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Plant Physiol, June 2000, Vol. 123, pp. 765-776 Interaction between Gravitropism and Phototropism in Sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus1Fachbereich Biologie/Botanik, Philipps-Universität, Lahnberge, D-35032 Marburg, Germany
The interaction between gravitropism and phototropism was analyzed for sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus. Fluence rate-response curves for phototropism were generated under three different conditions: (a) for stationary sporangiophores, which reached photogravitropic equilibrium; (b) for sporangiophores, which were clinostated head-over during phototropic stimulation; and (c) for sporangiophores, which were subjected to centrifugal accelerations of 2.3g to 8.4g. For blue light (454 nm), clinostating caused an increase of the slope of the fluence rate-response curves and an increase of the maximal bending angles at saturating fluence rates. The absolute threshold remained, however, practically unaffected. In contrast to the results obtained with blue light, no increase of the slope of the fluence rate-response curves was obtained with near-ultraviolet light at 369 nm. Bilateral irradiation with near-ultraviolet or blue light enhanced gravitropism, whereas symmetric gravitropic stimulation caused a partial suppression of phototropism. Gravitropism and phototropism appear to be tightly linked by a tonic feedback loop that allows the respective transduction chains a mutual influence over each other. The use of tropism mutants allowed conclusions to be drawn about the tonic feedback loop with the gravitropic and phototropic transduction chains. The results from clinostating mutants that lack octahedral crystals (implicated as statoliths) showed that these crystals are not involved in the tonic feedback loop. At elevated centrifugal accelerations, the fluence-rate-response curves for photogravitropic equilibrium were displaced to higher fluence rates and the slope decreased. The results indicate that light transduction possesses a logarithmic transducer, whereas gravi-transduction uses a linear one.
Light and the earth's gravitational
field represent, for plants and fungi, the most important environmental
cues for development and orientation in space (Braun, 1997 Shen-Miller and Gordon (1967) With continuous horizontal unilateral light acting over long periods of
time, fluence rate-response curves for photogravitropic equilibrium are
obtained that are less complex than the time-dependent fluence-response
curves mentioned above. In the investigation of P. blakesleeanus phototropism, such equilibrium curves have been generated extensively in the study of action spectroscopy (e.g.
Varjú et al., 1961 One needs to distinguish between two different types of interactions:
vectorial interactions and tonic interactions. During unilateral
irradiation, the positive phototropism and the negative gravitropism
add up vectorially in accordance to their subjective strength and thus
constitute an example for vectorial interaction. Superimposed on this
vectorial interaction is also a tonic interaction. A tonic effect of
light manifests as a modification of the graviresponse where it is
irrelevant whether the light is given symmetrically or asymmetrically
with respect to the irradiated organism. Blue light below 3 × 10 To characterize the interplay between gravitropism and phototropism, we measured fluence rate-response curves for phototropism under conditions where the gravitropic stimulus was neutralized by clinostating the sporangiophores while they were exposed to the unilateral light. In addition we increased the gravitropic stimulus by subjecting sporangiophores on a centrifuge to accelerations exceeding 1g and generated fluence-response curves of phototropism under these conditions. To investigate the mode of interaction between gravitropism and
phototropism more specifically, we made use of tropism mutants that
show either enhanced or reduced gravitropism. The gravitropic and
phototropic transduction chains possess different inputs but share
elements in common at the output, which comprise the gene products of
the genes madD, E, F, G, and H (Fig.
1). A notable feature of the gravitropism
of P. blakesleeanus is the fact that it
reacts to different gravitropic stimuli. These are the wall strain
(bending stress or flexure) in horizontal sporangiophores (Dennison,
1961
Our results indicate that the gravitropic and phototropic transduction chains interact through a tonic feedback loop of mutual influence, which is essential for the establishment of a wavelength-dependent photogravitropic bending angle.
Photogravitropic Equilibrium during Clinostating To see the effect of gravitropism on the bending angle reached
during photogravitropic equilibrium, we compared fluence rate-response curves that were generated either with static sporangiophores or with
sporangiophores that were clinostated head-over (Fig. 2). When sporangiophores were irradiated
with unilateral monochromatic light (454 nm) for 8 h, a
photogravitropic equilibrium angle was reached that depended on the
fluence rate. The threshold for the photogravitropic bending angle was
near 6 × 10
When fluence rate-response curves were measured at 369 nm, however, we observed no difference between the two experimental conditions (Fig. 3, top). With near-UV light, the clinostating had apparently no effect. Tonic Light Effect on Gravitropism The observation that clinostating had no effect when near-UV light
was applied (Fig. 3) suggested that light could exert a tonic effect on
gravitropism. To test directly for such a possible effect, we
irradiated horizontally positioned sporangiophores bilaterally with
horizontal monochromatic light (such that the sporangiophores were in
phototropic balance) and compared the gravitropic bending of the
irradiated samples with dark controls (Fig.
4). At 10
Photogravitropic Equilibrium of a Statolith Mutant during Clinostating To better assess the effect of clinostating with respect to the
different gravitropic stimuli (Fig. 1), we tested an albino mutant
(C213 carA geo-3) that lacks the sedimenting protein
crystals (statoliths) and compared it to an albino strain (C171
carAcarR) that contains them. The white mutant C171, which
lacks
Mutant C213 carA geo-3 was different from the strains described above in that the threshold for photogravitropic equilibrium was raised slightly (Fig. 5, bottom). The effect of clinostating was, however, the same as in the other strains. Even in C213, clinostating caused the characteristic double effect of increasing the slope of the fluence rate-response curve and, at the same time, increasing the maximal bending angle by about 35° (Fig. 5, bottom). Photogravitropic Equilibrium of Two Tropism Mutants during Clinostating Two additional gravitropism mutants that were tested for the
effect of clinostating contained octahedral protein crystals. One
mutant, C5 carB geo-10, is hypergravitropic (Ootaki et al., 1995
Mutant A909 madJ has a raised photogravitropic threshold and
substantially reduced gravitropism and avoidance response (Campuzano et
al., 1996 Photogravitropic Equilibrium at Elevated g: Centrifugation Experiments To investigate how the angle of photogravitropic equilibrium depends on the strength of the gravitational acceleration, phototropism experiments were done on a centrifuge that generated centrifugal net accelerations ranging from 2.3g to 8.4g. As detailed in "Materials and Methods," sporangiophores were mounted on the horizontal disc of the centrifuge and were exposed to a beam of unilateral broad-band blue light that had a width of 2 cm. Because the sporangiophores passed this beam only once per revolution, they were thus subject to continual pulsed stimulus light. The illumination beam was arranged to strike the sporangiophores at 90° from the direction of the net acceleration vector, r (Fig. 7). The fluence rate-response curves that were obtained with wild-type sporangiophores are shown in Figure 8. It is apparent that an increase of the acceleration between 2.3g and 8.4g alters the fluence rate dependence in that the slopes become more shallow. In addition, the extrapolated thresholds increased with increasing acceleration (Fig. 8).
The dependence of the angle of photogravitropic equilibrium on centrifugal acceleration is shown in Figure 9. It is apparent that for responses between 20° and 40° bending, there exists a log-linear relationship. Although the acceleration increases linearly, the resulting fluence rate, which is required to elicit the given reference response, increases logarithmically (Fig. 9).
There are several investigations on the interaction between
gravity and light. Practically all of these studies were devoted to
assessing the effect of light on gravitropism (Lu et al., 1996 The mentioned investigations provide a basis for understanding how light influences gravitropism. They do not, however, address the reciprocal question of how gravitropic stimulation affects phototropism. This question is particularly pertinent for the understanding of photogravitropic equilibrium. A clinostat, in which bending organisms are rotated vertically to the axis of the clinostat, provides an easy way to neutralize the effect of gravity and thus the gravitropic response. If provisions are made that the actinic unilateral light rotates along with the organism, the apparatus should enable one to dissect the complex response of photogravitropic equilibrium and to distinguish the gravitropic from the phototropic component. To our knowledge, fluence rate-response curves for phototropism were never before generated under conditions in which the gravitropic stimulus was neutralized by clinostating. A fluence-response curve for the phototropism of oat coleoptiles
was generated under conditions in which the coleoptiles were clinostated horizontally after the application of the unilateral light
pulse (Shen-Miller and Gordon, 1967 Relation between Gravitational Acceleration and Phototropism The effect of clinostating on P. blakesleeanus wild type and the carotene-lacking mutants, C171 and C213, was manifested in two ways: (a) an increase of the slope of the fluence rate-response curves, and (b) and increase of the maximal bending angle. The fact that the threshold remained practically unaffected was
anticipated. At the threshold no (asymmetric) gravitropic stimulus is
exerted on a stationary vertical sporangiophore and, as a consequence,
clinostating should remain without an effect. This expectation was
largely borne out by the results obtained with the wild type and
strain C213 for blue light. The somewhat surprising For fluence rates above threshold, clinostating did increase the bending and thus the slope of the fluence rate-response curve (Figs. 3 and 5). This observation was in line with our expectation, because clinostating eliminated the counteracting effect of the negative gravitropism so that light could act with a greater efficiency. The second notable effect of clinostating was the increase of the
maximal bending angle (plateau of the fluence rate-response curves;
Figs. 3 and 5). This effect of clinostating indicates that the maximal
bending angle is, under normal conditions, limited by the action of
gravity. This conclusion is novel and differs from previous
explanations that rested on the argument that no further bending beyond
70° would be possible, because the incidence angle of the unilateral
light would be too small for causing positive bending (Dennison, 1965 Gravitropism and Phototropism Are Linked via a Tonic Feedback Loop For the analysis of photogravitropic equilibrium, it is essential to distinguish between vectorial and non-vectorial, i.e. tonic, responses. The fact that clinostating did not have an effect on the shape of the fluence rate-response curve of phototropism when near-UV light of 369 nm was applied (Fig. 3) indicated that light could exert a tonic effect. Bilateral irradiation of horizontal sporangiophores resulted indeed in an enhancement of gravitropism (Fig. 4). The complex behavior of the wild type and the mutants is explained in the framework of a tropism model, which represents an extension of the traditional model shown in Figure 1. The extended model involves the novel feature of a tonic feedback loop, which links the gravitropic and phototropic transduction chains (Fig. 10). The tonic feedback loop consists of three regulatory elements: (a) a tonic enhancer (+, dashed line), which exerts a light-mediated stimulation of gravitropism; (b) the negative regulator geo-10, which dampens the gravitropic transduction chain; and (c) a tonic inhibitor (-, dashed line), which inhibits the phototropic transduction chain. A gravistimulation (either unilateral or multilateral as on the clinostat) generates a moderate tonic inhibition of the phototropic transduction chain, the extent of which depends on the activity of the negative regulator geo-10. The geo-10 element has the function of dampening the vectorial transduction chain of gravitropism, causing a concomitant down-regulation of the tonic inhibitor. Light (either unilateral or bilateral) stimulates tonically the gravitropic transduction chain and counteracts the geo-10 element. Blue light at threshold-fluence rates enhances gravitropism more effectively than near-UV light (Fig. 4), and thus the tonic inhibition is substantially larger than in near-UV light.
The tonic feedback loop explains the observation that clinostating causes an increase of the slope for blue light (454 nm), whereas it is ineffective for near-UV light (369 nm; Fig. 3). For blue light, the negative tonic effect is relatively large (Fig. 10), but also the vectorial gravitropic input is large. This generates a situation in which a large vectorial gravitropic input is counteracted by an only moderate phototropism input. Blue-light elicited phototropism is, therefore, more efficient when gravitropism is neutralized by clinostating. In contrast, for near-UV light, the negative tonic effect is moderate, but the vectorial gravitropic input is also moderate. Here a modest vectorial gravitropic input is counteracted by a strong phototropism input. The net result for unilateral irradiation with near-UV light is a lack of increase of the phototropic bending angle, despite the neutralization of gravitropism by clinostating (Fig. 3). The tonic feedback loop also offers an explanation for the phenotype of the hypergravitropic mutant C5 and for the allocation of the geo-10 mutation in the transduction chains (Fig. 10). The defect of mutant C5 cannot be located near the output of the transduction chain, because the bending is very efficient, i.e. the cell wall is not stiff as it appears to be in class-2 mutants (madD-J). Clearly, the defect must reside near the input on the branch of the gravitropism transduction chain (Fig. 10). The hypergravitropic phenotype is best explained by the assumption that geo-10 represents a negative regulator exerting a suppressing (dampening) effect on the vectorial transduction chain, which in turn represents the input for the negative tonic element. Elimination of the geo element by the geo-10 mutation thus causes hypergravitropism and an enhancement of the negative feedback on the phototropism chain. As a result, the effectiveness of the light input becomes reduced. The fluence rate-response curve of phototropism (454 nm) of C5 geo-10 remains shallow even with clinostating, i.e. when the vectorial effect of gravitropism is neutralized (Fig. 6). Clinostating itself, however, represents a continual tonic (multilateral) gravistimulation, which, in C5, is not reduced by the geo-10 element as it is in the wild type, so that the negative feedback in C5 exceeds that of the wild type during clinostating. As a result unilateral blue light is less effective in C5 than in the wild type. The negative tonic effect that gravistimulation exerts over phototropism might also be responsible for the log-linear relationship between phototropism and gravitropism (see below). Quantitative Relationship between Light and Gravitational Stimulation It is apparent from Figure 9 that a linear increase of the
gravitational acceleration requires an exponential increase of the
fluence rate in order to elicit a given constant bending angle. For
bending angles up to 40°, the data can be fitted to a simple exponential function, y = a × exp(bx) where y is the fluence rate of the
unilateral blue light, x is the centrifugal acceleration, and a and b are adjustable parameters (Eq. 2).
For higher bending angles, the relationship becomes more complex, but
the fluence rate still grows exponentially with the centrifugal
acceleration (Fig. 9, dashed line). It is concluded that the
light-transduction chain possesses a logarithmic transducer (Bergman et
al., 1973 Behavior of Gravitropism Mutants Lacking Octahedral Crystals The mutant C213 carA geo-3 displays a reduced
gravitropic responsiveness. This defect has been associated with the
lack of so-called octahedral crystals in vacuoles of the sporangiophore (Ootaki and Wolken, 1973 Clinostating had a similar effect on the crystal-lacking strain C213 as on the other strains, i.e. clinostating caused an increase of the slope and also an increase of the maximal bending angle. These results were counterintuitive, because one could have expected that the weakened gravitropic response in C213 should enable the unilateral light to act more efficiently. The lack of the statoliths, one might reason, should be equivalent to the effect of clinostating. For this reason, we had actually expected that crystal-lacking mutants would display an increased slope of the fluence rate-response curves of photogravitropic equilibrium (static conditions). This was, however, clearly not the case, as the crystal-lacking mutants had the same slopes as the crystal-containing strains. We conclude from these observations that the protein crystals do not play an essential role in the interaction between gravitropism and phototropism. Because of the redundant gravitropic input (Figs. 1 and 10), the other two gravistimuli (lipid globules and wall strain) may substitute for the lack of protein crystals. Hypergravitropic and Gravitropic Defective Mutants Mimic Elevated Centrifugal Acceleration The behavior of the mutants C5 and A909 is reminiscent of the behavior of the wild type on the centrifuge. At high centrifugal accelerations (8.4g) the wild type manifests an elevated threshold and a biphasic fluence rate-response curve. A similar pattern is found also for the mutants (Fig. 6). At lower centrifugal accelerations (2.3g) the threshold of the wild type decreases and the slope increases. Clinostating of the mutants has a similar effect as a reduction of the centrifugal acceleration in the wild type. The hypergravitropic mutant C5 geo-10 behaves as if the gravitropic stimulus at normal earth's gravity (1g) was amplified, resulting in hypergravitropism. Clinostating of C5 lowers the threshold to almost the wild-type value, indicating that the light sensitivity of the hypergravitropic mutant is not basically affected. The slope reduction with clinostating was explained in the framework of the tonic feedback loop (see above). In C5, without clinostating, the phototropism has to counteract the vectorial as well as the excessive negative tonic effect of the hypergravitropic mutation and, as a result, the fluence rate-response curve of C5 shows an elevated threshold and a reduced slope in comparison to that of the wild type (Fig. 6). The effect of the geo-10 mutation in C5 is thus equivalent to augmenting the centrifugal acceleration in the wild type. The gravitropic defective mutant, A909 madJ (class 2),
showed similar fluence-response curves as the hypertropic mutant C5 (Fig. 6). The madJ mutation must reside on a branch of the
transduction chain that is common to both gravitropism and
phototropism, because the bending response is affected for both types
of tropism (Campuzano et al., 1996 Wavelength Dependence and Consequences for Action Spectroscopy Action spectra for phototropism have been generated either on the
basis of fluence-response curves, as in the case of grass coleoptiles
(Shropshire and Withrow, 1958 Action spectra for photogravitropic equilibrium (based on fluence
rate-response curves as in this work) differ from those obtained with
the phototropic balance method (Curry and Gruen, 1959
Strains The standard wild-type strain of Phycomyces blakesleeanus (Burgeff) NRRL1555 (-) was originally obtained from the Northern Regional Research Laboratories (Peoria, IL). The mutants described in this paper are listed in Table I.
Growth Conditions Sporangiophores were grown in glass shell vials (1-cm
diameter × 4-cm height; Flachbodengläser, AR Klarglas,
Münnerstädter Glaswarenfabrik, Münnerstadt, Germany)
on a synthetic medium (so-called SIV medium described by Sutter
[1975]). Each shell vial was inoculated with five to 10 heat-induced
spores (at 49°C for 10 min). Until the appearance of stage
4b-sporangiophores (i.e. with sporangium), the material was kept in a
temperature-controlled room (21°C) under white fluorescent light of
moderate fluence rate (0.7 W m Measurement of Fluence Rate-Response Curves for Phototropism The photogravitropic equilibrium of stage-4 sporangiophores was
measured in a threshold box, as described previously (Campuzano et al.,
1996 The entire threshold box, including the lamp, was mounted in a metal frame with an attached electrical motor, which allowed rotation around its long axis. This allowed the sporangiophores to be rotated head-over (3 rpm) while they were continually irradiated unilaterally (Fig. 2). The glass shell vials with the sporangiophores were kept in place by special tight-fitting plastic holders (rubber cushioned) that could be fixed inside the threshold box. The irradiations with unilateral light lasted for 8 h. After completion of the irradiation, the phototropic bending angle was determined with a protractor. The bending angle in the plane of the bending sporangiophore, i.e. the polar angle, was measured. Optical Equipment and Measurement of Irradiances We used interference filters (8-12 nm one-half-band width, Schott Glaswerke, Mainz, Germany), neutral density filters (type NG, Schott Glaswerke), and heat-absorbing filters (type KG1, 5 mm, Schott Glaswerke). Fluence rates were determined with a UV-enhanced photodiode (BN-9102-4, Gigahertz-Optik, Puchheim, Germany) and a calibrated readout instrument (Optometer P-9201, Gigahertz-Optik). Centrifugation Experiments The centrifuge that was used for the establishment of
photogravitropic equilibrium at centrifugal accelerations at
2.1g, 4.1g, and 8.3g was
described previously (Dennison, 1961 The light source was as described by Dennison (1964) For the 2.1g series, the net acceleration was 2.3g, directed downwards at an angle of 25.9° from horizontal, and the illumination beam was 25.9° from vertical (Fig. 7). For the 4.1g series, the net acceleration was 4.2g, directed downwards at an angle of 13.675° from horizontal, and the illumination beam was 13.675° from vertical. For the 8.3g series, the net acceleration was 8.4g, directed downwards at an angle of 6.87° from horizontal, and the illumination beam was 6.87° from vertical. The illumination intensity was varied by changing the lamp voltage.
Calibration was carried out as described in Dennison (1964) The sporangiophores were rotated on the centrifuge disc at a radius of
20 cm, and they passed through the 2-cm width of the beam once per
revolution. Therefore, the average intensity experienced by the
sporangiophores was 2/40 Measurements of the angle of sporangiophore growth ( Since the microscope axis was tangent to the circle of rotation, the phototropic angle was measured in the radial plane. In some cases, usually at the lowest intensities, the sporangiophore's final orientation deviated significantly from this plane. Such declinations, or aiming errors, were qualitatively estimated by eye while looking down on the sporangiophore as they rotated on the centrifuge, but no systematic aiming error data were collected. Data Analysis The fluence rate-response curves shown in Figures 3, 5, 6, and 8
were fitted to the equation:
We thank Siegrid Völk and Marko Göttig for excellent technical assistance.
Received October 4, 1999; accepted March 4, 2000. 1 This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant no. Ga 173/7-1).
2 Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755.
* Corresponding author; e-mail galland{at}mailer.uni-marburg.de; fax 49-6421-2822057.
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