First published online January 9, 2003; 10.1104/pp.015966
Plant Physiol, February 2003, Vol. 131, pp. 493-506
WVD2 and WDL1 Modulate Helical Organ Growth and Anisotropic Cell
Expansion in Arabidopsis1,[w]
Christen Y.L.
Yuen,2
Rebecca S.
Pearlman,2 3
Laura
Silo-suh,4
Pierre
Hilson,5
Kathleen L.
Carroll,6 and
Patrick H.
Masson*
Laboratory of Genetics, University of Wisconsin, 445 Henry Mall,
Madison, Wisconsin 53706
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ABSTRACT |
Wild-type Arabidopsis roots develop a wavy pattern of growth
on tilted agar surfaces. For many Arabidopsis ecotypes, roots also grow
askew on such surfaces, typically slanting to the right of the gravity
vector. We identified a mutant, wvd2-1, that displays suppressed root waving and leftward root slanting under these conditions. These phenotypes arise from transcriptional activation of
the novel WAVE-DAMPENED2
(WVD2) gene by the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter
in mutant plants. Seedlings overexpressing WVD2 exhibit
constitutive right-handed helical growth in both roots and etiolated
hypocotyls, whereas the petioles of WVD2-overexpressing rosette leaves
exhibit left-handed twisting. Moreover, the anisotropic expansion of
cells is impaired, resulting in the formation of shorter and stockier
organs. In roots, the phenotype is accompanied by a change in the
arrangement of cortical microtubules within peripheral cap cells and
cells at the basal end of the elongation zone. WVD2
transcripts are detectable by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain
reaction in multiple organs of wild-type plants. Its predicted gene
product contains a conserved region named "KLEEK," which is found
only in plant proteins. The Arabidopsis genome possesses seven other
genes predicted to encode KLEEK-containing products. Overexpression of
one of these genes, WVD2-LIKE 1, which
encodes a protein with regions of similarity to WVD2 extending beyond the KLEEK domain, results in phenotypes that are highly similar to
wvd2-1. Silencing of WVD2 and its
paralogs results in enhanced root skewing in the wild-type direction.
Our observations suggest that at least two members of this gene family
may modulate both rotational polarity and anisotropic cell expansion
during organ growth.
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INTRODUCTION |
The primary roots of Arabidopsis
possess an intrinsic handedness to their growth, consistently
forming counterclockwise coils as they elongate upon a horizontal
surface of hard agar (Mirza, 1987 ). However, when the
surface is positioned vertically, the downward growth behavior of roots
dictated by gravitropism conflicts with this counterclockwise coiling
tendency, resulting in a net direction of growth that is to the right
of the gravity vector. It should be noted that, in this report, we
follow the convention used in Simmons et al. (1995) and
Rutherford and Masson (1996) to describe the direction
of root coiling (clockwise or counterclockwise) and slanting (skewing:
leftward or rightward of the vertical axis), as viewed through the agar medium.
While slanting on vertical surfaces, root tips of wild-type Arabidopsis
seedlings also exhibit a largely left-handed rotation around the net
axis of growth, resulting in a moderate, left-handed twisting of the
discrete cell files that make up the root epidermal layer. This
left-handed preference in root tip rotation is associated with and may
be responsible for the counterclockwise bias in root coiling and, by
extension, rightward root slanting on vertical surfaces (Simmons
et al., 1995 ; Rutherford and Masson, 1996 ). Most
mutants possessing an opposite (leftward root slanting phenotype accordingly display predominantly right-handed epidermal cell file
rotation (CFR; Marinelli et al., 1997 ; Furutani
et al., 2000 ), whereas mutants with exaggerated rightward root
slanting often exhibit enhanced left-handed epidermal CFR
(Rutherford and Masson, 1996 ; Sedbrook et al.,
2002 ; Thitamadee et al., 2002 ).
Arabidopsis root tip rotation appears to be driven by circumnutation,
an endogenous, elliptical movement pattern that all plant organs
exhibit around their mean growth vector. Depending on the plant species
in question, circumnutation can be left-handed, right-handed, or
seemingly random (Hashimoto, 2002 ). Although the basis
for circumnutational direction remains uncertain, several recent models
have focused on the cortical microtubule arrangement within elongating
cells (Liang et al., 1996 ; Furutani et al., 2000 ; Thitamadee et al., 2002 ). Cortical
microtubules are thought to direct the anisotropic expansion of cells
by guiding the deposition of cellulose microfibrils within the cell
wall (Giddings and Staehelin, 1991 ). In rapidly
elongating maize (Zea mays) and Arabidopsis root cells, the
alignment of cortical microtubules is transverse with the axis of
root elongation. As the cells enter the mature zone of roots, the
microtubules consistently transition to a right-handed helical
arrangement just before adopting the longitudinal configuration observed in cells that have ceased to expand (Liang et al.,
1996 ; Sugimoto et al., 2000 ). The elongating
cells of lefty1 and lefty2 mutant roots, which
possess an exaggerated rightward-slanting phenotype, exhibit a
primarily right-handed oblique arrangement of cortical microtubules
(Thitamadee et al., 2002 ). The elongating root cells of
the spiral1 mutant, which possesses an opposite (leftward) root-skewing phenotype, conversely contain predominantly left-handed, oblique cortical microtubule arrays (Furutani et al., 2000 ). On the basis of these observations, it has been
proposed that the direction of cortical microtubules may specify the
polarity of root tip rotation (Liang et al., 1996 ;
Furutani et al., 2000 ).
Interestingly, although wild-type Arabidopsis roots embedded within a
homogeneous agar-based environment grow straight downward, their tips
still oscillate around the net growth axis. The degree of cell file
twisting at the root tip does not differ significantly between roots
growing in agar and roots growing on the surface of the agar medium
(Sedbrook et al., 2002 ). Furthermore, the frequency of
root tip oscillations under these two growth conditions does not differ
(Mullen et al., 1998 ). These observations suggest that the coiling behavior of roots is surface-triggered and can be uncoupled
from circumnutation in the absence of an asymmetric mechanical stimulus
(Rutherford and Masson, 1996 ; Mullen et al., 1998 ; Sedbrook et al., 2002 ). Decreasing the
agar content of the growth medium, or tilting the media-containing
plates forward slightly so that gravitropism tends to pull the roots
away from the surface, diminishes the slanting tendency of roots. These observations suggest that the coil-inducing stimulus may be tactile (Okada and Shimura, 1990 ; Rutherford and Masson,
1996 ).
In addition to the right-slanting phenotype, Arabidopsis roots exhibit
an elaborate, wavy growth pattern on agar surfaces that have been
tilted backward (Okada and Shimura, 1990 ). Root waving
consists of a succession of left-handed and right-handed circumnutation-like movements, each accompanied by CFRs in the opposite
direction, originating within the basal region of the root elongation
zone (Okada and Shimura, 1990 ; Rutherford and Masson, 1996 ). This behavior can be described as a succession of leftward and rightward root slanting movements, which appears to
result from a combination of gravity and touch stimulation (Okada and Shimura, 1990 ; Simmons et al.,
1995 ; Rutherford and Masson, 1996 ;
Rutherford et al., 1998 ). Other surface-derived stimuli
may also be involved (Buer et al., 2000 ).
To further characterize the processes involved in determining root
rotational polarity and helical growth, we have screened a collection
of activation-tagged Arabidopsis lines for altered root-waving and/or
root-skewing phenotypes. Here, we describe the isolation and
characterization of a mutation (wvd2-1) that inhibits root
waving and reverses root slanting on agar surfaces. Our analysis
strongly suggests that WVD2 (GenBank accession no. AF548461)
and at least one of its paralogs (WDL1) function as
regulators of rotational polarity and anisotropic cell expansion during
organ growth.
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RESULTS |
Isolation and Characterization of wvd2-1
The wvd2-1 mutant displayed altered root growth
phenotypes on inclined agar surfaces. Whereas the roots of wild-type
Arabidopsis seedlings (ecotype No-0) formed sinusoidal waves and skewed
to the right of the gravity vector, wvd2-1 roots skewed
leftward without waving when grown under these conditions (Fig.
1A). In addition, homozygous
wvd2-1 roots elongated at a slower rate than wild type and
were noticeably larger in diameter (Table
I). wvd2-1 roots also
possessed a higher density of root hairs than wild type, although no
hairs were found at ectopic positions within atrichoblastic cell files
(data not shown). Cells within the epidermal layer appeared to bulge
out at random locations along the root (Fig.
2, C and H). The F1
progeny derived from out-crosses between homozygous wvd2-1
and wild-type plants also exhibited suppressed root waving, and had
intermediate root-skewing, elongation, and radial expansion phenotypes
(Fig. 1A; Table I). However, they lacked the hairy-root and epidermal
cell-bulging phenotypes of homozygous wvd2-1 roots (Figs. 2,
B and E). Genetic analysis of the subsequent F2
generation revealed that wvd2-1 segregated as a single,
semidominant mutation (1:2:1 ratio; 2 = 0.0169; n = 472).

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Figure 1.
Root growth phenotypes on agar surfaces of wild
type (ecotype Nossen-0 [No-0]), homozygous wvd2-1, or the
F1 progeny of a cross between wvd2-1
and No-0 (A); of representative T2 plants
segregating for either the 35S:WVD2 (B) or
35S:WDL1 (C) transgenes in a wild-type No-0 background; or
for T2 plants segregating for the silencing
transgene siWVD2 in a wvd2-1 background (D). Seedlings were
grown for 7 d on 1.5% (w/v) agar-solidified medium, tilted
backward 30° from vertical. For B, C, and D, the
T2 seedlings were derived from selfing a
transgenic plant hemizygous for the transgene. Pictures were taken from
the bottom of the plates, through the medium.
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Table I.
Biometrical analysis of root and shoot
phenotypes
Root phenotypes, Seedlings were grown on 1.5% (w/v) agar plates. Root
elongation was measured over a 24-h interval, 4 to 5 d after
germination (DAG). Root diameters were determined at the mature zone 7 DAG. In both cases, the plates were oriented vertically. The angles of
root skewing were measured for seedlings grown on plates tilted
backwards 30°, 7 DAG. Hypocotyls, Lengths and diameters are for
etiolated seedlings grown on 0.8% (w/v) agar plates, 5 DAG. Rosette
leaves, Values are for the first true leaf of each plant, measured
within 24 h of bolt emergence. Siliques, Five fully elongated
siliques were analyzed from eight wvd2-1 and eight wild-type
No-0 plants. Measurement of epidermal and cortical cells within the
mature zones of roots grown on vertical 1.5% (w/v) agar plates, 7 DAG.
Five cortical and three epidermal cells were measured from nine
wvd2-1 and nine wild-type No-0 roots. All results are mean
values ± SD. N.D., Not determined.
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Figure 2.
Epidermal CFR phenotypes. Close-up images of roots
grown on a tilted agar surface (A-F) or embedded in agar (G and H).
Images were taken either at the tip (A-C) or at the mature zone (D-H)
of 7-d-old roots: A, D, and G, Wild-type No-0; B and E, heterozygous
wvd2-1; C, F, and H, homozygous wvd2-1. Arrows
indicate positions where bulging of epidermal cells are observed in
homozygous wvd2-1 roots. Scale bars = 100 µm.
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The mean angle of wvd2-1 root skewing varied according to
the orientation of the agar surface. Mutant roots exhibited greater mean angles of leftward skewing on agar surfaces inclined backward than
on vertically positioned surfaces, with the angle of leftward deviation
increasing the further the agar plate was tilted backward (Table
II). By comparison, the skewing angles of
wild-type No-0 roots grown on tilted and untilted plates did not differ
significantly, although plate tilting appeared to increase the
amplitude of wild-type root waving (data not shown). The growth vectors
of wvd2-1 and wild-type roots submerged within the
agar-solidified growth medium did not deviate significantly from
the vertical axis (Table II), indicating that the wvd2-1
skewed root growth phenotype neither is caused by nor results in an
alteration of the root gravitropic set point angle. However, the
bending kinetics of wvd2-1 roots lagged slightly behind that
of wild-type roots upon gravistimulation (supplementary data can be
viewed at www.plantphysiol.org), possibly because of the
large difference in rate of root elongation between mutant and
wild-type seedlings.
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Table II.
Effect of the growth conditions on root skewing
Plate conditions, Seedlings were grown on one-half-strength Murashige
and Skoog media containing either 0.8% or 1.5% agar. The orientation
of the plates (indicated next to and below the agar content) is
relative to the vertical position (0°), with angles > 0°
indicating backwards plate tilting. The angles of root skewing were
measured for seedlings grown on the surface of the agar, except where
denoted as being "in agar." Propyzamide, Seedlings were grown for
7 d on 1.5% agar plates, tilted backwards 30°, with 0, 1, or 3 µM propyzamide added to the medium. Results are mean
angles of root skewing ± SD. Positive and negative
values indicate rightward and leftward skewing, respectively.
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Under most conditions, directional growth on agar surfaces is
associated with the polarity of epidermal cell file twisting at the
root tip: Left-handed CFR occurs when the root coils in the
counterclockwise direction, whereas right-handed CFR accompanies clockwise coiling (Okada and Shimura, 1990 ;
Sedbrook et al., 2002 ). On tilted agar surfaces,
wild-type roots of the No-0 ecotype alternated between left-handed and
right-handed epidermal CFR, with a strong bias observed in favor of
left-handed CFR (Fig. 2, A and D). Homozygous wvd2-1 roots,
on the other hand, possessed a constitutive right-handed CFR phenotype
(Fig. 2, C and F). The underlying cortical cell files of
wvd2-1 also exhibited right-handed twisting (data not shown). A bias to-handed right-handed CFR was also observed in heterozygous wvd2-1 seedlings, although they periodically
showed evidence of left-handed CFR as well (Fig. 2, B and E).
When grown embedded within a homogenous environment of 1.5% (w/v)
agar-solidified growth medium, both wild-type and
wvd2-1 mutant roots grew straight down. However, wild-type
roots still displayed left-handed CFR (Fig. 2G), whereas mutant roots
displayed right-handed CFR (Fig. 2H). Furthermore, the cell-bulging
phenotype of wvd2-1 roots was more evident than when grown
on the surface of the medium.
Under our normal growth conditions, the roots of wvd2-1
seedlings appear to be both shorter and thicker than wild type. To determine whether defects in anisotropic cell expansion contribute to
the altered morphology of wvd2-1 roots, measurements of the dimensions of cells within the mature zone of wild-type and mutant roots were obtained. As shown in Table I, both cortical and epidermal root cells were shorter in wvd2-1 (67% and 56% the length
of wild type, respectively). The periclinal width of these cells
conversely was significantly larger in the mutant (48% and 44% wider,
respectively). Reduced cell anisotropy was also observed in cells of
the endodermal layer of the root (data not shown). No increase in cell
number was observed in any of the layers of mutant roots observed in cross section (data not shown). Thus, impaired cell anisotropy appears
to account for a large portion of the root elongation and expansion
phenotypes of wvd2-1.
The wvd2-1 mutation also causes expansion-related defects in
several shoot organs, including hypocotyls, siliques, and rosette leaves (Table I). However, seed size was not altered (data not shown).
Moreover, defects in the polarity of axial rotation were also observed
in shoot organs. The hypocotyls of etiolated wvd2-1 seedlings showed constitutive right-handed epidermal CFR (Fig. 3B), whereas the cell files of wild-type
hypocotyls appeared to be linear with the axis of elongation (Fig. 3A).
Interestingly, the petioles of homozygous wvd2-1 rosette
leaves exhibited left-handed CFR, resulting in a consistent clockwise
leaf curling (Fig. 3E). The rosette leaves of wild-type and
heterozygous wvd2-1 plants generally did not display a
tendency to curl (Fig. 3, C and D).

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Figure 3.
Shoot phenotypes of wvd2-1. Close-up
images of hypocotyls from wild-type No-0 (A) and wvd2-1 (B)
seedlings grown in darkness on vertical 1.5% (w/v) agar plates,
4 d after germination (DAG). Rosette leaves of wild-type (C),
heterozygous (D), and homozygous (E) wvd2-1 seedlings.
Arrows indicate leaves showing prominent clockwise curling. Photographs
were taken within 24 h of bolting.
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Effect of wvd2-1 on Cortical Microtubules
Several mutants with defects in anisotropic cell expansion and
root growth behavior display defects in cortical microtubule alignment
within cells of the root elongation zone (Furutani et al.,
2000 ; Thitamadee et al., 2002 ; Wasteneys,
2002 ). We examined the root growth behavior of
wvd2-1 and wild-type seedlings in the presence of compounds
that affect microtubule organization.
The addition of 1 to 3 µM propyzamide, a
microtubule-destabilizing compound, to the growth medium caused an
exaggerated rightward root-slanting phenotype in wild-type No-0
seedlings and enhanced leftward skewing of wvd2-1 roots
(Table II). The increase in angle of root skewing was greater for
wvd2-1 than for wild type at both concentrations (Table II).
The addition of oryzalin, another microtubule-destabilizing compound (Baskin et al., 1994 ), to the growth medium
also resulted in enhanced alteration of wvd2-1 mutant root
elongation compared with wild type (supplementary data).
To determine how the arrangement of cortical microtubule arrays in
elongating wvd2-1 root cells compared with those of
wild-type, whole-mount immunolocalization experiments were performed on
4-d-old mutant and wild-type seedlings grown on vertical 0.8% (w/v)
agar plates to diminish the effects of root waving. Consistent
with the observations reported by Liang et al. (1996)
and Sugimoto et al. (2000) , epidermal cells in the
elongation zone of wild-type No-0 roots possessed microtubule arrays
that were predominantly transverse in alignment (Fig.
4A). On the other hand, a left-handed spiral arrangement of cortical microtubules was apparent within the
elongating cells of wvd2-1 roots (Fig. 4B). This spiral
arrangement was found in epidermal cells located on the distal side of
CFR initiation, and became more pronounced as cells approached the region of the elongation zone where CFR became apparent. Although cells
directly at the site of CFR initiation had a strongly left-handed cortical microtubule orientation (Fig. 4B), the cells located on the
basal side of CFR initiation displayed a nearly longitudinal microtubular alignment (data not shown). Cortical microtubule organization was also altered in wvd2-1 peripheral root cap
cells, with cells possessing transverse, longitudinal, or oblique
arrays (Fig. 4D). Wild-type peripheral root cap cells, on the other
hand, possessed uniformly transverse microtubule alignments (Fig.
4C).

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Figure 4.
Arrangement of cortical microtubules. A and B,
Localization of cortical microtubules within the primary roots of
4-d-old wild-type (A) and wvd2-1 (B) seedlings. The
images shown to the right of the dashed lines in A and B correspond to
the bracketed region of the roots shown to the left of the dashed
lines, taken at a higher magnification. White lines along the roots
indicate the site of CFR initiation. The images were constructed from
overlapping confocal images taken along the length of the roots. C and
D, Localization of cortical microtubules within the peripheral root cap
cells of wild-type (C) and wvd2-1 (D) seedlings. Scale
bar = 10 µm.
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WVD2 Encodes a Small Hydrophilic Protein
Ds(HYG 35S), the transposon used to generate the
activation-tagged population from which wvd2-1 was isolated,
harbors both a hygromycin resistance gene (HPT) and an
outward-directed cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter
(Wilson et al., 1996 ). Cosegregation analysis of the
wvd2-1 and hygromycin resistance phenotypes in 114 F3 families (derived from crosses between
homozygous wvd2-1 and wild-type plants) indicated complete
linkage between the mutant phenotype and a Ds(HYG 35S)
insertion. Using inverse PCR, the genomic sequence immediately flanking
one end of the Ds element was obtained. This sequence was
found to match a segment on the upper arm of chromosome 5, near the
nga76 marker. A cDNA clone (p6D1) matching the
Ds-disrupted locus was isolated from an Arabidopsis cDNA
library (CD4-7) and sequenced. Subsequent primer extension analysis
revealed that full-length transcripts possess an additional 64 bases
upstream of the 5' end of p6D1. A comparison of the full-length cDNA
and genomic sequences revealed that the identified gene consists of six
exons and five introns, and encodes a transcript 1.0 kb in length. The
Ds(HYG 35S) element cosegregating with the wvd2-1 phenotype is inserted within the first exon of this gene, 362 bp
upstream of the first potential start codon, with its CaMV 35S promoter
directed toward the gene's open reading frame (Fig. 5A). The WVD2 gene was
predicted by genome annotations (At5g28646 [gi:22327159]),
although the annotated sequence omits the first and fourth exons
depicted in Figure 5A.

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Figure 5.
The wvd2-1 mutation is caused by the
insertion of a Ds(HYG 35S) element within the
5'-untranslated region of WVD2. A, Structure of the
wvd2-1 allele. The dark boxes indicate exons, whereas the
light boxes represent introns. The site of Ds(HYG 35S)
insertion within the wvd2-1 allele is denoted by , with
the direction of CaMV 35S promoter transcriptional activation
represented by an arrow. The positions of the predicted start and stop
codons of the WVD2 open reading frame are indicated by ATG
and TGA, respectively. B, Genomic sequence immediately flanking the
Ds insertion site. Insertion of the Ds element is
accompanied by an 8-bp target site duplication (boxed sequence). In two
independently isolated revertant lines, excision of the Ds
element also caused a C G transversion and a single-base pair
deletion, resulting in a 7-bp footprint. C, Root-waving phenotype of a
wvd2-1 revertant line. On the left, progeny derived from the
self-fertilization of a plant heterozygous for wvd2-1
and revertant allele a. Note the wavy appearance and
rightward skewing of the roots of seedlings denoted with an asterisk.
Wild-type No-0 seedlings are in the middle (between the two black
bars), and a Landsberg erecta (Ler) seedling is
located at the right. This picture was taken from below the
plate.
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Two genetically stable revertant lines were identified among the
progeny of wvd2-1 plants harboring the Nae35S-Ac
element (Fig. 5C). PCR amplification of the genomic sequence flanking the original Ds insertion site, followed by sequencing of
the amplification products, revealed that the reversions were
accompanied by Ds excision events, which left behind an
identical 7-bp footprint in both cases (Fig. 5B). Our revertant
analysis indicates that a Ds(HYG 35S) element insertion
within this gene, which we have designated as WVD2, is
responsible for the phenotype of wvd2-1 plants.
On the basis of the sequence of its cDNA, the deduced WVD2 protein
(Fig. 6A) is 23 kD in size, is highly
hydrophilic, and is predicted to localize in the cytoplasm. Its peptide
sequence lacks significant stretches of similarity to proteins of known function. The amino acid content of WVD2 is biased toward Glu, Lys, and
Ser, which constitute 14% (Glu) and 11% each (Lys and Ser) of all
amino acids within the protein. WVD2 contains a short region (residues
89-172) that shares homology with seven predicted proteins from
Arabidopsis (Fig. 6, B and C). With the exception of the predicted gene
product of At1g70950, which possesses 50% identity to only
a subregion of the conserved domain of WVD2 (residues 89-149), the
degree of identity between WVD2 and the remaining six proteins within
this conserved domain ranges from 50% to 88% (Fig. 6C). We have
termed this region of conservation the KLEEK domain, after the five
contiguous residues invariantly found in all eight Arabidopsis proteins
(Fig. 6C). According to the PAIRCOIL program (Berger et al.,
1995 ), a portion of the KLEEK domain is predicted to form a
coiled-coil structure (WVD2 residues 92-136 [P = 0.892]). BLAST searches performed with the KLEEK domain of WVD2 have
identified additional KLEEK-containing proteins from a wide range of
plant species, including barley (Hordeum vulgare), corn,
cotton (Gossypium hirsutum), pine (Pinus spp.),
potato (Solanum tuberosum), rice (Oryza sativa),
rye (Secale cereale), sorghum (Sorghum bicolor),
soybean (Glycine max), and tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum). However, we were unable to identify any non-plant proteins possessing this motif (data not shown).

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Figure 6.
The gene product of WVD2 contains the
novel KLEEK domain. A, The deduced amino acid sequence of WVD2.
Residues corresponding to the conserved domain are underlined. B,
Pair-wise similarity between predicted Arabidopsis proteins containing
the KLEEK domain. Each predicted protein is assigned an identification
number (1-8), which is defined on the right of the table, and is
represented in the first and last lanes and columns of the table.
Percent identity between two proteins is represented in the
corresponding table box. C, Alignment of a region surrounding the KLEEK
domain for all eight predicted KLEEK-carrying Arabidopsis proteins.
Residues matching the consensus are shaded. In B and C, alignment was
performed using MegAlign (ClustalV method: gap penalty = 10, gap
length penalty = 10, PAM250 Matrix; DNASTAR, Inc., Madison,
WI).
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The product encoded by At3g04630, which we hereafter refer
to as WVD2-Like1 (WDL1), shares the
most similarity to WVD2 over its entire length (59.9% amino acid
identity; Fig. 6B). The sequence of full-length WDL1 cDNA
(Ceres cDNA clone 39706) indicates that the predicted WDL1 protein has
a molecular mass of 32 kD and is also highly hydrophilic. The two next
most similar proteins to WVD2 from Arabidopsis (encoded by
At1g54460 and At3g23090) share 41.1% and 40.1%
identity, respectively, with WVD2 over its length. The other four
predicted proteins share only limited sequence similarity with WVD2
(25.7%-34.2% identity), essentially limited to the KLEEK domain.
Altering Expression of WVD2 and WDL1
Modulates Organs' Growth Behavior
Because Ds(HYG 35S) carries an outward-transcribing
CaMV 35S promoter on one of its flanks, northern-blot analysis was
performed to assess whether WVD2 was up-regulated in
wvd2-1 tissues. As shown in Figure
7A, a highly abundant 1.2-kb transcript
was detected by WVD2-specific probes in total RNA extracted
from mutant (lane 1) but not wild-type (lane 2) tissues. On the other
hand, no differences in level of expression were detected for three
other genes showing similarity to WVD2, relative to an
eIF4A loading control, indicating that the wvd2-1
phenotype was most likely the result of increased expression of
WVD2 rather than silencing of a related gene.

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Figure 7.
A, Northern-blot analysis of WVD2
expression. Total RNA was prepared from wvd2-1 (lane 1),
wild-type No-0 (lane 2), and silencing lines
wvd2[siWVD2]-1 (lane 3), wvd2[siWVD2]-3 (lane
4), and wvd2[siWVD2]-4 (lane 5). Seedlings were grown for
5 d on 1.5% (w/v) agar plates, tilted backward 30°.
Blots were hybridized with gene-specific probes, as indicated. Note
that the expected size of wild-type WVD2 transcripts is 1.0 kb, but transcripts from the wvd2-1 mutant allele are 1.2 kb
in length because of sequences corresponding to the border of the
Ds(HYG 35S) element. The coding potential of mutant
transcripts is unchanged (data not shown). B, Tissue-specific RT-PCR
analysis of WVD2 and WDL1 expression. Using
gene-specific primers, RT-PCR analysis was performed with 0.5 µg of
total RNA extracted from light-grown whole seedlings (lane 1),
hypocotyls and cotyledons (lane 2), roots (lane 3), dark-grown whole
seedlings (lane 4), flowers (lane 5), rosette leaves (lane 6), siliques
(lane 7), and stems (lane 8). All tissues were derived from wild-type
Columbia (Col) plants. Tissue samples were collected from plants grown
on tilted 1.5% (w/v) agar plates, 4 to 5 DAG (lanes 1-3); from
plants grown on vertical 1.5% (w/v) agar plates, 4 d after
germination (lane 4); or from soil-grown plants, 4 to 6 weeks after
germination (lanes 5-8). Both primer pairs flank a single intron of
their respective genes. Sequencing of WVD2 and
WDL1 RT-PCR amplification products confirmed that they did
not include intron-related sequences (data not shown).
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To verify that the increased expression of WVD2 was
responsible for the wvd2-1 mutant phenotype, we transformed
wild-type No-0 plants with a construct designed to express the open
reading frame of WVD2 under the control of the CaMV 35S
promoter (p35S:WVD2). Of 20 transgenic seedlings recovered,
17 independent T2 lines segregated for
root-waving, root-skewing, and root elongation phenotypes. Although
some phenotypic variability existed between transgenic lines,
presumably because of position-mediated effects on transgene
expression, the majority possessed phenotypes strongly reminiscent of
wvd2-1, including occasional bulging of epidermal cells,
increased root hair production, and clockwise curling rosette leaves
(data not shown). Similarly to heterozygous wvd2-1
seedlings, the three transgenic lines with the weakest
wvd2-like phenotypes still exhibited predominantly
right-handed CFR in roots, but periodically switched to left-handed CFR
when grown on tilted agar surfaces (data not shown). The root growth
pattern of a representative line on tilted agar surfaces is shown in
Figure 1B. Northern-blot analysis confirmed the expression of the
transgene in these lines (data not shown).
To determine whether CaMV 35S-driven expression of WDL1
would also result in phenotypes similar to those observed in
wvd2-1, wild-type No-0 seedlings were transformed with the
p35S:WDL1 construct (see "Materials and Methods"). In
the T2 generation, 14 of the 17 transgenic lines
isolated segregated for altered root growth phenotypes, the majority of
which possessed short roots that did not wave and slanted to the left
on tilted agar surfaces (Fig. 1C). The shoot morphology of
35S:WDL1 transgenic plants was also highly similar to
wvd2-1 (data not shown).
In plants, the simultaneous expression of sense and antisense RNA can
induce gene-specific silencing at high frequency (Waterhouse et
al., 1998 ). Because wild-type WVD2 transcripts were
not detectable via northern-blot analysis, we used the
wvd2-1 mutant background to examine the effects of
transgene-mediated silencing of WVD2 on root skewing,
thereby allowing us to confirm transcriptional suppression through
northern-blot analysis. Transgenic wvd2-1 seedlings
harboring the p-siWVD2 silencing construct, which expresses inverted copies of the WVD2 cDNA under the CaMV 35S
promoter, exhibited suppression of the mutant phenotype (Fig. 1D). The
onset of silencing varied among different lines, with some
wvd2[siWVD2] lines appearing noticeably
different from wvd2-1 seedlings 4 d after germination,
whereas other lines took as long as 10 d after germination to
exhibit suppression of the wvd2-1 phenotype. In the latter
case, roots would initially skew leftward on a tilted agar surface and
then switch to rightward slanting (data not shown). Interestingly,
quantification of the mean root-skewing angles for four
representative lines displaying early onset of wvd2-1 suppression indicated that the rightward root skewing of these lines
was increased over wild-type No-0 seedlings. Root skewing varied
between 27° ± 8° and 32° ± 7° from the vertical in these silenced lines, compared with 20° ± 7° from the vertical for
untransformed No-0 roots. Differences in average root-skewing angle
between silenced wvd2-1 and wild-type lines were all
statistically meaningful (t test P values varying
between 3.5 × 10 8 and 2.7 × 10 20). Transcripts derived from the
wvd2-1 allele were diminished in the silenced lines,
reaching levels barely detectable by northern-blot analysis (Fig. 7A).
The levels of WDL1 transcripts also were substantially diminished in all silenced lines analyzed, whereas those of
At1g54460 changed only slightly. On the other hand, the
levels of At3g23090 transcripts remained unchanged in these
lines. Hence, silencing appeared to affect expression of the genes with
the highest similarity to WVD2 at the cDNA sequence level
(Fig. 7A; data not shown).
WVD2 and WDL1 Are Expressed in
Multiple Plant Tissues
We performed reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR on RNA extracted from
a variety of organs to determine the wild-type expression pattern of
WVD2 and WDL1. For both sets of experiments, the
gene-specific primer pairs amplified a region spanning an intron in
genomic DNA, thereby allowing us to distinguish between PCR products
derived from reverse transcription of mRNA and amplification products arising from genomic DNA contamination. As shown in Figure 7B, using
WVD2-specific primers, RT-PCR products of the expected size (550 bp) were detected in 0.5 µg of total RNA from seedlings grown under the standard root-wave assay conditions (lane 1) or etiolated seedlings grown on vertically positioned plates (lane 4). Furthermore, WVD2 transcript was detected in both
cotyledon/hypocotyl-specific (lane 2) and root-specific (lane 3) RNA
preparations. Transcript was also detected in tissue-specific RNA
extracts from the flowers, rosette leaves, siliques, and inflorescence
stems of wild-type plants (lanes 5-8). Similar results were obtained
when WDL1-specific primers were used (Fig. 7B). Therefore,
both WVD2 and WDL1 appear to be expressed in most
organs of wild-type Arabidopsis.
 |
DISCUSSION |
We have identified wvd2-1, a mutant that exhibits
defects in both the expansion and rotational polarity of plant organs.
The mutant allele contains an activation-tagging Ds element
inserted within the 5'-untranslated region of WVD2, driving
increased expression of transcripts with full-coding potential. Because
the wvd2-1 mutation can be phenocopied by the
35S:WVD2 transgene, the mutant phenotype is most likely the
result of ectopic expression and/or overexpression of WVD2.
Furthermore, the effects of WVD2 expression appear to be
dosage dependent, because heterozygous wvd2-1 seedlings possess an intermediate phenotype. Reduction of WVD2,
WDL1, and At1g54460 transcript levels in a
wvd2-1 background reverses the phenotypes and results in
enhanced root slanting in the wild-type direction.
The wvd2-1 mutation also causes roots to be shorter and
thicker than wild type under our growth conditions. This appears to result primarily from impaired anisotropic cell expansion resulting in
increased radial expansion and decreased elongation in all layers of
the root (Table I) and in most organs of the plant (data not shown).
However, the smaller average length of cells in the mature zone of
mutant roots compared with wild type (56% for epidermal cells, and
66% for cortical cells) is not sufficient to account for the full
reduction in root growth (46%) also associated with the mutation
(Table I; data not shown). Root growth is conditioned by a combination
of cell division and cell expansion, and we have not excluded the
possibility that the mutation might affect both processes.
Even though several phytohormones have been found to modulate
anisotropic cell expansion in plants (for review, see Shibaoka, 1994 ),
it appears that the cell expansion defect of wvd2-1 is not
associated with dramatic changes in sensitivity to phytohormones. Slight increases in root growth resistance to indole-3-acetic acid
(IAA), naphthalene acetic acid (NAA),
1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC), and 6-benzyladenine
(BA) were observed in mutant seedlings (supplementary
data). However, these changes in root growth sensitivity were much
smaller than those typically found in phytohormone-resistant mutants (Chang et al., 1993 ; Leyser et al.,
1993 ; Chen et al., 1998 ) and were similar in all
phytohormone response assays. These results suggest that the
altered phytohormone sensitivity of wvd2-1 may not be
specific and could result indirectly from the profound effect of
wvd2-1 on anisotropic cell expansion.
On the other hand, increasing Suc concentrations in the medium
exacerbated radial expansion phenotype of wvd2-1 roots,
whereas wild-type root expansion was not modified under these
conditions (supplementary data). This Suc effect was highly specific,
because mannitol had little or no effect on this aspect of the
phenotype (supplementary data). Therefore, the radial expansion defect
of wvd2-1 roots may involve pathways or processes similar to
those responsible for the phenotypes of the Arabidopsis conditional root expansion mutants, which also exhibited increased radial expansion
in the presence of high concentrations of Suc (Hauser et al.,
1995 ). We hypothesize that the Suc effect on radial cell expansion in roots may be related to its activity as a signaling molecule (Smeekens, 2000 ).
Whereas wild-type roots exhibited a wavy, rightward-slanting growth
pattern on tilted agar surfaces, the roots of wvd2-1
seedlings did not wave significantly and slanted to the left under
these conditions. This altered growth behavior of mutant roots on agar surfaces was accompanied by an apparent shift in the polarity of root
directional growth bias, as evidenced by their epidermal CFR phenotype.
Homozygous wvd2-1 roots possessed constitutive righthanded
CFR when grown on tilted agar plates, which is typically associated
with clockwise coiling on horizontal agar surfaces (Okada and
Shimura, 1990 ; Simmons et al., 1995 ;
Rutherford and Masson, 1996 ; Sedbrook et al.,
2002 ). The leftward-skewing phenotype of wvd2-1
roots may therefore derive from the combined influence of gravitropism
and a surface-dependent clockwise coiling behavior in the mutant
(Rutherford and Masson, 1996 ).
The net growth vector of wvd2-1 roots was influenced by the
angle at which the agar surface was positioned, with the smallest leftward deviation from the gravity vector occurring when the agar
plates were positioned vertically. Backward plate tilting is believed
to enhance the interaction between roots and the surface, because of
gravitropism directing root growth into the medium (Okada and
Shimura, 1990 ). Thus, one possible interpretation of the
increased leftward skewing of wvd2-1 roots on inclined
surfaces is that an increase in surface-derived tactile stimulation
causes an enhanced root-coiling phenotype. Because wvd2-1
roots appear to coil constitutively in the clockwise direction, this
enhancement of root coiling results in a more dramatic left-slanting
phenotype. Wild-type No-0 root skewing, on the other hand, appeared to
be less dependent upon the orientation of the surface. This may be attributable to the ability of wild-type roots to alternate between clockwise and counterclockwise coiling. If the increase in tactile stimulation caused by backward plate tilting affects coiling in both
directions equally, the net change in angle of root skewing may be
negligible. However, increased coiling in both directions would be
anticipated to result in an increased frequency and/or amplitude of
root waving. Backward plate tilting has previously been shown to
enhance the wavy growth pattern of wild-type roots (Okada and
Shimura, 1990 ; Simmons et al., 1995 ;
Mullen et al., 1998 ).
It is also possible that wvd2-1 displays a constitutive or
enhanced thigmoresponse phenotype. Under the alternating circumnutation model of root waving, formation of the wavy growth pattern involves touch-induced reversions of root tip rotational polarity, resulting in
back-and-forth changes in the direction of root coiling (Okada and Shimura, 1990 ; Rutherford and Masson, 1996 ).
On the basis of the WVD2 and WDL1 overexpression
phenotypes, the wild-type function of these genes may be to promote a
switch from the default (left-handed) direction of wild-type root-tip
rotation to right-handed rotation in response to a perceived stimulus.
The thicker root phenotype of wvd2-1 may alternatively
result in increased contact of the root with the agar surface, thereby
allowing for enhanced stimulation of the root (and thus, exaggerated
coiling). Finally, we cannot eliminate the possibility that the
increased diameter of mutant roots also contributes to the suppression
of wvd2-1 root waving. In general, plant species that
develop relatively thick roots do not exhibit strong waving patterns on
agar surfaces (Simmons et al., 1995 ). We have similarly
observed that several mutants characterized by root expansion defects
similar to wvd2-1, including the eto
(Guzman and Ecker, 1990 ) and erh
(Schneider et al., 1997 ) mutants, also lack root waving
on tilted agar plates (C. Yuen and P.H. Masson, unpublished data).
However, it is interesting to note that, unlike wvd2-1,
these other mutants do not skew significantly to either the left or
right under these conditions (C. Yuen and P.H. Masson, unpublished data).
A growing body of evidence suggests that the direction of cortical
microtubules is a major determinant in the rotational polarity of roots
(Liang et al., 1996 ; Furutani et al.,
2000 ; Thitamadee et al., 2002 ). Similar to the
leftward-skewing spr1 mutant, the elongating root cells of
wvd2-1 contain microtubule arrays with a left-handed oblique
organization. This left-handed arrangement is observed in root cells
apical to the position where cell file twisting is first observed in
wvd2-1, but becomes more prominent in cells proximal to the
site of CFR initiation (Fig. 4). Cells basal to this position appear to
adopt a longitudinal alignment (Fig. 4), similar to that observed in
nonelongating cells at the mature zone of wild-type roots (Liang
et al., 1996 ; Sugimoto et al., 2000 ). Cortical
microtubules have long been hypothesized to regulate
anisotropic cell expansion by defining the orientation of cellulose
microfibril deposition within the cell wall (Giddings and
Staehelin, 1991 ) and may also be involved in hemicellulose deposition (Burk et al., 2001 ). Therefore, the observed
misalignment of cortical microtubules in wvd2-1 cells may
potentially account for both the reduced cell anisotropy and clockwise
root-coiling phenotypes of wvd2-1.
On the basis of the preceding discussion, we hypothesize that WVD2
interacts directly or indirectly with microtubules, altering their
dynamics and consequently affecting anisotropic cell expansion and root
growth behavior on surfaces. This model is consistent with the fact
that wvd2-1 enhances root growth sensitivity to intermediate
concentrations of oryzalin, a drug that destabilizes cortical
microtubules (see above), and with the observation that propyzamide,
another microtubule-destabilizing compound, enhances the root slanting
of wvd2-1 to a greater degree than wild type (Table II).
Both WVD2 and WDL1 are predicted to possess coiled-coil domains, a
structural configuration implicated in a number of protein-protein
interactions. It is notable that plants highly expressing a transgene
that encodes a green fluorescent protein-MAP4 chimeric protein also
possess a strong, leftward root-skewing phenotype (Hashimoto,
2002 ). MAP4 is a micro-tubule-associated protein that is
believed to assist in the polymerization and stabilization of
microtubules (Olsen et al., 1995 ). Moreover, mutations
within two genes encoding -tubulins (lefty1 and
lefty2) were shown to enhance root slanting in the wild-type
direction (Thitamadee et al., 2002 ). It should, however,
be cautioned that it remains formally possible that the altered
cytoskeleton arrangement of elongating wvd2-1 cells is
caused by changes in the architecture of the cell wall (Fisher
and Cyr, 1998 ; Sugimoto et al., 2001 ;
Takeda et al., 2002 ).
Further characterization is necessary to determine whether the
phenotypes associated with wvd2-1 are the consequence of
overexpression in functionally relevant cells or ectopic expression in
cells that do not normally transcribe WVD2 and/or
WDL1. Interestingly, although transgene-mediated
cosuppression of genes encoding WVD2 and WVD2-like proteins restores
rightward root slanting and wild-type organ expansion and morphology in
the wvd2-1 mutant background, the angle of root skewing is
significantly greater than that of wild-type controls. Although
expression of the wvd2-1 mutant allele is reduced to almost
undetectable levels in silenced lines, these seedlings still possess a
greater abundance of WVD2 transcripts than wild type.
However, the siWVD2 transgene also reduced the expression
level of WDL1 and At1g54460 in silenced lines
(Fig. 7A). These observations suggest that a reduction in the net
abundance of transcripts from both WVD2 and
WVD2-like genes results in a phenotype (increased rightward
root slanting) that is the opposite of the wvd2-1 mutation.
This is consistent with our hypothesis that WVD2 and its
paralogs may promote clockwise root coiling in wild-type plants.
Expression of both genes is detected in a broad range of wild-type
plant organs, indicating that they may modulate helical growth and/or
anisotropic cell expansion processes throughout wild-type Arabidopsis
plants. Interestingly, whereas plants overexpressing either
WVD2 or WDL1 were characterized by right-handed
helical growth phenotypes in roots and etiolated hypocotyls, they also
exhibited left-handed petiole twisting and clockwise leaf curling (Fig.
3E; data not shown). This may indicate that the specific activity of
WVD2 and WDL1 is dependent upon the organ in which it is expressed. By
contrast, the spr2, lefty1, and lefty2
mutations cause organ polarity defects of the same direction in both
roots and petioles (Hashimoto, 2002 ).
In summary, the root growth behavior exhibited by wvd2-1
(this study) and spr1 (Furutani et al., 2000 )
mutant seedlings indicates that mutations that reverse the direction of
the axial rotational bias promote opposite directional preference of
root coiling on horizontal surfaces and opposite slanting on tilted or
vertical media. Our characterization of WVD2 and
WDL1 strongly suggests that both genes function as positive
regulators of right-handed helical growth in roots and etiolated
hypocotyls, possibly by affecting the dynamics of cortical microtubules
within elongating cells. The latter effect appears distinct from that
of spr1 (Furutani et al., 2000 ), considering
the differential slanting response displayed by these mutants to
intermediate concentrations of propyzamide (reversal of root skewing
for spr1 [Furutani et al., 2000 ] and enhancement for wvd2-1 [Table II]). In any case, the role
of WVD2 and WDL1 in Arabidopsis roots may be to modulate the polarity of circumnutation. Such adjustments in the direction and of root coiling in response to asymmetric tactile stimulation may facilitate the ability of roots to maneuver in natural soil environments by
allowing them to avoid impediments to growth. The stems of twining
plants also exhibit coiled growth patterns allowing them to grow around
objects for structural support. Although Arabidopsis stems do not coil,
it is tempting to speculate that modulation of root coiling in
Arabidopsis and stem coiling in twining plants may involve similar processes.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Stocks and Manipulation
Seeds of the Arabidopsis ecotypes Col, Ler, and No-0
were obtained from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center (ABRC, Ohio State University, Columbus). Transgenic Ler seeds
carrying the Ds(HYG 35S) transposon (Wilson et al.,
1996 ) were supplied by George Coupland (John Innes Centre,
Norwich, UK), and Nina Fedoroff (Pennsylvania State University,
University Park) provided seeds from an No-0 line containing the
disabled (non-transposing) Ac construct Nae35S-Ac
(Fedoroff and Smith, 1993 ). All techniques and
conditions used to surface sterilize and germinate Arabidopsis seeds
and to grow seedlings and plants were as described by Rutherford and Masson (1996) , except where noted otherwise.
Assays pertaining to root elongation in the presence of phytohormones,
oryzalin, mannitol, or increased levels of Suc were conducted as
described by Sedbrook et al. (1999) . IAA, NAA, and ACC
were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis) and prepared as 0.1 mM IAA or 1 mM NAA and ACC stock solutions in
ethanol. Oryzalin (Chem Service, West Chester, PA) and BA
(Sigma-Aldrich) were prepared as 0.5 mM and 10 mM stock solutions, respectively, in dimethyl sulfoxide
(DMSO). These compounds were added to the pH-buffered medium at the
concentrations defined in the text. All plates in one experiment
contained the same amount of solvent (0.05% [v/v] ethanol for
experiments involving IAA, NAA, and ACC; 0.1% [v/v] DMSO for
experiments involving BA; and 0.05% [v/v] DMSO for experiments
involving oryzalin). The kinetics of root growth in the presence or
absence of drugs and the kinetics of root tip reorientation in response
to gravistimulation were quantified as described by Rutherford
et al. (1998) . Data were subjected to statistical analysis
(t and F tests) using the Microsoft Excel program
(MS Office 98, Microsoft, Redmond, WA).
For assays of root waving/skewing, we used square petri dishes
containing one-half-strength Murashige minimal organics medium (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) solidified with 1.5% (w/v) agar
(type E, Sigma-Aldrich). The Suc content within the medium was 1.5% (w/v). After sowing seeds, the plates were wrapped with paper surgical tape (Micropore, 3M, St. Paul). The plates were then kept in
darkness, at 4°C, for 2 to 4 d. Afterward, the plates were
transferred to a growth chamber (22°C, 100% relative humidity, and
16-h/8-h light/dark cycle; TC16, Conviron, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada).
Plates were positioned vertically for the first 3 d of seedling
growth, then inclined backward 30° (unless otherwise specified), and
returned to the growth chamber. Seedlings were photographed with a
digital camera (Coolpix800, Nikon, Tokyo) 6 to 7 DAG, and the digitized
images were analyzed as described by Rutherford and Masson
(1996) . The effect of propyzamide on root slanting was tested
by germinating and growing wild-type No-0 and wvd2-1 mutant
seeds on media containing propyzamide (Chem Service) at the
concentrations defined in the text.
Ds Transposition and Activation Screening for
Arabidopsis Root-Waving Mutants
Activation-tagging mutagenesis was performed essentially as
described by Wilson et al. (1996) , except that crosses
to plants harboring the Nae35S-Ac element were performed to
induce Ds(HYG 35S) element transposition. Approximately
1,800 independent transposition lines were obtained in the
F2 generation. Seedlings from the subsequent F3 generation were screened for abnormal
root-waving and/or -skewing phenotypes on tilted agar surfaces. The
wvd2-1 mutant was among those identified in the screen.
Lines derived from at least four cycles of wvd2-1
introgression into the No-0 ecotype were used to obtain all
quantitative data for wvd2-1.
To isolate revertant alleles of WVD2, the progeny of plants
identified as being homozygous for the wvd2-1 Ds insertion
allele and also containing the Nae35S-Ac element were
germinated on tilted agar plates. DNA was extracted from the cotyledons
of revertant plants showing a wild-type phenotype under the root-waving
assay (Klimyuk et al., 1993 ), and
WVD2-specific primers flanking the Ds
insertion site (5'-GCTCACCGACTCAACAACTTCT-3' and
5'-AATATCCAACAACTTAACAAACCA-3') were used to screen for putative
excision alleles via PCR. The amplification products were then
sequenced to check for the presence of excision footprints. Putative
revertant plants were allowed to self-pollinate, and the resulting
progeny were genotyped and phenotyped to determine the heritability of
detected excision events.
Cloning WVD2 and Isolation of cDNA
The sequence immediately flanking the Ds insertion
site of wvd2-1 was obtained by inverse PCR (Long et
al., 1993 ) using ligated fragments of XhoI-digested
genomic DNA as a template. The first round of PCR used primers DL6
(Long et al., 1993 ) and Ds-a1
(Bancroft et al., 1993 ), whereas the second round used
primers DL6 and DL3 (Long et al., 1993 ). Employing the
plaque screening method described by Ausubel et al.
(1994) , a partial WVD2 cDNA clone (p6D1) was isolated from the CD4-7 Arabidopsis -PRL2 cDNA library (ABRC). Probes used in this screening were PCR-amplified from Wassilewskija genomic DNA with the primer pair 5'-TGGTGAAATATGACAGTAAGTTGGG-3' and 5'-CTCAGTGCATTCTTTCTCCTCAT-3' and 32P-labeled
using the Multiprime labeling system (Amersham Biosciences AB, Uppsala).
Generation of T-DNA Constructs and Plant Transformation
The p35S:WVD2 construct was generated by cloning a
PCR-amplified copy of the WVD2 open reading frame between
the unique NcoI and BstEII restriction sites of
pCAMBIA1302, immediately downstream of a CaMV 35S promoter cassette. An
NcoI restriction site overlapping the start codon of
WVD2 was added to the forward primer
(5'-GAAATATGACAGTAAGTTGCCATGGGAAGAGA-3'), and a
BstEII site immediately following the stop codon was added to the reverse primer
(5'-GGAAGCTTTTTGGGTCACCTCATTCTACCACAC-3'). The
p35S:WDL1 construct was generated in a similar manner, using WDL1 primers
(5'-ATGTCCAGTGCCATGGGAAGAGAAGTTGTTG-3' and
5'-ATCATCTTTGGTCACCTCAAGCTTCTTCTGA-3').
The WVD2 cosuppression construct (p-siWVD2) was
created by inserting an antisense-oriented copy of the WVD2
coding region between the NcoI and SpeI
restriction sites of pCAMBIA1381 (upstream of the GUS gene),
and a sense-oriented copy at the BstEII site (downstream of
GUS). Both antisense and sense WVD2 fragments
were PCR-amplified, using the p6D1 cDNA clone as template (antisense primers,
5'-CTTAAACTAGTATGAGAAGAGAAGTTGTTGAG-3' and
5'-GAGACCATGGATT-CTACCACACTCTGGCGATCC-3'; sense primers,
5'-TTAGGTGACCATGAGAAGAGAAGTTGTTGAG-3' and
5'-GAGGGTCACCATTCTACCACACTCTGGCGATTC-3'). A 2×
CaMV 35S promoter fragment (obtained by XmaI/SpeI
digestion of pCAMBIA1302) was subsequently inserted between the
XmaI and SpeI sites of the vector, directly
upstream of the antisense WVD2 cassette, to initiate
transgene transcription in planta. Finally, to allow for kanamycin
resistance selection in transformed plants, the HPTII
cassette of pCAMBIA1381 was replaced with the NPTII cassette
of pCAMBIA2300 through XmaI/SacII digestion,
followed by vector/insert ligation.
The aforementioned pCAMBIA binary vectors (CAMBIA, Canberra, Australia)
were kindly provided by Anthony Bleecker (University of Wisconsin,
Madison). Constructs were introduced into plants via
Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation
(Clough and Bent, 1998 ).
Northern-Blot and RT-PCR Analysis
Total RNA was isolated from plant tissues using the RNeasy Plant
Mini kit (Qiagen USA, Valencia, CA) and subjected to northern-blot analysis, as described in the QIAGEN Guide to Analytical Gels, Parts
IV-VI (Qiagen USA, 2000a , 2000b ,
2000c ). 32P-labeled probes were
generated by random priming (Multiprime labeling system, Amersham
Biosciences AB). The template for WVD2 probe generation was
an EcoRI/XbaI fragment liberated from the vector
backbone of our isolated WVD2 cDNA, p6D1. Template for WDL1 probes was obtained by EcoRI/XbaI
digestion of a partial WDL1 cDNA clone, 170L2 (ABRC). Probes
specific to At1g54460 and At3g23090, which are
both predicted to encode products with sequence similarity to
WVD2 and WDL1, were amplified from a cDNA library (CD4-22, ABRC) by PCR (At1g54460 primers,
5'-GACAAACACATGGATAAGAAAGCGAATAGT-3' and
5'-ATAAGAAAAGATCATACGAAAATAGAGCA-3'; At3g23090 primers,
5'-AAAGAGTGTACTAGTGAGATCCCCGTTGGT-3' and
5'-TGGTTTATCTGGTCAGCATTCCGTGTGG-3'). Hybridization was performed in
ULTRAhyb buffer (Ambion, Austin, TX), using the hybridization conditions and washes recommended by the manufacturer.
The Qiagen OneStep RT-PCR kit was used for all RT-PCR analyses. The
following primers were used for detection of WVD2
expression: 5'-GCTTATCAAGAAATCATTGTTCAATCAGAC-3' and
5'-CTTAGGACGCGTCAGA-GGAAACTTCT-3'. The primers used for RT-PCR
detection of WDL1 transcripts were: 5'-CATCATCTTTTGAAATTTCAAGCTTCTTCTGAG-3' and
5'-GAATGGGAAGA-GAAGTTGTTGAGGTGCT-3'. We defined the 5' end of
full-length wild-type WVD2 transcripts by primer-extension
analysis (Yamada et al., 1998 ), using a
WVD2-specific primer (5'-TTCTTTCTCCTCATAATCTTCTTCCTCTGC-3')
and poly(A) RNA extracted with the PolyATract System 1000 kit (Promega,
Madison, WI) from 4-d-old Ler seedlings grown on tilted agar plates.
Immunofluorescence
For visualization of microtubules within cells of the root cap,
we used the protocol described by Goodbody and Lloyd
(1994) , with modifications. Cell wall digestion was performed
with 0.1% (w/v) Pectolyase Y-23 and 0.5% (w/v) Macerozyme
(Karlan Research Products Corporation, Santa Rosa, CA),
dissolved in microtubule-stabilizing buffer (MTSB; Goodbody and
Lloyd, 1994 ). After cell wall digestion, a 15-min membrane
permeabilization step was performed (10% [v/v] DMSO and 3% [v/v]
NP-40, in MTSB), followed by three 15-min washes in MTSB. Before
incubation with primary or secondary antibodies, the samples were
blocked in a solution of 1% (v/v) normal goat serum and 3% (w/v)
bovine serum albumin (in MTSB) for 30 to 60 min. The antibodies
were also diluted in this blocking solution. Detection of microtubules
within cells of the root elongation zone, on the other hand, was
performed as described by Sugimoto et al. (2000) , except
that the samples were blocked in a solution of 1% (v/v) normal goat
serum and 3% (w/v) bovine serum albumin (in PEM buffer [25
mM PIPES, 0.5 mM MgSO4, and 2.5 mM EGTA {pH 7.2}]) and the cold methanol
extraction step was omitted. In both cases, rat anti-tubulin antibodies
(clone YOL1/34, Harlan Sera-Lab Ltd., Indianapolis), diluted 1:100,
were used for primary immunolabeling. Fluorescein
isothiocyanate-conjugated goat anti-rat IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch
Laboratories, West Grove, PA) was used as a secondary antibody, also
diluted 1:100.
Image Analysis and Microscopy
Pictures of seedlings on plates, of plants in soil, and of
rosette leaves and siliques were obtained with either a Nikon
Coolpix800 digital camera or a Nikon 8008S camera. The Nikon 8008S
camera was attached to a dissecting microscope (Wild M3Z, Leica,
Wetzlar, Germany) to acquire images of root CFR. Images used for the
quantitative analysis of the diameters of roots and etiolated
hypocotyls and for lengths and periclinal widths of root cells were
obtained by a SPOT RT Slider digital camera (National Diagnostics,
Atlanta) attached to a Nikon Optiphot-2 microscope equipped with
Nomarski optics. For cellular measurements, whole seedlings were
chemically cleared (Malamy and Benfey, 1997)
before being mounted on microscopic slides. For confocal microscopy, we
used a laser scanning confocal microscope (MRC-1024, Bio-Rad, Hercules,
CA) at the W.M. Keck Laboratory for Biological Imaging (University of
Wisconsin, Madison). Quantitative analysis of images was performed
using the public domain NIH Image program (v1.62; developed at the
United States National Institutes of Health and available on the
Internet at http://rsb.info.nih.gov/nih-image), with obtained data
exported to Microsoft Excel spreadsheets for statistical calculations.
Distribution of Materials
Upon request, all novel materials described in this publication
will be made available in a timely manner for noncommercial research
purposes, subject to the requisite permission from any third-party
owners of all or parts of the material. Obtaining any permissions will
be the responsibility of the requestor.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Drs. Nina Fedoroff, George Coupland, and the
Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center for providing several of the Arabidopsis lines used in this study, and Dr. Anthony Bleecker for
providing the pCAMBIA binary vectors. We also thank Dr. Sebastian Bednarek for assistance in immunodetection of cytoskeleton elements in
root cells, the W.M. Keck Laboratory for Biological Imaging for
allowing access to and technical assistance in use of the confocal
microscope, and members of the Masson laboratory for fruitful discussion.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received October 9, 2002; returned for revision October 25, 2002; accepted October 31, 2002.
1
This work was supported by the Fundamental Space
Biology Program of the National Aeronautic and Space Administration
(grant nos. NAG2-1189 and NAG2-1492), by Wisconsin Hatch funds (no.
WIS04310), and by the National Institutes of Health (genetics training
grant no. 5T32GMO7133).
2
These authors contributed equally to the paper.
3
Present address: Department of Biology, 3400 North
Charles Street, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218.
4
Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, 315 Life Sciences Building, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849.
5
Present address: Department of Plant Systems Biology,
Ghent University-VIB, Ledeganckstraat 35, 9000 Ghent, Belgium.
6
Present address: Medical School, 4671 Medical Sciences
Center, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail phmasson{at}facstaff.wisc.edu; fax
608-262-2976.
[w]
The online version of this article contains Web-only
data. The supplemental material is available at
www.plantphysiol.org.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.015966.
 |
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