wall-modifying enzymes, which catalyze the breakage of load-bearing
bonds and rearrange cell wall polymers (Cleland, 1995 ). However, the
biochemical mechanisms by which cell wall structure is modified in
response to auxin remain poorly understood.
The plant primary cell wall is typically described as a complex network
of cellulose microfibrils that are interwoven by two classes of matrix
polymers, hemicelluloses and pectins, together with other,
less-abundant components such as structural proteins (Carpita and
Gibeaut, 1993 ). The major hemicellulose in dicotyledons is xyloglucan,
which is thought to coat and tether the cellulose microfibrils
together, forming an extensive cellulose-xyloglucan network (Hayashi
and Maclachlan, 1984 ; McCann et al., 1990 ). Since this network is
believed to represent a major constraint to turgor-driven cell
expansion, the disassembly of critical load-bearing linkages or
associations, such as xyloglucan molecules that cross-link adjacent
cellulose microfibrils, may be an essential feature of the wall
loosening required for cell expansion. The observation that one of the
early effects of auxin-induced growth is xyloglucan depolymerization
and solubilization (Labavitch and Ray, 1974 ; Talbott and Ray, 1992 )
supports this model.
Candidate enzymes responsible for the reorganization of the
cellulose-xyloglucan framework include endo- -1,4-glucanases (EGases) and xyloglucan endotransglycosylases (XETs). Plant EGases catalyze the
endo-hydrolysis of -1,4 linked glucan chains (Brummell et al.,
1994 ), while XETs catalyze the endo-cleavage of xyloglucan polymers and
transfer of the newly generated reducing ends to other xyloglucans (Fry
et al., 1992 ; Nishitani and Tominaga, 1992 ). An increase in the
expression of the EGase and XET genes in response to auxin has been
described in several plant species (Xu et al., 1995 ; Wu et al., 1996 ;
Catalá et al., 1997 ). Another group of plant proteins,
expansins, have been identified as wall-loosening factors, although
they have been reported to possess no glycanolytic activity
(McQueen-Mason et al., 1992 ). Unlike EGases and XETs, expansins promote
the long-term extension of isolated cell walls in vitro, and have been
proposed to catalyze the ability of cell walls to extend at an acidic
pH (Cosgrove, 1998 ).
The mechanism of expansin action is still unknown, but it has been
suggested that expansins disrupt hydrogen bonds between cellulose
microfibrils and associated hemicelluloses (McQueen-Mason and Cosgrove,
1995 ). By disrupting the noncovalent associations between xyloglucan
and cellulose, expansins could both facilitate the movement of
microfibrils relative to each other and alter the accessibility of
xyloglucan to cell wall enzymes such as EGases and XETs. Expansin gene
families have been identified in several plant species (Shcherban et
al., 1995 ; Link and Cosgrove, 1998 ), and the expression of some
expansin genes has been correlated with cell growth (Cho and Kende,
1997 ; Orford and Timmis, 1998 ). However, the complexity of the expansin
gene families and the tissue-specific patterns of expression of some of
their members suggest that different isoforms may have distinct
functions in plant growth and development (Rose et al., 1997 ; Reinhardt
et al., 1998 ). Most expansins and their homologs identified to date are
classified as -expansins, while -expansins comprise a divergent class of proteins that contain highly conserved residues with -expansins, despite only 25% overall amino acid identity (Cosgrove et al., 1997 ).
Cell expansion also accompanies fruit growth, accounting for increases
in cell volume of 10-fold or more (Coombe, 1976 ), and is likely to
involve synthesis and restructuring of the primary wall. It has been
suggested that, like growing vegetative tissues, auxin promotes cell
expansion in fruit by causing an increase in cell wall extensibility
(Gillaspy et al., 1993 ). However, relatively little information exists
about the basis and mechanisms of wall loosening during fruit growth.
In contrast, cell wall changes during fruit ripening are well
documented and have been associated with an increase in gene expression
of specific EGases (Lashbrook et al., 1994 ), XETs (Arrowsmith and de
Silva, 1995 ; Schröder et al., 1998 ), and ripening-specific
expansins (Rose et al., 1997 ). Although activities of enzymes degrading
-1,4-glucans or xyloglucans and XET activity are generally high
during early fruit growth (Bonghi et al., 1998 ; Faik et al., 1998 ),
there is little information about the expression of specific members of
the XET, EGase, and expansin gene families during fruit growth and
their relationship to the expression of related genes during fruit ripening.
We have previously shown that auxin regulates mRNA abundance of an
EGase (Cel7) and an XET (LeEXT1) during
auxin-induced elongation of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum
cv T5) hypocotyl segments (Catalá et al., 1997 ). In this paper,
we characterize the auxin regulation of a new tomato expansin gene
(LeExp2; GenBank accession no. AF096776) and describe the
expression of LeExp2, Cel7, and LeEXT1
during fruit development. These auxin-induced genes encode cell
wall-modifying enzymes that may act synergistically in restructuring
the cellulose-xyloglucan network to allow cell expansion both in
elongating hypocotyls and during rapid fruit growth.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Material
Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum cv T5) seeds were sown
on moist vermiculite, and etiolated seedlings were grown in the dark for 7 d at 25°C. The growth rates of different regions of the hypocotyl were measured using paint marks applied at 5-mm intervals along the hypocotyls of 6-d-old seedlings. The distances between the
marks were measured in 15 seedlings after a 12-h growth period in the dark.
Fruit and vegetative tissues were harvested from greenhouse-grown
tomato plants. Young expanding fruit were staged as I, II, or III,
corresponding to fruit diameters of 0.5 to 1 cm, 2 to 3 cm, and 4 to 6 cm, respectively, and ripening fruit were assigned a developmental
stage based on color, as described in Lashbrook et al. (1994) . Pericarp
tissue was isolated from fruit harvested at different developmental
stages and frozen immediately in liquid nitrogen. To characterize the
rate of tomato fruit growth, flowers were tagged at anthesis and fruit
diameters measured over a period of 50 d. A regression curve was
established from data obtained with 15 fruit
(r2 = 0.96).
Hormone Treatments
Etiolated tomato hypocotyl sections (6 mm) were cut directly below
the apical hook and incubated in 25 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.0), 2% (w/v) Suc for 2 to 3 h (Kelly and Bradford, 1986 ). Buffer was replaced with fresh buffer or buffer containing the
indicated concentration of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D),
indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), naphthylacetic acid (NAA), or brassinolide,
and segments were incubated at 25°C in the dark with gentle agitation.
PCR Amplification and cDNA Library Screening
Degenerate PCR primers were designed from conserved amino acids
identified in an alignment of deduced amino acid sequences from nine
expansins (Shcherban et al., 1995 ) and were used to amplify an expansin
cDNA fragment from auxin-treated tomato hypocotyl RNA. The 5' end
primer [G(GC)(N) CA(TC) GC(N) AC(N) TT(CT) TA(CT) GG(N) G]
corresponded to amino acids 6 to 11 of the consensus sequence and the
3'end primer [(TC) TGCCA(AG) TT(TC) TG(N) CCCCA(AG) TT] to amino
acids 182 to 188 (n = A, T, C, or G). cDNA synthesis and PCR amplification were as in Rose et al. (1996) , with an annealing temperature of 50°C.
The resulting 540-bp cDNA fragment was cloned into the PCR II vector
(Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), and the DNA sequence was determined
using an automated sequencer (model 377, Perkin-Elmer/Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) and dye terminator chemistry with AmpliTaq
DNA polymerase (Taq FS, Perkin-Elmer/Applied Biosystems). The PCR fragment, corresponding to amino acids 28 to 207 of the full-length clone, was used to screen a tomato hypocotyl cDNA library
in the pARC7 vector (O'Neill et al., 1990 ). Twenty-four positive
clones were identified and six inserts were subcloned from the library
vector into the SalI /NotI sites of the
pBluescript II SK+ plasmid (Stratagene, La Jolla,
CA) and sequenced as for the PCR product. The longest clone was
designated LeExp2.
The full deduced amino acid sequence of LeExp2 was aligned
with the corresponding sequences of -expansins, including the signal
peptides, present in the GenBank database using CLUSTAL with
substitution matrix BLOSUM30 (Gap opening penalty of 10 and gap
extension penalty of 0.05). A phylogenetic tree was constructed using
PHYLIP software (Felsenstein, 1989 ) with the parsimony method PROTPARS
using the neighbor-joining method and bootstrap analysis with 1,000 replicates. The GenBank accession numbers are: Arabidopsis AtExp1,
U30476, AtExp2, U30481, AtExp5, U30478, and
AtExp6, U30480; rape BnExp1, AJ000885; cotton
GhExp1, AF043284; cucumber CsExp1, U30482;
CsExp2, U30460; pea PsExp1, X85187; Phleum pollen allergen Phlp1, X78813; pine
PtExp4, U64892; rice OsExp1, Y07782;
OsExp2, U30477; OsExp3, U30479; OsExp4, U85246; tobacco NtExp2, AF049351;
NtExp3, AF049352; NtExp4, AF049353;
NtExp5, AF049354; tomato LeExp1, U82123; LeExp2, AF096776; LeExp3, AF059487;
LeExp4, AF059488; LeExp5, AF059489;
LeExp18, AJ004997.
DNA and RNA Gel-Blot Analysis
Genomic DNA was isolated from tomato leaves as described in Murray
and Thompson (1980) . Ten micrograms of genomic DNA was digested with a
range of restriction enzymes, fractionated by electrophoresis on 0.8%
(w/v) agarose gels, and transferred to positively charged nylon
membrane (Boehringer Mannheim/Roche, Basel, Switzerland), as in
Sambrook et al. (1989) . A 652-bp SacI/StuI fragment, including the first 43 bp of the 3' untranslated region, was
used as the LeExp2 probe. Cel7 and
LeEXT1 probes were prepared as described in Catalá et
al. (1997) . A 200-bp tomato actin cDNA fragment was used as a loading
control for a gene expressed constitutively throughout fruit
development. Probes were radiolabeled by random hexamer priming using
[ -32P]dATP (3,000 Ci
mmol 1, Dupont, Wilmington, DE) and
Klenow DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA).
Hybridizations were performed at 42°C in 50% (w/v) formamide,
6× SSPE, 0.5% (v/v) SDS, 5× Denhardt's solution, and 100 mg
mL 1 sonicated salmon sperm DNA. Membranes were
washed three times in 5× SSC, 1% (w/v) SDS at 42°C for 15 min, followed by three washes in 0.2× SSC, 0.5% (w/v) SDS at
65°C for 20 min (8°C below Tm).
Total RNA was isolated from etiolated tomato hypocotyls using a kit
(RNeasy Plant Total RNA kit, Qiagen, Valencia, CA) according to the
manufacturer's instructions. Total RNA (15 µg per lane) was
subjected to electrophoresis on 1.2% (w/v) agarose, 10%
(v/v) formaldehyde gels, visualized with ethidium bromide to
test for equal loading, and transferred to Hybond-N membrane
(Amersham-Pharmacia Biotech, Uppsala, Sweden) as in Sambrook et al.
(1989) . RNA was extracted from frozen pericarp and vegetative tissues
by the method of Wan and Wilkins (1994) .
Poly(A)+ RNA was isolated with the Oligotex mRNA
kit (Qiagen), and 1 µg per lane was subjected to electrophoresis as
described above. RNA blots were hybridized and washed at a stringency
equivalent to that of the DNA-blot analysis described above.
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RESULTS |
Cloning and Phylogenetic Analysis of LeExp2
To identify expansins expressed in response to auxin, RNA was
isolated from auxin-treated tomato hypocotyls and used for reverse transcriptase-PCR reactions, together with degenerate oligonucleotide primers based on deduced amino acid domains conserved between expansins. The sequence of an amplified 540-bp cDNA fragment
corresponded to a new tomato expansin, and was designated
LeExp2. Subsequent screening of a tomato hypocotyl cDNA
library identified a full-length LeExp2 clone (1,147 bp)
encoding a predicted polypeptide of 247 amino acids, including a signal
peptide of 20 amino acids, as predicted using SignalP (Henrik et al.,
1997 ). An expansin gene isolated from tomato leaves was previously
described as LeExp2 (Reinhardt et al., 1998 ); however, the
authors did not report the nucleotide or amino acid sequence. We have
subsequently confirmed that the LeExp2 DNA sequences are
identical (S. McQueen-Mason, personal communication).
A phylogenetic tree generated from the alignment of the deduced amino
acid sequences of LeExp2 and other expansin genes identified different subgroups of expansins (Fig.
1). Four groups were indicated and,
although group I is supported with a low bootstrap value, the same
groups have been identified in another phylogenetic analysis based on
nucleotide sequences of expansins (Link and Cosgrove, 1998 ).
LeExp2 aligned within a sublineage of group I containing expansins from tobacco (NtExp5, 89% amino acid identity),
cucumber (CuExp1, 78% identity), and pine
(PtExp4, 76% identity). This group also contained expansins
from rice (OsExp4) and cotton (GhExp1), whose
expression is correlated with elongation growth (Cho and Kende, 1997 ;
Orford and Timmis, 1998 ). Five other tomato expansins aligned within
different phylogenetic groups and showed 49% to 71% identity with
LeExp2. Group IV contained three expansin homologs: LeExp4, expressed in young tomato fruit (Brummell et al.,
1999 ) and LeExp1 and LeExp18, which are expressed
during fruit ripening and leaf primordia formation, respectively (Rose
et al., 1997 ; Reinhardt et al., 1998 ). The more divergent tomato
expansin LeExp3 aligns outside the four principal groups.

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Figure 1.
Phylogenetic tree of the alignment of
LeExp2 deduced amino acid sequence with other
-expansins. Protein sequences were aligned using CLUSTAL, and a
phylogenetic tree was constructed using PHYLIP software with the
PROTPARS program. Numbers above the branches indicate the bootstrap
values. A Phleum pollen allergen (Phlp1),
identified as a -expansin, was used as an outgroup. Full details and
accession numbers are given in "Materials and Methods."
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Genomic Analysis of LeExp2
A cDNA fragment corresponding to part of the LeExp2
coding region was used as a probe for genomic DNA gel-blot analysis
(Fig. 2). The probe hybridized strongly
to a single genomic fragment, indicating that LeExp2 is a
single-copy gene and that the probe is gene specific. Additional faint
bands were present in some lanes and may represent other distantly
related genes. The same LeExp2 probe was used subsequently at the same
relative stringency to probe the RNA gel blots.

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Figure 2.
Genomic DNA analysis of LeExp2.
Genomic DNA (10 µg per lane) was digested with the indicated
restriction enzymes, gel blot hybridized with the LeExp2
cDNA probe, and washed with 0.2× SSC, 0.5% (w/v) SDS at 65°C (8°C
below the Tm).
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LeExp2 mRNA Accumulates in the Apical Elongation Zone
of Tomato Etiolated Hypocotyls
LeExp2 expression was examined in tomato vegetative
tissues at the level of mRNA abundance using the same cDNA probe as
above. RNA gel-blot analysis using poly(A+) RNA
from leaf, stem, hypocotyl, and root revealed a band of 1.2 kb (Fig.
3a). The strongest hybridization signal
was detected in hypocotyls, while expression was low in roots. A steep
gradient in growth rate from the apical to basal regions of etiolated
seedlings has been observed in several plant species, with the maximal
rate in the elongation zone immediately below the apical hook (Shinkle et al., 1992 ; Gendreau et al., 1997 ). An analysis of LeExp2
mRNA abundance in different regions of etiolated hypocotyls showed high
levels in the apical elongating zone (elongation rate, 0.73 ± 0.15 mm h 1), while levels decreased toward
region B (elongation rate, 0.36 ± 0.07 mm
h 1) and C (elongation rate, 0.14 ± 0.08 mm h 1) (Fig. 3b). LeExp2 was not
detected in zone D adjacent to the root, which exhibited negligible
elongation.

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Figure 3.
Analysis of LeExp2 mRNA abundance
in tomato vegetative tissues. a, Poly(A+) RNA-blot analysis
of LeExp2 expression in vegetative tissues. Each lane
contained 1 µg of poly(A+) RNA from leaf, stem,
hypocotyl, or root tissues. b, Total RNA gel-blot analysis of
LeExp2 expression along the tomato etiolated hypocotyl.
Each lane contained 15 µg of total RNA isolated from consecutive 1-cm
regions of the hypocotyl. Ethidium bromide staining of the gel is shown
below the blot as a loading control. The growth rates of regions A
through D were measured in 15 seedlings over a 12-h period, as
described in "Materials and Methods." RNA gel blots were hybridized
and washed at the same stringency as in Figure 2.
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LeExp2 Expression Is Auxin Regulated in Tomato
Etiolated Hypocotyl Segments
The effect of auxin on LeExp2 mRNA abundance was
examined using previously described conditions (Kelly and Bradford,
1986 ; Catalá et al., 1997 ). Etiolated hypocotyl segments were
pre-incubated for 2 h in buffer to deplete endogenous auxin and
then incubated in buffer alone, or in buffer plus the synthetic auxin
2,4-D. In this system it has been shown that the
growth of tomato hypocotyl segments is auxin-stimulated over a 12-h
incubation period (Kelly and Bradford, 1986 ; Catalá et al.,
1997 ). We extended the analysis with treatments up to 24 h to be
able to detect a prolonged or delayed accumulation of transcripts, such
as has been observed for some auxin-induced genes (Sitbon and
Perrot-Rechenmann, 1997 ), including endo-1,4- -glucanases (Verma et
al., 1975 ; Catalá et al., 1997 ). Segments were incubated for
24 h in a range of 2,4-D concentrations
(Fig. 4a) or in 5 µM 2,4-D over a time
course of up to 24 h (Fig. 4b).

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Figure 4.
Auxin regulation of LeExp2 mRNA
levels in etiolated hypocotyl segments. a, Effect of auxin
concentration on LeExp2 accumulation. Apical segments
were pre-incubated for 2 h in buffer and then transferred to fresh
buffer plus the indicated auxin concentration and incubated for 24 h. NI, Non-incubated; BR, brassinolide. b, Time course of
LeExp2 mRNA accumulation. Apical segments were
pre-incubated for 2 h in buffer (0-h time point) and then for the
indicated times in buffer alone (control) or buffer plus 5 µM 2,4-D. c, Effect of other auxins on
LeExp2 mRNA accumulation. Apical segments were
pre-incubated for 2 h in buffer (0-h time point) and then for
24 h in buffer alone (control) or buffer plus the indicated
concentration of 2,4-D, NAA, or IAA. After incubation,
RNA was isolated and total RNA-blot analysis (15 µg per lane) was
performed. Ethidium bromide staining of the gel is shown below the
blots as a loading control. RNA gel blots were hybridized and washed at
the same stringency as in Figure 2.
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Although LeExp2 is expressed at high levels in the apical
regions of growing hypocotyls, it was not detected in hypocotyl segments following incubation for 24 h in buffer alone (Fig. 4a). However, mRNA levels were substantially higher upon incubation with 1 µM 2,4-D.
LeExp2 mRNA accumulation was induced to a similar extent
with 5 µM 2,4-D, and 10 µM 2,4-D resulted in
slightly higher levels. Treatment of segments for 24 h with 0.1 to
1.0 µM of the growth-inducing hormone
brassinolide did not increase LeExp2 mRNA levels (Fig. 4a).
Analysis of changes in LeExp2 expression with time
showed that mRNA levels in the control segments declined over the
6 h following the addition of fresh buffer, and became undetectable after 12 h (Fig. 4b). Segments incubated in the
presence of 2,4-D accumulated substantially
higher levels of LeExp2 mRNA after 2 h, and by 6 h, LeExp2 mRNA abundance had been restored to similar or
greater levels than those at the beginning of the incubation period.
Although LeExp2 mRNA abundance also decreased during
incubation of the segments with auxin, the decrease was delayed and
transcript levels were substantially higher than in the corresponding
control segments after 24 h.
The effect of the natural auxin IAA and the auxin analog NAA on the
steady-state levels of LeExp2 mRNA was also examined. Hormone concentrations shown to be optimal in stimulating hypocotyl segment elongation were used (Kelly and Bradford, 1986 ; Catalá et
al., 1997 ). A higher concentration of IAA was also used to compensate
for the instability of this compound. As observed with 2,4-D, incubation of segments for 24 h with
IAA or NAA also elevated the levels of LeExp2 mRNA over
the control incubated in buffer alone (Fig. 4c).
LeExp2 and Auxin-Regulated XET and EGase Genes Are
Expressed during Tomato Fruit Growth
The expression of LeExp2 during tomato fruit
development was examined, together with the expression of genes
encoding an XET (LeEXT1) and an EGase (Cel7),
which, like LeExp2, are auxin regulated in etiolated
hypocotyls (Catalá et al., 1997 ).
Tomato fruit growth followed a sigmoidal curve (Fig.
5a). After fruit set and cell division
(beginning of stage I), a growth phase, characterized by a rapid
increase in fruit diameter (stages II and III), was followed by a
period of continued growth but at a reduced rate (end of stage III,
immature green stage). The growth rate continued to decline until the
end of fruit expansion (mature green stage).

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Figure 5.
Expression of expansin (LeExp2),
XET (LeEXT1), and EGase (Cel7) genes
during tomato fruit development. Flowers were tagged at anthesis and
fruit diameter measured over a period of 50 d. A regression curve
was established from data obtained with 15 fruit. Poly(A+)
RNA-blot analysis of LeExp2, LeEXT1, and
Cel7 expression was done during tomato fruit
development. Northern blots (1 µg per lane) were hybridized
successively with the LeExp2, LeEXT1,
Cel7, and actin cDNA probes. (I, 0.5- to 1.0-cm diameter
fruit; II, 2- to 3-cm diameter fruit; III, 4- to 6-cm diameter fruit;
IG, immature green; MG, mature green; Br, breaker; Tu, turning; Pi,
pink; LR, light red; RR, red-ripe). RNA gel blots were hybridized and
washed at the same stringency as in Figure 2.
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LeExp2 mRNA levels were high in young expanding fruit,
exhibiting a peak at stage II, corresponding to the greatest rate of fruit expansion, but decreased dramatically at the immature green stage
(Fig. 5b). LeExp2 mRNA was undetectable during ripening. The
XET gene, LeEXT1, showed a similar pattern of expression to LeExp2, with the highest mRNA levels at stages II and III,
prior to a decrease at the immature green stage. Expression was barely detectable in mature green fruit that had reached full expansion and
was not observed at the onset of or during ripening (Fig. 5b).
The EGase gene Cel7 was also expressed during fruit
expansion, but showed a different pattern from LeExp2
and LeEXT1. Levels of Cel7 mRNA increased
at stage III of fruit expansion and remained high in the immature
and mature green fruit. Cel7 was not detected at the
breaker stage, which marks the onset of autocatalytic ethylene production and fruit ripening, or in later ripening stages (Fig. 5b).
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DISCUSSION |
We have shown that a new member of the tomato expansin gene
family, LeExp2, is regulated by auxin, and its expression
pattern is consistent with a role in plant cell expansion.
LeExp2 mRNA accumulated primarily in elongating regions of
the tomato hypocotyl and was absent in mature, non-expanding basal
regions (Fig. 3b). The LeExp2 mRNA decayed to undetectable
levels during a 24-h incubation of apical hypocotyl sections in buffer
alone, which may indicate a low stability of the transcript. However,
the addition of auxin resulted in the maintenance of higher
LeExp2 mRNA levels during the incubation period (Fig. 4b).
This increase in LeExp2 mRNA levels may be controlled at the
level of gene transcription and/or mRNA stability. Regulation of gene
expression by auxin has been most extensively studied for members of
the SAUR (small auxin-up-regulated genes) and
Aux/IAA gene families. These rapidly induced,
auxin-responsive mRNAs are under transcriptional regulation involving
regulatory sequences in the promoter region (Abel and Theologis, 1996 ).
As with LeExp2, these auxin-responsive mRNAs also decline to
undetectable levels when organ sections are excised and incubated in
the absence of auxin for up to 24 h.
Relatively short half-lives have been measured for some of these
transcripts; however, auxin does not significantly alter the stability
of certain SAUR and Aux/IAA mRNAs (Koshiba et
al., 1995 ; Gil and Green, 1996 ). Transient accumulation of
LeExp2 transcript in the presence of auxin (Fig. 4b) is
consistent with a short mRNA half-life; however, whether
LeExp2 mRNA levels are regulated through gene transcription
and/or post-transcriptional events remains to be determined. Treatment
of segments with the hormone brassinolide, which also promotes tissue
elongation (Zurek et al., 1994 ), caused no increase in
LeExp2 mRNA levels.
It has been demonstrated that brassinosteroid treatment of tomato
hypocotyl segments does not induce members of the tomato SAUR gene family or other auxin-inducible genes, and it has
been suggested that the molecular mechanism(s) of
brassinosteroid-promoted elongation is likely to differ from that of
auxin-induced elongation (Clouse et al., 1992 ; Zurek et al., 1994 ).
Other expansin gene(s) may be involved in brassinosteroid-induced
elongation. This suggests that the maintenance of LeExp2
mRNA steady-state levels is part of an auxin-regulated pathway and
could act as an important mechanism for sustained auxin-induced growth.
We also examined the expression of LeExp2 during tomato
fruit development, and showed that it is selectively expressed during a
period of rapid and substantial cell expansion but not during fruit
ripening (Fig. 5).
Phylogenetic analysis of expansin sequences has revealed the existence
of at least three subfamilies of expansin genes (Fig. 1) that contain
characteristic conserved amino acid sequences (Link and Cosgrove,
1998 ). This suggests that each expansin subclass comprises members with
similar specific physiological roles, which may be reflected in common
patterns of expression and hormonal regulation. The LeExp2
sequence is highly homologous to the tobacco expansin NtExp5
and is closely related to a biochemically characterized cucumber
expansin (CsExp1) that promotes extension in isolated cell
walls of cucumber hypocotyls (McQueen-Mason et al., 1992 ). LeExp2 and CsExp1 belong to a sublineage of group
I. This group also contains an expansin gene expressed specifically
during elongation of cotton fibers (Orford and Timmis, 1998 ) and a rice
expansin (OsExp4) that is up-regulated by gibberellic acid,
a treatment that promotes rapid internode elongation (Cho and Kende,
1997 ). Therefore, this group includes expansins involved in
facilitating rapid cell expansion and regulated by growth-promoting hormones.
Tomato expansins comprise a gene family with individual members showing
distinct and overlapping expression during different phases of fruit
development (Brummell et al., 1999 ). LeExp4, like LeExp2, is expressed during rapid fruit expansion; however,
these genes align within divergent phylogenetic groups: I and IV,
respectively (Fig. 1). It is likely that divergent tomato expansins are
expressed in specific fruit cell types, are regulated differentially by environmental and hormonal stimuli, or act on different cell wall components. Furthermore, the tissue-specific expression of other tomato
expansins from group IV, LeExp18 and LeExp1,
suggests their involvement in distinct processes involving
differentiation (such as primordium initiation; Reinhardt et al., 1998 )
and and morphogenesis (such as wall disassembly during fruit ripening;
Rose et al., 1997 ). It is interesting that the tomato ripening-related
expansin LeExp1 has a diametrically opposite pattern of
expression to LeExp2 during fruit development and is
regulated by ethylene, a hormone that coordinates many
ripening-regulated pathways (Rose et al., 1997 ). More detailed analyses
of tissue-specific expression and hormonal regulation of individual
members of the expansin gene family may help elucidate the significance
of evolutionary divergence among expansins that has given rise to the
different phylogenetic groups.
In tomato, XETs and EGases, like expansins, comprise gene families with
divergent members showing differential developmental or hormonal
regulation (Rose and Bennett, 1999 ). In common with LeExp2,
the tomato genes LeEXT1 and Cel7, encoding an XET
and an EGase, respectively, are expressed during auxin-induced
elongation of hypocotyl segments (Catalá et al., 1997 ) and could
participate in the cell wall restructuring necessary for sustained
fruit expansion. We have shown that, like LeExp2,
LeEXT1 and Cel7 are selectively expressed during
tomato fruit growth (Fig. 5), with negligible mRNA levels present
during fruit ripening. The mRNA levels of both LeExp2 and
LeEXT1 peaked during the stages of higher rates of fruit
growth, while Cel7 expression increased and remained high
during the later stages of fruit expansion, when the growth rate is
lower. This trend was similar to the time dependence of mRNA
accumulation observed for these genes during the incubation of
hypocotyl segments with auxin (Fig. 4b; Catalá et al., 1997 ). In
hypocotyl segments, LeExp2 and LeEXT1 transcript
levels declined after the period of maximal elongation, while Cel7 mRNA
accumulation, which lagged behind that of LeEXT1, remained
high after segment elongation had ceased.
Disassembly of the cellulose-xyloglucan network by the potentially
coordinated action of expansins and enzymes such as XETs and EGases has
been suggested to mediate reversible wall loosening (Rose and Bennett,
1999 ). Several models may be proposed whereby the products of the
LeExp2 and LeEXT1 genes have a synergistic or
complementary action to allow controlled restructuring of the cellulose-xyloglucan matrix during cell expansion. The action of
expansin may disrupt the association between hemicellulose and the
cellulose microfibrils, allowing transient wall loosening, while at the
same time XETs catalyze incorporation of newly synthesized xyloglucan
into the expanding wall, maintaining structural integrity and tensile
strength. The kinetics of the accumulation of Cel7 mRNA are
consistent with Cel7 acting as the rate of cell expansion decreases,
perhaps hydrolyzing free ends of newly incorporated xyloglucans.
Extensive trimming of the non-cellulose-bound domains of xyloglucans
was reported in studies of rapidly growing rose cell-suspension
cultures (Thompson and Fry, 1997 ). The significance of such
modifications is unclear; however, it should be noted that
hydrolysis of xyloglucan chains might generate substantial populations
of xyloglucan oligosaccharides that can act as biologically active
growth regulators (Creelman and Mullett, 1997 ).
The patterns of expression of LeExp2, LeEXT1, and
Cel7 during the period of rapid fruit growth suggest that
they are part of a developmental and/or hormonal signal transduction
network controlling cell expansion in fruit. LeExp2,
LeEXT1, and Cel7 are regulated by auxin in
etiolated hypocotyl segments, and since auxin levels peak coincident
with the initiation of cell expansion during tomato fruit development
(Hocher et al., 1992 ; Buta and Spaulding, 1994 ), it is likely that
these genes are also up-regulated by auxin during tomato fruit
growth. Down-regulation of LeExp2, LeEXT1, and
Cel7 expression is coincident with the cessation of fruit
cell expansion and the initiation of ripening. In contrast, ripening-related EGase, XET, and expansin genes have been identified and in some cases shown to be ethylene up-regulated (Lashbrook et al.,
1994 ; Arrowsmith and de Silva, 1995 ; Rose et al., 1997 ). This suggests
that during fruit development the structure of the cell wall is
modified by the actions of different subsets of these classes of
enzymes whose gene expression is regulated by different hormonal
signals such as auxin and ethylene, coordinating fruit growth and
ripening, respectively.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received July 14, 1999; accepted October 22, 1999.
1
Present address: Complex Carbohydrate Research
Center and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University
of Georgia, 220 Riverbend Road, Athens, GA 30602-4712.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail abbennett{at}ucdavis.edu; fax
530-752-4552.
 |
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