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Plant Physiol, April 2001, Vol. 125, pp. 1957-1966
Phytochrome A Mediates Blue Light and UV-A-Dependent Chloroplast
Gene Transcription in Green Leaves1
Louis
Chun,
Alana
Kawakami, and
David A.
Christopher*
Department of Molecular Biosciences and Biosystems Engineering,
University of Hawaii, 1955 East-West Road, AgSciences III, Room 218, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822
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ABSTRACT |
We characterized the photobiology of light-activated chloroplast
transcription and transcript abundance in mature primary leaves by
using the following two systems: transplastomic promoter-reporter gene
fusions in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), and phytochrome
(phyA, phyB, and hy2) and cryptochrome
(cry1) mutants of Arabidopsis. In both dicots, blue
light and UV-A radiation were the major signals that activated total
chloroplast and psbA, rbcL, and 16S rrn
transcription. In contrast, transcription activities in plants exposed
to red and far-red light were 30% to 85% less than in blue
light/UV-A, depending on the gene and plant species. Total chloroplast,
psbA, and 16S rrn transcription were 60%
to 80% less in the Arabidopsis phyA mutant exposed to blue light/UV-A
relative to wild type, thus definitively linking phyA signaling to
these photoresponses. To our knowledge, the major role of phyA in
mediating the blue light/UV-A photoresponses is a new function for phyA
in chloroplast biogenesis at this stage of leaf development. Although
rbcL expression in plants exposed to UV-A was 50% less
in the phyA mutant relative to wild type, blue
light-induced rbcL expression was not significantly affected in the phyA, phyB, and
cry1 mutants. However, rbcL expression in
blue light was 60% less in the phytochrome chromophore mutant, hy2, relative to wild type, indicating that another
phytochrome species (phyC, D, or E) was involved in blue light-induced
rbcL transcription. Therefore, at least two different
phytochromes, as well as phytochrome-independent photosensory pathways,
mediated blue light/UV-A-induced transcription of chloroplast genes in mature leaves.
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INTRODUCTION |
During chloroplast development,
light quality and quantity coordinate nuclear and chloroplast gene
expression needed for the proper assembly and function of the
multisubunit photosynthetic enzymes and pigment-protein complexes
(Mayfield et al., 1995 ; Goldschmidt-Clermont, 1998 ; Leon et al., 1998 ).
The effects of light on chloroplast biogenesis are mediated by the
co-action of several photoreceptors. They include the phytochromes
(Quail, 1994 ; Pratt, 1995 ; Smith, 1995 ; Chory, 1997 ), the
protochlorophyllide holochrome (Thompson and White 1991 ; Barnes et al.,
1996 ), and the blue light/UV-A photoreceptors such as the flavoprotein,
cryptochrome (Cashmore et al., 1999 ), and photosystem-generated redox
potentials (Danon and Mayfield, 1994 ; Escoubas et al., 1995 ; Alfonso et
al., 2000 ). The photoreceptors initiate signaling pathways that
interact with each other and with pathways initiated by developmental
and plastid-derived signals (Fuglevand et al., 1996 ; Casal and
Mazzella, 1998 ; Lopez-Juez et al., 1998 ; Neff and Chory, 1998 ) to
modulate gene expression at transcriptional and post-transcriptional
levels (Thompson and White 1991 ; Quail, 1994 ; Mayfield et al.,
1995 ).
A great deal of information has been obtained from genetic,
biochemical, and molecular studies on the photoreceptors and pathways involved in light-regulated nuclear gene expression (Bowler et al.,
1994 ; Quail, 1994 ; Smith, 1995 ; Barnes et al., 1996 ; Chamovitz and
Deng, 1996 ; Chory, 1997 ; Zhong et al., 1997 ; Cashmore et al., 1999 ).
However, much less is known about the individual photoreceptor species
and photosensory pathways that modulate gene expression in
chloroplasts. In seedlings, red and far-red light, mediated by
phytochrome, are primary signals that control the levels of light-induced chloroplast mRNA (Link, 1982 ; Thompson et al., 1983 ; Zhu
et al., 1985 ) and RNA polymerase activities (Bottomley, 1970 ; Dubell
and Mullet, 1995 ; Christopher, 1996 ). Although phyA and the downstream
nuclear protein, DET1, have been shown to be involved (Pepper et al.,
1994 ; Dubell and Mullet, 1995 ; Christopher, 1996 ; Christopher and
Hoffer, 1998 ), the effects of mutants for individual phytochrome
species on chloroplast transcription have not been examined directly.
Many of the studies of phytochrome involvement in chloroplast gene
expression have used seedlings as experimental material and have
focused on de-etiolation (Link, 1982 ; Thompson et al., 1983 ; Zhu et
al., 1985 ; Bowler et al., 1994 ; Christopher and Mullet, 1994 ; Dubell
and Mullet, 1995 ). In contrast, we know very little about the
photobiology of light-activated transcription of chloroplast genes in
green primary leaves. This is important because several light-regulatory mechanisms essential for photosynthetic efficiency and
adaptation occur in mature leaves (Melis, 1991 ; Aro et al., 1993 ). In
addition, the action spectrum for various light-regulated processes
(Fluhr et al., 1986 ; Cosgrove, 1994 ; Mohr, 1994 ) and the types of
phytochromes that predominate in tissues (Chory et al., 1989 ; Quail,
1994 ) change during leaf development. The types of RNA polymerases
predominating in plastids also change during leaf development, from a
nuclear-encoded T7 phage-type in immature plastids to a plastid-encoded
Escherichia coli-like RNA polymerase (PEP) in mature
chloroplasts (Igloi and Kössel, 1992 ; Iratni et al., 1994 ;
Allison et al., 1996 ; Hajdukiewicz et al., 1997 ). The PEP initiates
transcription from 70-type promoters upstream
from many chloroplast genes such as rbcL, psbA,
and the 16S rrn operon, which encode the large subunit of Rubisco, the D1 protein of photosystem II, and the ribosomal RNAs, respectively. Light modulates the association of the PEP with promoters
via sigma factors and protein phosphorylation (Baginski et al., 1997 ;
Isono et al., 1997 ; Kim et al., 1998 ; Kanamaru et al., 1999 ; Tan and
Troxler, 1999 )
Photoreceptor mutants and chimeric promoter-reporter gene fusions in
transplastomic chloroplasts potentially represent useful systems with
which to begin defining the photobiology of chloroplast gene expression
in mature leaves. Therefore, in this study we determined the effects of
spectral quality on chloroplast transcription and mRNA accumulation in
the following two systems: transplastomic tobacco (Nicotiana
tabacum) lines containing the uidA reporter gene driven
by the rbcL and 16S rrn promoters; and wild-type
and several photoreceptor mutants (phyA, phyB, hy2, and
cyrptochrome1 [cry1]) of Arabidopsis. The
mutants phyA and phyB are defective in the major
phytochrome species, A and B, respectively (Quail, 1994 ), whereas
hy2 is defective in chromophore biosynthesis, making it
severely deficient in all phytochrome activities (Smith, 1995 ). The
cry1 mutation is impaired in a high-fluence blue light
photoreceptor, cry1 (Cashmore et al., 1999 ). Mature phyA and
cry1 plants grown in white light resemble the wild-type
phenotype (Whitelam et al., 1993 ; Ahmad et al., 1998 ), whereas
phyB and hy2 are yellow-green. We provide direct
evidence that blue light and UV-A, but not red or far-red light, were
primary signals for activating chloroplast transcription in mature
leaves and that phyA mediated the psbA and 16S
rrn, but not the rbcL, photoresponses. Another
phytochrome species, as well as a distinct blue photosensory pathway,
also influenced chloroplast transcription.
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RESULTS |
We initially examined the effects of spectral quality on
chloroplast transcription and mRNA accumulation in two transplastomic lines of tobacco. Each line differed in the gene-specific promoters driving transcription of the uidA reporter gene. The two
promoters were derived from the 16S rrn operon and the
light-activated rbcL gene, respectively. The non-consensus
type plastid promoter transcribed by the nuclear-encoded T7 phage-type
was not present in the 16S rrn promoter-uidA
transgene (Zoubenko et al., 1994 ). A third transplastomic line, which
had a promoterless uidA transgene, served as a negative control, as did wild-type tobacco.
In Figure 1, a uidA
gene-specific probe was used to detect uidA mRNA levels in
transgenic plants exposed to red, blue, or white light or UV-A
radiation, and the uidA RNA levels were quantitated. Steady-state uidA mRNA levels driven by the 16S
rrn promoter were higher in plants exposed to blue light,
white light, or UV-A, relative to red light and dark controls (Fig. 1).
The highest mRNA levels were observed in the blue light and UV-A
treatments. For the 16S rrn promoter, similar
uidA mRNA levels occurred in plants exposed to red light or
darkness (Fig. 1). UidA mRNA levels driven by the
rbcL promoter were slightly higher in plants exposed to blue
and white light relative to red light, UV-A, or darkness (Fig. 1).
About 2-fold higher levels of uidA mRNA were detected in the
line with the rbcL promoter exposed to red light relative to
dark controls. Overall, uidA mRNA levels were 80% to 90%
lower when driven by the rbcL promoter relative to the 16S
rrn promoter (Fig. 1), which is in agreement with
differences in the expression of these genes from other species and
experiments (Rapp et al., 1992 ; Dubell and Mullet, 1995 ; Shiina et al.,
1998 ). This experiment suggested that the respective promoters driving
uidA transcription controlled differences in mRNA
accumulation in response to light quality, although RNA stability
effects could not be ruled out.

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Figure 1.
Analysis of the effects of spectral quality on
transcription of chloroplast promoters (rbcL and 16S
rrn) fused to the uidA gene in transplastomic
tobacco plants. The transplastomic lines contained the 16S
rrn promoter-uidA gene (16S Pr), rbcL
promoter-uidA gene (rbcL Pr), or the promoterless
uidA gene. Dark-adapted plants were exposed to 12 h of
red or blue light at 18 ± 2 µmol m 2
s 1, white light at 100 ± 10 µmol
m 2 s 1, or UV-A
radiation at 18 ± 2 µmol m 2
s 1. Equal amounts of total cell RNA (12 µg)
from each treatment were analyzed. Radioactivity for the bands
corresponding to uidA mRNA was quantitated for each
treatment from three separate duplicated experiments to estimate the
relative mRNA level. Values from the promoterless control were
subtracted from the values for plants containing the promoter-bearing
constructs. Means ± SD are shown.
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It is possible that sequences in the untranslated leader, which is
fused to the uidA coding sequence in the rbcL
construct, could influence chloroplast mRNA accumulation, via mRNA
stability, in response to light (Shiina et al., 1998 ). Thus, in Figure
2 we used the lysed chloroplast run-on
transcription assay to determine transcription rates directly in
chloroplasts from the transgenic lines exposed to darkness, red, and
blue light. These treatments were chosen because they represented the
major extremes in uidA mRNA accumulation (Fig. 1).

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Figure 2.
Analysis of total and promoter-specific
chloroplast transcription rates in response to spectral quality in
chloroplasts from mature leaves of tobacco. A, The lysed run-on
transcription assay was performed on equal amounts of purified
chloroplasts from dark-adapted transplastomic tobacco plants containing
the 16S rrn promoter-uidA gene (16S
rrn) or the rbcL promoter-uidA gene
(rbcL) exposed to 12 h of additional darkness (D), or
equal fluences of red (R) or blue (B) light (18 ± 2 µmol
m 2 s 1). Transcripts
produced in the lysed run-on assay were hybridized to non-radioactive
uidA gene-specific and vector-specific DNAs attached to
nylon membranes. To visualize bands, rbcL-labeled panels
were exposed to x-ray film 5-fold longer than for the 16S panels. B,
Radioactivity hybridized to gene-specific DNAs was quantitated, after
subtracting background hybridization to the vector, for each treatment
from two replicates of two independent experiments. Transcription
activity (means ± SD) is expressed as fmol
[32P]UMP incorporated (1 × 108 chloroplasts) 1 (10 min) 1. C, Total chloroplast transcription rates
were measured in wild type treated as in A and B. Rates are expressed
as pmol [32P]UMP incorporated (1 × 108 chloroplasts) 1 (10 min) 1. The data represent the means ± SD of two independent experiments with two
replicates.
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Promoter-specific and total chloroplast transcription were measured in
mature tobacco leaves (Fig. 2). Transcription activities from the 16S
rrn and rbcL promoters were over 5- and 2-fold
higher, respectively, in plants exposed to blue light relative to red light or darkness (Fig. 2, A and B). Overall, transcription from the
rbcL promoter was less than one-tenth of transcription from the 16S rrn promoter (Fig. 2B), which resembled differences
in mRNA levels (Fig. 1). Transcription from both promoters was
moderately higher in plants exposed to red light compared with
darkness. Total chloroplast transcription in plants exposed to blue
light was over 2-fold higher than red light and darkness (Fig. 2C). In
summary, blue light significantly stimulated total and
promoter-specific transcription in tobacco chloroplasts (Fig. 2), and
this stimulation was correlated with an increase in steady-state mRNA
levels (Fig. 1).
The stimulatory effects of blue light on tobacco chloroplast
transcription and RNA accumulation raise the question of whether this
response was specific to tobacco or whether it existed in other plant
species. The types of photoreceptors involved in mediating the
activation of chloroplast transcription by blue light in mature leaves
are also not known. Therefore, to answer these questions we measured
total (Fig. 3) and gene-specific (Fig.
4) chloroplast transcription in mature
dark-adapted wild-type Arabidopsis and phyA mutant plants
exposed to five spectral regimes. The phyA mutant was chosen
because previous research with far-red light suggested that phyA was
involved in chloroplast transcription in etiolated pea (Dubell and
Mullet, 1995 ) and barley (Christopher, 1996 ) seedlings.

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Figure 3.
Analysis of the influence of phyA and light
quality on total chloroplast transcription rates in mature leaves of
Arabidopsis. Plants were dark-adapted for 36 h and were then
exposed to 12 h of additional darkness (D), or 18 ± 2 µmol
m 2 s 1 of red light (R),
far-red light (fR), blue light (B), or UV-A radiation (UV) or 100 ± 10 µmol m 2 s 1
white light (W) as described in "Materials and Methods." Lysed
run-on transcription activities (means ± SD) are
expressed as pmol [32P]UMP incorporated (1 × 108 chloroplasts) 1 (10 min) 1. The data represent four independent
experiments with two replicates each.
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Figure 4.
Analysis of the influence of phyA and light
quality on gene-specific chloroplast transcription rates in mature
leaves of wild-type (WT) and the phyA mutant of Arabidopsis.
A, Transcription of the rbcL, psbA, and 16S genes were
measured in purified chloroplasts using the lysed run-on assay as
described in "Materials and Methods." A representative blot from
the blue light treatment is shown. B, Quantitation of 16S rrn
transcription in wild-type (black bars) and the phyA mutant
(hatched bars). Light treatments are as described in Figure 3. C,
Quantitations of rbcL and psbA transcription are
shown. Transcription activities (means ± SD) for all genes are expressed as fmol
[32P]UMP incorporated (1 × 108 chloroplasts) 1 (10 min) 1. The data represent four independent
experiments with two replicates each.
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Total chloroplast transcription was highest in dark-adapted wild-type
plants exposed to blue light, white light, or UV-A radiation (Fig. 3).
Red and far-red light had minimal stimulatory effects on transcription
relative to the dark controls (Fig. 3). The level of chloroplast
transcription in plants exposed to blue light, white light, and UV-A
radiation was lower by 40%, 56%, and 72%, respectively, in the
phyA mutant relative to wild-type plants. Hence, blue light
and UV-A significantly induced total chloroplast transcription in
mature leaves of wild-type Arabidopsis plants as in tobacco and this
response was attenuated in the phyA mutant.
In Figure 4 we determined the effects of spectral quality on the
transcription of two light-responsive chloroplast genes, psbA and rbcL, as well as the 16S rrn
in wild-type and phyA mutant plants. The overall values of
gene-specific transcription rates descended in the following order: 16S
rrn > psbA > rbcL. In
general, transcription of each gene was higher in wild-type plants
exposed to all light regimes relative to dark controls (Fig. 4).
However, the degree of transcriptional activation depended on the
specific gene and light treatment. PsbA, rbcL, and 16S
rrn transcription were stimulated 12-, 8-, and 18-fold,
respectively, in wild-type plants exposed to white light relative to
dark controls (Fig. 4). Transcription of these genes increased
markedly, from 11- to 16-fold, in wild-type plants exposed to blue
light or UV-A radiation relative to dark controls (Fig. 4). However,
psbA, rbcL, and 16S rrn transcription were 30%
to 80% lower in wild-type plants exposed to red or far-red light
relative to blue light, white light, and UV-A radiation. The
significant activation of chloroplast gene transcription in response to
blue light and UV-A (Fig. 4) resembled the response of total
chloroplast transcription to these light regimes (Fig. 3). In general,
rbcL transcription rates in Arabidopsis chloroplasts were
10- to 20-fold higher than in tobacco chloroplasts (Figs. 2 and 4).
This could be due to differences between the two species, leaf age, or
other factors.
16S rrn, psbA, and rbcL transcription were
20% to 80% less, depending on the light treatment, in the
phyA mutant compared with wild-type plants (Fig. 4),
especially psbA and 16S rrn transcription in blue
light, white light, and UV-A. In contrast, rbcL
transcription in the phyA mutant exposed to blue or red
light was similar to the wild-type controls (Fig. 4C). These results
indicate that phyA is involved in blue light-, UV-A-, red light-, and
far-red light-induced 16S rrn and psbA
transcription and UV-A-induced rbcL transcription. However,
phyA is not involved in mediating blue light- and red light-induced
rbcL transcription. In addition, rbcL,
psbA, and 16S rrn transcription were higher in
the phyA mutant exposed to blue light relative to red light
and darkness, suggesting that another photoreceptor besides phyA was
also involved in light-activated chloroplast transcription.
We focused next on identifying photoreceptors involved in blue
light-induced rbcL transcription. We analyzed
rbcL expression in five mutants, cry1,
phyA, phyB, hy2, and the
phyA/phyB double mutant (Fig.
5A). The degree of rbcL mRNA
accumulation was 10% lower in the cry1 mutant relative to
wild type in blue and white light (Fig. 5A). This experiment indicates
that cry1 is not the major photoreceptor mediating light-induced
accumulation of rbcL mRNA. No effect of the phyA
and phyB mutants and the double mutant phyA/phyB
were observed on light-induced rbcL expression (Fig. 5).
However, blue light-induced rbcL mRNA accumulation was 60% lower in the hy2 mutant relative to wild-type plants. The
results indicate another phytochrome species (phyC, D, or E) was
involved in blue light-induced rbcL expression.

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Figure 5.
Analysis of the influence of blue light, cry1, and
phytochrome on rbcL and psbA expression in
Arabidopsis chloroplasts from mature leaves. Relative rbcL
(A) and psbA (B) mRNA levels were determined by
quantitating radioactive bands on RNA gel blots that hybridized with
gene-specific probes. The total cell RNAs were isolated from
dark-adapted wild-type (W.T.) and cry1, phyA, phyB,
phyA/phyB, and hy2 mutant plants exposed to 15 h
of additional darkness (DK), or 18 ± 2 µmol
m 2 s 1 blue (BL) or
white 100 ± 10 µmol m 2
s 1 (WL) light. RNA levels in wild-type plants
exposed to blue light were set at 100. The values for the other
treatments are expressed relative to 100.
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PsbA transcription was 6- to 10-fold higher in the
phyA mutant exposed to blue light relative to dark controls
(Fig. 4). Thus, the phyA mutant did not abolish the
stimulatory effect of blue light on psbA transcription. This
raised the question whether any other photoreceptors besides phyA were
involved in blue light-induced psbA expression. Therefore,
we analyzed psbA expression in the same series of mutants
(Fig. 5B). The accumulation of psbA mRNA was over 40% lower
in the phyA, digenic phyA/phyB, and
hy2 mutants exposed to blue or white light relative to
wild-type controls, whereas psbA mRNA levels were 10% to
20% lower in the phyB mutant. No additive effect of
phyB with phyA was observed. In the
hy2 mutant a moderate 10% to 15% increase in
psbA mRNA levels occurred in blue and white light compared
with dark controls.
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DISCUSSION |
Blue Light/UV-A Activate Chloroplast Transcription in Mature Leaves
of Two Dicots
In this study we employed two complementary systems,
transplastomic promoter-reporter gene fusions in tobacco and
Arabidopsis photoreceptor mutants, as a means to begin elucidating the
photosensory pathways that regulate chloroplast gene expression in
mature leaves. Previous research on the role of phytochrome in
chloroplast gene expression depended on varying light quality and
fluence treatments of wild-type plants, particularly, seedlings
(Bottomley, 1970 ; Link, 1982 ; Thompson et al., 1983 ; Zhu et al., 1985 ;
Dubell and Mullet, 1995 ; Christopher, 1996 ). To our knowledge no
studies have used the two systems described here to examine the
photobiology of chloroplast transcription and to measure chloroplast
transcription directly in a phytochrome mutant. Although the
Arabidopsis system allowed the analysis of the effects of phytochrome
and cryptochrome mutants on light-activated chloroplast transcription
and mRNA accumulation, the routine transformation of Arabidopsis
chloroplasts is not yet possible. Therefore, the tobacco system enabled
us to analyze, in parallel, the photobiology of light-activated
promoter-reporter gene fusions in transgenic chloroplasts. We provide
direct evidence that blue light and UV-A are major signals responsible
for the activation of chloroplast transcription in the two dicots,
whereas red and far-red light had much smaller effects.
Although we measured transcription and RNA accumulation in response to
light, RNA stability also contributes to chloroplast mRNA abundance
(Mayfield et al., 1995 ; Shiina et al., 1998 ). In the tobacco plants
exposed to red light, uidA mRNA levels driven by the
rbcL promoter increased more than the corresponding
transcription rate (Figs. 1 and 2). Red light may have differentially
enhanced the stability of the rbcL-5'-uidA RNA. In
Arabidopsis, rbcL and psbA mRNA accumulation
(Fig. 5) was correlated with transcription rates (Fig. 4), but did not
increase proportionally relative to dark controls because mRNA levels
remained high in the dark due to enhanced stability of these RNAs (Kim
et al., 1993 ). Also, we cannot rule out an influence of RNA stability
in the hy2 background. The approach used here can be
combined with chloroplast transcription inhibitors such as tagetitoxin
to assess the roles of RNA stability in the photobiology of chloroplast
gene expression.
Detection of phyA-Dependent and -Independent Photosensory
Pathways
In Arabidopsis, phyA signaling was definitively linked to blue
light/UV-A-induced chloroplast gene transcription. The 60% to 80%
decrease in blue light-induced psbA and 16S rrn
transcription in the phyA mutant is an indication that phyA
is playing a major role in these photoresponses. The phytochromes
absorb blue light in vitro and in vivo (Butler et al., 1964 ; Mohr,
1994 ) and phyA has been proposed to play at least a minor role in blue
light responses for some time, independent of and dependent on
cryptochrome (Reed, 1999 ; Lin, 2000 ) However, phyA has been primarily
associated with mediating the high-irradiance responses to far-red
light, particularly during germination, seedling de-etiolation and
establishment, chloroplast development, and the response to very low
fluence light (Chory et al., 1989 ; Bowler et al., 1994 ; Quail 1994 ;
Dubell and Mullet 1995 ; Smith, 1995 ; Barnes et al., 1996 ; Furuya and Schäfer, 1996 ; Neff and Chory, 1998 ). The finding that phyA is playing a major role in mediating the response of chloroplast transcription to blue light/UV-A in mature leaves is, to our knowledge, a new function for this photoreceptor at this stage of chloroplast biogenesis. Additional examples of phyA mediating blue light responses are cotyledon expansion and hypocotyl inhibition (Whitelam et al.,
1993 ; Neff and Chory, 1998 ), seed germination (Shinomura et al., 1996 ),
and Lhcb gene induction (Hamazato et al., 1997 ).
There is precedence for a role of phyA in mature green tissue. Although
phyA levels and gene expression drop precipitously in illuminated
plants (Quail, 1994 ; Smith, 1995 ; Reed, 1999 ), its' levels can
increase during dark-adaptation (Hunt and Pratt, 1980 ; Smith, 1995 ). In
addition, a small amount of phyA may be adequate to regulate processes
in mature tissue as less than 5% of the total phytochrome levels are
required for phyA interactions in vitro (Ahmad et al., 1998 ). PhyA may
modulate chloroplast transcription by sensing circadian periods (Zhong
et al., 1997 ), which also affect chloroplast transcription (Krupinska,
1992 ; Nakahira et al., 1998 ).
It has been well-documented that cry1, cry2, and NPH1 are three of the
known blue light photoreceptors in Arabidopsis (Christie et al., 1998 ;
Cashmore et al., 1999 ). However, cry1 did not significantly influence
blue light-activated psbA and rbcL expression
(Fig. 5) and, previously, blue light-induced psbD expression
(Christopher and Hoffer, 1998 ). NPH1 and the photolabile cry2 operate
at much lower fluences (Christie et al., 1998 ; Guo et al., 1999 ) than the high fluences used here. High, but not low fluence, light activates
chloroplast transcription in dicots and monocots (Gamble and Mullet,
1989 ; Christopher and Mullet, 1994 ; Dubell and Mullet, 1995 ;
Christopher, 1996 ). We did not test the cry2 and
nph1 mutants. However, with the recent finding that phyA can
phosphorylate cry1 and cry2 (Ahmad et al., 1998 ), it would be valuable
to test the cry1-cry2 double, phyA-cry1-cry2
triple, and phyC, D, and E, mutants.
PhyA was not involved in blue light-induced rbcL
transcription (Fig. 4C). PhyA involvement also varies for blue
light-induced nuclear gene expression (Oelmüller and Kendrick,
1991 ). Our results with the hy2 and cry1 mutants
(Fig. 5A) suggest that another phytochrome species such as phyC, D, or
E was involved in rbcL expression, with a minor modulatory
role for cry1. The results with psbA expression (Fig. 5B)
indicate that there were phyA- and phyB-dependent and phytochrome-independent modes of blue light-induced psbA
expression. Therefore, light-induced chloroplast transcription involves
multiple phytochromes and blue light/UV-A signaling, as does seedling
development (Quail, 1994 ; Smith, 1995 ; Chory, 1997 ; Casal and Mazzella,
1998 ).
The lack of a role for phyA in blue light-activated
rbcL transcription raises questions about the
mechanism regulating the photobiology and gene selectivity of
the transcription apparatus. The light-responsiveness of rbcL,
psbA, and 16S rrn transcription depends on the PEP
(Allison et al., 1996 ), which predominates in mature leaves. Multiple
photosensory pathways can interact by regulating distinct transcription
factors that modulate the PEP. Several nuclear-encoded sigma factors
have been identified in chloroplasts (Isono et al., 1997 ; Kanamaru et
al., 1999 ; Tan and Troxler, 1999 ) and some are light-induced.
Therefore, it seems reasonable to hypothesize that blue light acting
via phyA would regulate at least one sigma factor, whereas a
phyA-independent sigma factor may control rbcL transcription.
Developmental Change in Action Spectrum for Chloroplast
Transcription
In etiolated monocot and dicot seedlings phyA is the predominant
phytochrome species (Quail, 1994 ; Smith, 1995 ) and it has been
extensively shown that red and far-red light are the primary signals
stimulating chloroplast transcription and mRNA accumulation (Bottomley,
1970 ; Link, 1982 ; Thompson et al., 1983 ; Zhu et al., 1985 ). In
etiolated pea the activation of chloroplast transcription is a
high-irradiance response to far-red light mediated by phyA (Dubell and
Mullet, 1995 ). The only exception is the psbD gene, which is selectively activated by high-fluence blue light from a blue
light-responsive promoter in etiolated seedlings (Christopher and
Mullet, 1994 ; Chen et al., 1995 ). The major stimulatory effects of red
and far-red light on chloroplast transcription in dicot seedlings are
related to the stimulation of chloroplast and leaf development (Chory
et al., 1989 ; Dubell and Mullet, 1995 ). In contrast, we observed that
continuous far-red and red light stimulated chloroplast transcription
in mature leaves to a much smaller degree than did blue light/UV-A. We
postulate that the action spectrum for activating chloroplast
transcription changed during plant development. Similar developmental
changes in action spectrum have been reported for rbcS and
chs gene expression (Fluhr et al., 1986 ; Mohr, 1994 ),
hypocotyl development (Cosgrove, 1994 ), and the accumulation of
chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (Mohr, 1994 ). PhyA
signaling in mature, relative to etiolated, tissue may be different
because of changes in phyA substrate specificities, interactions with
other pathways, or the optical properties of the tissue.
Evolution of Phytochrome-Mediated Blue Light/UV-A-Activated
Chloroplast Transcription
From an evolutionary standpoint the emphasis on blue light
responsive transcription in chloroplasts is consistent with the blue
light-activation of photosynthesis genes (psbA and
psbD) in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus
(Tsinoremas et al., 1994 ). In a similar manner, high-fluence blue light
rather than red light activates transcription of the barley chloroplast
psbA promoter when heterologously expressed in
Synechococcus (Tsinoremas et al., 1999 ). Cyanobacteria are
considered to be ancestors to the plant chloroplasts. However, no
cryptochrome genes were found in a completely sequenced cyanobacterial
genome, whereas several novel variants of phytochromes were identified,
one of which influenced gene expression for the light harvesting
apparatus (Kaneko et al., 1996 ; Kehoe and Grossman, 1996 ; Lamparter et
al., 1997 ; Yeh et al., 1997 ). This suggests that photosensory pathways
linking phytochrome and photosynthesis gene expression were established prior to the endosymbiotic events that gave rise to plant chloroplasts. As ancestral genes for phytochrome (Quail, 1994 ) and chloroplast proteins such as Lhcb were transferred to the nucleus, the
photoregulation of genes remaining in the chloroplast co-evolved with
the phytochromes to coordinate chloroplast and nuclear gene expression
for the stoichiometric production of photosystem subunits. Because
transcription of genes encoding photosynthesis functions is lower in
the phyA mutant exposed to white light, this raises the
question of whether the ability of the photosynthetic apparatus to
adapt to high light is impaired in the mutant. Measurement of
photosynthetic activity in wild-type and phyA mutant plants
under increasing light intensity would answer this question.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Material and Growth Conditions
Wild-type seeds from the Columbia and Landsberg
erecta ecotypes (Arabidopsis) were purchased from Lehle
Seeds (Round Rock, TX). Seeds of the cry1, phyA,
phyB, and hy2 mutants were obtained from the
Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center (Ohio State University). Seeds
were planted in flats containing water-saturated Jiffy potting mix
(Bentonville, AR) and chilled (5°C) overnight (14 h). Plants were
exposed to a photoperiod of 12 h of darkness and 12 h of white light (fluorescent, 100 ± 10 µmol m 2
s 1) at 22°C to 26°C for 28 d. To obtain
dark-adapted seedlings, the 28-d-old plants were placed in complete
darkness for 36 h. Following dark-adaptation, plants were
maintained in the dark or were exposed to the light sources (described
below) for 12 and 15 h (indicated in Figure Legends) before
harvesting. Tissue was harvested by quick freezing in liquid nitrogen
or was used fresh for chloroplast isolation. All manipulations of
dark-grown plants were performed in complete darkness or under a dim
green safelight as previously described (Christopher, 1996 ).
Seeds of wild-type and transplastomic tobacco (Nicotiana
tabacum var. Ottowa) lines pLAA24A, pLAA25A (Zoubenko et al.,
1994 ), and pWW11 (Shiina et al., 1998 ) were used. The chloroplast
genome of line pLAA25A contains the promoterless uidA
gene, whereas lines pLAA24A and pWW11 contained the uidA
gene under the control of the tobacco chloroplast promoters for the 16S
rRNA and rbcL genes, respectively. Two copies of each
transgene, one in each copy of the inverted repeat, are present in the
plastid genomes. Tobacco plants were grown on Sunshine Mix No. 4 (SunGro Horticulture, Bellevue, WA) under a photoperiod of 10 h of
darkness and 14 h of light at 24°C to 27°C for 42 d.
Plants were dark-adapted for 36 h prior to exposing them to
12 h red, blue, UV-A, and white light treatments (described
below). They were then harvested for RNA or chloroplast isolation.
Light Sources and Conditions
Fluences for red, far-red, blue, and white light were measured
using a quantum photometer (LI-COR, LI-1000, Lincoln, NE) and a
radiometer (model 65, YSI-Kettering). Fluences of UV-A radiation (W
m 2) were measured using a UVX radiometer with a UVX-36
sensor (UVP, Inc., Upland, CA). Fluences of visible light and UV-A
radiation were normalized using the radiometer and corrected for
detection efficiency. Red light (18 ± 2 µmol m 2
s 1) of 650 to 670 nm band width with a peak at 658 nm was
obtained by passing white light (tungsten halogen 300 W, EXR 54392, Sylvania, Danvers, MA) through a red interference filter (CBS-R,
Carolina Biological Supply, Burlington, NC) and filtered through clear heat-absorbing glass. Far-red light (18 ± 2 µmol
m 2 s 1) greater than 700 nm was obtained by
passing incandescent light (60 W, GE) through a far-red cut-off filter
(CBS FR 750, Carolina Biological Supply). Red and far-red light sources
were cooled with a fan. Blue light (18 ± 2 µmol
m 2 s 1) from 410 to 480 nm with a peaks at
440 and 420 nm was obtained by the following two means depending on the
number of plants treated: (a) For plants in small pots, white light
(tungsten halogen 300 W, EXR 54392, Sylvania) was passed through a
narrow band width blue interference filter (B-1, Edmund Scientific,
Barrington, NJ); and (b) for large flats used in chloroplast isolation,
light from 100% actinic blue fluorescent light bulbs (40 W T12, 420 nm
peak, Coralife, Carson CA) was used. UV-A light (75-85 W
m 2, radiometer-determined equivalent to 18 ± 2 µmol m 2 s 1) from 330 to 405 nm with a
peak at 365 nm (90% of total emission contained in 330-395 nm) was
obtained by using a black light blue bulb (F15T8 BLB-15 W, Sylvania)
housed in a lamp (Spectronics, Westbury, NY). White light (100 ± 10 µmol m 2 s 1) was obtained from
cool-white bulbs (F40CW-RS-WM 34 W, GE W-Miser).
Chloroplast Isolation and Transcription Assays
Arabidopsis and tobacco chloroplasts were isolated from
leaves as described (Hoffer and Christopher, 1997 ). Intact chloroplasts were counted in a hemacytometer using a phase contrast microscope. Chloroplast transcription activity was assayed using
[ -32P]UTP and 1 × 108 of purified
chloroplasts at a final concentration of 9.1 × 108
chloroplasts mL 1. Total chloroplast transcription
activities from four experiments of duplicate samples (Arabidopsis) or
two experiments with duplicate samples (tobacco) were expressed as pmol
[32P]UMP incorporated (1 × 108
chloroplasts) 1 (10 min) 1. Radiolabeled
run-on transcripts were hybridized as described (Christopher, 1996 ) to
non-radiolabeled gene-specific, single-stranded antisense RNAs (1 pmol
each psbA, rbcL, 16S rRNA, or pSK vector; Rapp et al.,
1992 ), or to 0.5 pmol (160 ng) of a 485-bp uidA
gene-specific DNA fragment. Gene-specific DNAs and RNAs were separated
by agarose gel electrophoresis and transferred to nylon membranes. The
levels of radioactivity hybridized to the membranes were determined by liquid scintillation counting of excised bands and by using an AMBIS
4000 Image Acquisition and Analysis System (AMBIS, Inc., San
Diego). Values of counts hybridized to the pSK vector (Stratagene Cloning Systems, San Diego) were subtracted from the gene-specific values. Gene-specific transcription activities were expressed as fmol
[32P]UMP incorporated (1 × 108
chloroplasts) 1 (10 min) 1
(kb) 1.
RNA and DNA Gel-Blot Hybridization and Analysis
Total cell RNA was isolated from frozen leaf tissue (Arabidopsis
and tobacco) by extraction with acid phenol (pH 4.5) and was
quantitated spectrophotometrically as described (Hoffer and Christopher, 1997 ). RNA was separated by electrophoresis on 1.5% (w/v)
formaldehyde-1.2% (w/v) agarose gels (16 mM MOPS
[3-(N-morpholino)-propanesulfonic acid], 4 mM NaOAc, and 1 mM EDTA, pH 7.0). RNA gel blots
(Genescreen) containing equal amounts of total cell RNA (12 µg) per
lane were hybridized with radiolabeled gene-specific probes as
previously described (Christopher, 1996 ).
Heterologous antisense RNA probes were derived from linearized
recombinant plasmids with DNA inserts specific for the barley chloroplast genes, 16S rRNA, rbcL, and
psbA (Rapp et al., 1992 ). The RNA probes were
synthesized and radiolabeled with [ -32P]UTP (>800
Ci/mM, ICN Pharmaceuticals) using T3 and T7 RNA
polymerases. A 485-bp PCR product internal to the uidA
gene (Jefferson et al., 1987 ) was made using primers
5'-TGCGGTCACTCATTACGGCA and 5'-AGTATCTCTATTGGAAGTGG. The PCR
contained 50 ng of plasmid DNA template (pGUS1 for
uidA), 2.5 units of Taq DNA polymerase,
50 mM KCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 9.0), 1% (w/v)
Triton X-100, and 0.2 mM for each of the dNTPs. The PCR
consisted of 40 cycles of 1 min at 94°C, 1 min at 45°C, and 1.5 min
at 72°C. The resulting PCR product was gel-purified, diluted, and
used to make DNA blots to hybridize with radiolabeled RNAs generated in
the lysed plastid run-on transcription assays and to make a
radiolabeled uidA probe. The
uidA-specific PCR product was labeled with
[ -32P]dATP (>800 Ci/mM, ICN
Pharmaceuticals) by the method of Schowalter and Sommer
(1989) .
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENT |
The authors would like to thank Dr. Lori Allison for generously
providing seeds of the transplastomic tobacco lines (pLAA24A, pLAA25A,
and pWW11).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received August 9, 2000; returned for revision October 31, 2000; accepted November 28, 2000.
1
This work was supported by the U.S. Department
of Energy Biosciences Program (grant no. DE-FG03-97ER20273 to
D.A.C.). College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources Journal
Series 4521.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail dchr{at}hawaii.edu; fax
808-956-3542.
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