Plant Physiology 132:2034-2044 (2003)
© 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists
CELL BIOLOGY AND SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION
The Putative Arabidopsis Arp2/3 Complex Controls Leaf Cell Morphogenesis1,[w]
Shundai Li,
Laurent Blanchoin,
Zhenbiao Yang and
Elizabeth M. Lord*
Department of Botany and Plant Sciences and Center for Plant Cell
Biology, University of California, Riverside, California 92521 (S.L., Z.Y.,
E.M.L.); and Laboratoire de Physiologie Cellulaire Végétale,
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 17 rue des martyrs, 38054
Grenoble, France (L.B.)
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ABSTRACT
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The evolutionarily conserved Arp2/3 complex has been shown to activate
actin nucleation and branching in several eukaryotes, but its biological
functions are not well understood in multicellular organisms. The model plant
Arabidopsis provides many advantages for genetic dissection of the function of
this conserved actin-nucleating machinery, yet the existence of this complex
in plants has not been determined. We have identified Arabidopsis genes
encoding homologs of all of the seven Arp2/3 subunits. The function of the
putative Arabidopsis Arp2/3 complex has been studied using four homozygous
T-DNA insertion mutants for ARP2, ARP3, and
ARPC5/p16. All four mutants display identical defects in the
development of jigsaw-shaped epidermal pavement cells and branched trichomes
in the leaf. These loss-of-function mutations cause mislocalization of diffuse
cortical F-actin to the neck region and inhibit lobe extension in pavement
cells. The mutant trichomes resemble those treated with the
actin-depolymerizing drug cytochalasin D, exhibiting stunted branches but
dramatically enlarged stalks due to depolarized growth suggesting defects in
the formation of a fine actin network. Our data demonstrate that the putative
Arabidopsis Arp2/3 complex controls cell morphogenesis through its roles in
cell polarity establishment and polar cell expansion. Furthermore, our data
suggest a novel function for the putative Arp2/3 complex in the modulation of
the spatial distribution of cortical F-actin and provide evidence that the
putative Arp2/3 complex may activate the polymerization of some types of actin
filaments in specific cell types.
Actin nucleation is critical for the reorganization and dynamics of the
actin cytoskeleton. Two actin nucleation factors have been identified in yeast
and animals. Formins nucleate actin polymerization required for actin cable
formation in yeast (Evangelista et al.,
2002 ; Sagot et al.,
2002 ). The Arp2/3 complex activates the polymerization of branched
F-actin and promotes actin nucleation from the side of an existing actin
filament, leading to the formation of a branched actin network
(Mullins et al., 1998 ;
Svitkina and Borisy, 1999 ;
Blanchoin et al., 2000 ;
Cooper et al., 2001 ;
Higgs and Pollard, 2001 ;
Robinson et al., 2001 ). The
Arp2/3 complex consists of seven subunits (ARP2, ARP3, ARPC1/p41, ARPC2/p31,
ARPC3/p21, ARPC4/p20, and ARPC5/p16; Higgs
and Pollard, 2001 ). ARP2 and ARP3 are actin-related proteins. The
structural analysis of the activated Arp2/3 complex implicates Arp2 and Arp3
as the actin nucleation sites by forming a heterodimer that resembles an actin
dimer (Cooper et al., 2001 ;
Robinson et al., 2001 ). The
localization of the Arp2/3 complex is concentrated in the actin patches in
yeast cells and at the leading edge of migrating animal cells
(Welch et al., 1997a ;
Morrell et al., 19992 ;
Schaerer-Brodbeck and Riezman,
2000a ,
2000b ;
Higgs and Pollard, 2001 ). As a
multifunctional organizer, the cellular roles of the Arp2/3 complex involve
the control of actin polymerization nucleation for many cell functions such as
cell movement, cell division, endocytosis, vesicle trafficking, and bacterial
invasion (Welch et al., 1997b ;
Machesky and Gould, 1999 ;
Schaerer-Brodbeck and Riezman,
2000a ,
2000b ;
Higgs and Pollard, 2001 ). The
Arp2/3 complex was discovered in Amoeba sp. cells
(Machesky et al., 1994 ), but
its function has been primarily studied genetically in the single-celled yeast
and biochemically in mammalian cell culture. In complex multicellular
organisms, the biological function of the Arp2/3 complex has been studied only
in fruitfly (Drosophila melanogaster). A mutation of one Arp2/3
complex subunit, ARPC1, causes spindle fusion because of pseudocleavage furrow
disruption in syncytical fruitfly embryos
(Hudson and Cooley, 2002 ;
Stevenson et al., 2002 ).
Arabidopsis, with numerous advantages for genetic studies including the
availability of various collections of T-DNA insertion mutants, provides a
good model system to study the function of the Arp2/3 complex in higher
eukaryotes.
The actin cytoskeleton is an important component of plant cell growth and
development. Pharmacological and genetic studies suggest its role in a variety
of cellular processes such as organelle movement, guard cell movement, cell
polarity development, polarized cell growth, and cell division
(Volkmann and Baluska, 1999 ;
Belanger and Quatrano, 2000 ;
Vantard and Blanchoin, 2002 ).
Using live markers such as green fluorescent protein (GFP;
Kost et al., 1998 ) fused to
the actin-binding domain of the mouse talin and phalloidin staining in fixed
cells, different types of actin structures have been observed in plant cells
(Szymanski et al., 1999 ;
Hepler et al., 2001 ;
Frank and Smith, 2002 ). Actin
cables, presumably composed of unbranched actin filaments, are detected in all
living plant cells, whereas dynamic F-actin, composed of diffuse F-actin, is
seen at the front of tip-growing pollen tubes and root hairs
(Fu et al., 2001 ;
Jones et al., 2002 ). Diffuse
F-actin is also associated with the expanding parts of diffusely growing cells
(Fu et al., 2002 ). The
formation of both types of diffuse F-actin is dependent upon the Rho related
GTPase from plant (ROP) subfamily of Rho GTPases, the plant relative of animal
Rac/Cdc42 subfamilies of Rho GTPases known to signal the activation of the
Arp2/3 complex (Fu et al.,
2001 ,
2002 ;
Higgs and Pollard, 2001 ;
Jones et al., 2002 ). The
assembly, reorganization, and dynamics of specific actin structures are
regulated by intracellular and environmental signals in plants
(McCurdy et al., 2001 ). Many
of the conserved actin-binding proteins that regulate actin dynamics and
organization have been identified and studied such as ADF, profilin, fimbrin,
and actin motor proteins (Kovar et al.,
2000 ; Ramachandran et al.,
2000 ; Dong et al.,
2001 ; McCurdy et al.,
2001 ; McKinney et al.,
2001 ). However, the molecular mechanism for actin nucleation in
plants remains unknown.
The possible existence of the Arp2/3 complex in plants was suggested by the
cloning of the AtARP2 gene encoding the ARP2 homolog
(Klahre and Chua, 1999 ). We
have now identified Arabidopsis genes encoding six additional putative
subunits of the Arp2/3 complex. These genes are ubiquitously expressed in
various tissues. T-DNA insertions into any of the Arp2/3 subunit genes
examined induced cell shape changes in epidermal pavement cells and trichomes
in the leaf. The defects were associated with mislocalization of diffuse
cortical F-actin and reduction of a fine actin network in both pavement cells
and trichomes. This work provides genetic evidence showing a role for the
Arp2/3 complex in cell morphogenesis in higher eukaryotes.
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RESULTS
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The Arabidopsis Genome Encodes All of the Putative Subunits of the
Arp2/3 Complex
Conducting a blast search with the yeast Arp2/3 complex subunits, we
identified six new putative Arp2/3 complex subunits from the Arabidopsis
genome sequence. The coding sequences of Arabidopsis ARP3, ARPC1/p41, and
ARPC3/p21 were predicted by The Arabidopsis Information Resource database, and
the coding sequences of ARPC2/p34, ARPC4/p20, and ARPC5/p16 were predicted
based on their homologous gene organizations in yeast. The coding sequences of
the six subunits were confirmed through cloning and sequencing of cDNAs by
reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR using primers (supplemental data; they can be
viewed at
http://www.plantphysiol.org).
Table I shows a comparison of
the Arabidopsis homologs with those of human, Dictyostelium sp.,
fruitfly, budding yeast, and fission yeast (Schizosaccharomyces
pombe). AtARP3, like AtARP2, shares about 50% identity
with Arabidopsis actins in amino acid sequence (data not shown). All
of the Arabidopsis Arp2/3 complex subunits except for
ARPC1/p41 are encoded by a single gene. ARPC1/p41 is encoded by two genes
arranged in reverse orientation and in close proximity. The two Arabidopsis
ARPC1/p41 genes share very high nucleotide sequence identity
both in the coding and promoter region. Protein motif analysis revealed seven
WD-40 repeats in both ARPC1/p41 sequences. ARPC1/p41,
ARPC3/p21, and ARPC4/p20 share considerable amino acid identity with their
counterparts in other organisms. As in other organisms, ARPC2/p34 and
ARPC5/p16 are the most diverged of the seven subunits. RT-PCR analysis shows
that transcripts for all seven subunits are expressed in all tissues examined
(Fig. 1). All of the subunits
have low expression levels, but with relatively high expression in
inflorescences. Among these seven subunits, ARPC2/p34 and ARPC4/p20 have the
lowest expression.

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Figure 1. RT-PCR analysis of the transcript expression of the Arabidopsis Arp2/3
subunit genes in various tissues. RNA was isolated from organs of Arabidopsis
COL-0 WT plants grown in light and used for RT-PCR analysis as described in
the text. A 25-cycle PCR reaction was carried out for all genes except for
ARPC4/p20, for which 30 cycles were used. ACTIN2 was used as a
control except for pollen RT-PCR that involves the use of the ACTIN3
gene.
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Loss of Function Mutants for the Putative Arabidopsis Arp2/3
Subunits
To investigate the function of Arp2/3 subunits, we obtained several mutants
for Arabidopsis Arp2/3 subunits from the SALK Arabidopsis T-DNA mutant
collection (Fig. 2).
arp2-1 and arp2-2 were isolated with a T-DNA insertion in
the first intron and the last exon, respectively.
arpc5-1/p16-1 was isolated with a T-DNA insertion in the
second intron, and arp3-1 contains a T-DNA insertion in the fifth
intron. RT-PCR analysis revealed that none of these four mutant lines had
detectable transcripts for their respective genes
(Fig. 2). We consider them to
be strong and possibly null alleles. Homozygous mutant plants with a single
T-DNA insertion were obtained for all four mutants. By visual examination of
these mutants under normal growth conditions in soil or on agar plates, we did
not observe obvious changes in morphology as a whole plant in darkness or
light. This is surprising, given the importance of actin nucleation in the
regulation of actin organization as well as the essential role for the Arp2/3
complex in yeast.

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Figure 2. Characterization of the Arp2/3 subunit mutants. A, The location of the
T-DNA insertions in arp2-1, arp2-2,
arp3-1, and arpc5-1/p16-1 are shown on the
maps of AtARP2, AtARP3, and AtARPC5/p16 genes.
Arrows indicate the location of primers used for RT-PCR analysis of
transcripts. Exons are boxed and introns and untranscribed flanking sequences
are shown as lines. B, RT-PCR analysis of transcript levels for
arp2-1, arp2-2, arp3-1, and
arpc5/p16-1 mutants. Total RNA was extracted from
inflorescences of each homozygous mutant plant and WT plants. The full-length
coding sequence was amplified for each primer set.
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The Putative Arabidopsis Arp2/3 Complex Is Required for Proper Leaf
Epidermal Cell Morphogenesis
We next investigated whether the mutants are altered in cell shape
formation, which has been linked to diffuse cortical F-actin
(Szymanski et al., 1999 ; Fu et
al., 2001 ,
2002 ;
Frank and Smith, 2002 ;
Jones et al., 2002 ;
Frank et al., 2003 ). We first
examined tip growing cells, root hairs, and pollen tubes. Surprisingly,
neither the growth of pollen tubes nor root hairs was dramatically affected in
all four mutants grown under normal conditions (data not shown). We then
examined a possible effect of the Arp2/3 mutations on pavement cells, because
their development has been linked to cortical F-actin as well. Mature pavement
cells on the adaxial side of a wild-type (WT) leaf are jigsaw puzzle shaped
with a striking outgrowth of lobes, giving a wavy cell outline. In all four
mutants, including arp2-1, arp2-2, arp3-1, and arpc5-1, the
outline of pavement cells was smoother and much less wavy
(Fig. 3A). Quantitative
analysis showed that the neck width was not affected, whereas the lobe height
was dramatically reduced (Fig. 3,
BD).

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Figure 3. Characterization of leaf pavement cell shapes in arp2-1
and arp3-1 plants. A, Leaf pavement cell shapes. The fourth
rosette leaves from 2-week-old plants were cleared, and differential
interference contrast images were taken from the middle region of the cleared
leaves. Leaves from WT plants and all mutant plants are of similar sizes.
Tracing was used to highlight the cell shape of a typical pavement cell. Bars
= 30 µm. B, A schematic diagram of a leaf pavement cell illustrates how the
lobe height and neck width were measured as shown in C and D. The distance
indicated by dark arrows represents the lobe height. The distance indicated by
light arrows represents neck width. C, Comparison of the average width of the
neck region between WT and mutant pavement cells. Measurements in both C and D
were carried out using the fourth leaf of a 2-week-old plant, and 150
epidermal cells were used for each mutant line as well as WT. Statistical test
(t test) shows no significant difference in neck width between WT and
mutant pavement cells. D, Comparison of the average length of lobe heights
between WT and mutant pavement cells. Statistical test (t test) shows
that the length of lobe height is significantly reduced in the mutant pavement
cell compared with the WT pavement cell.
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We next examined the effects of mutation in the Arp2/3 complex on trichome
morphogenesis. We did this because F-actin has been shown to play an important
role in morphogenesis of this epidermal cell type
(Mathur et al., 1999 ;
Szymanski et al., 1999 ;
Schwab et al., 2003 ). As shown
in Figure 4, we observed a very
striking defect in trichome morphogenesis in the mutant plants
(Fig. 4). WT Arabidopsis
trichomes typically have three branches. Mutants including arp2-1, arp2-2,
arp3-1, and arpc5-1 have very severe and identical trichome
defects. Trichomes in these mutants had stunted branch outgrowth and
unrestricted stalk expansion. Despite the striking defects in the trichome
shape, trichome branch initiation was normal in all four mutants. The WT
trichomes on the stem are usually without branches or only with two branches.
The trichomes on the mutant stems clearly showed cell shape defects featured
as a dramatic increase in radial expansion and irregular trichome shapes. The
mutant trichome phenotype is very similar to that caused by treatment with
actin-disrupting drugs such as cytochalasin D or by mutations in the
DISTORTED genes (Mathur et al.,
1999 ; Schwab et al.,
2003 ). This phenotype can be attributed to the combined defects in
cell polarity development in stalks and polar growth in branches. Because
branches are formed, the polarity establishment for branch formation is not
affected.

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Figure 4. Trichome phenotypes of arp2-1, arp3-1, and
arpc5-1 mutants. A, Phenotype analyses of arp2-1,
arp3-1, and arpc5-1 mutant trichomes using light
microscopy. a to d, Trichomes on a young leaf from WT and mutant plants. e to
h, Single trichomes with branches from WT and mutant plants. Arrows point to
the branches. i to l, Trichomes on stems from WT and mutant plants. a, e, and
i are from WT plants. b, f, and j are from arp2-1 plants. c,
g, and k are from arp3-1 plants. d, h, and l are from
arpc5-1 plants. Arrows in e to h point to the branches. Bar
in a (100 µm) is the same for b through d. Bar in e (50 µm) is the same
for f through h. Bar in i (500 µm) is the same for j through l. B, Scanning
electron microscopic analyses of arp2-1 trichomes. a and b
show mature trichomes on a young leaf from WT and arp2-1
plants, respectively. c and d show single trichomes with the typical three
branches from WT and arp2-1 plants, respectively. Bar in a and b = 500 µm.
Bar in c = 100 µm. Bar in d = 20 µm.
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The fact that arp2-1, arp2-2, arp3-1, and arpc5-1 show
almost identical phenotypes in leaf epidermal cell morphogenesis strongly
suggests that the observed phenotype is due to a defect in the activity of the
putative Arp2/3 complex. In fact, we have just obtained a T-DNA insertion
mutant for ARPC4/p20 from the SALK collection that shows an
identical phenotype to the four mutants (S. Li, unpublished data).
Furthermore, a second T-DNA insertion mutant for ARP3 obtained from a
different T-DNA insertion population showed the same phenotype as
arp3-1. Therefore, we conclude that the putative ARP2/3 complex plays
a critical role in the control of cell morphogenesis in Arabidopsis leaf
epidermal pavement cells and trichomes. In the root epidermis, root hairs are
slightly wavy, but other epidermal cells in the root appear to be normal in
shape and size (data not shown).
The Spatial Distribution and Formation of Cortical F-Actin Is Altered
in the Arp2/3 Subunit Mutants
To understand the mechanism by which the putative Arabidopsis Arp2/3
complex modulates cell morphogenesis, we investigated the actin cytoskeleton
structure in these Arp2/3 subunit mutants. To visualize F-actin, an
actin-binding domain of the mouse talin tagged with GFP (GFP-mTalin) was
transiently expressed in leaf epidermal cells of mutant arp2-1 and
arp3-1 as well as WT plants (Fu et
al., 2002 ). In WT plants, the young pavement cells capable of
expanding in all directions characteristically contain strong diffuse F-actin
throughout the entire cell periphery, and a few actin cables localize to the
cell cortex and the cytoplasm. At this stage, no obvious F-actin structural
change is detected in the pavement cells of either arp2-1 or
arp3-1 mutants (Fig.
5A). When the WT pavement cells develop expanding lobes, patches
of strong diffuse F-actin are found at the tips of the extending lobes. These
actin patches are rarely observed in the nonexpanding neck region of WT
pavement cells. In both arp2-1 and arp3-1 mutants, the lobes
are initiated, but their growth is inhibited. Interestingly, the patches of
strong cortical diffuse F-actin typically associated with lobes were reduced.
Instead, cortical diffuse F-actin was more evenly distributed throughout the
cell periphery. A quantitative analysis was performed to measure the
percentage of association of strong diffuse F-actin with lobes in stage II
cells from WT and mutant plants. In the mutant plants, the percentage of
association of strong diffuse F-actin with lobes is significantly reduced
compared with that of WT plants. Consequently, in the mutant cells with
extending lobes, cortical diffuse F-actin was frequently found in the neck
region. At this stage, actin cables are not extensive and seem to be randomly
distributed both in WT and mutant pavement cells. In mature WT leaf pavement
cells, F-actin exists mainly as extensive long actin cables that appear to be
oriented randomly. In the mature pavement cells of arp2-1 and
arp3-1 mutants, the actin cables were also quite extensive but tended
to be oriented perpendicularly to the long axis of the cell. These
observations suggest that mutations in the Arp2/3 subunit genes affect the
spatial distribution, but not the assembly, of either cortical diffuse F-actin
or actin bundles in Arabidopsis leaf pavement cells.

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Figure 5. Analysis of actin organization in leaf pavement cells of
arp2-1 and arp3-1 plants. A, F-actin
organization in leaf pavement cells from arp2-1 and
arp3-1 plants visualized by GFP-mTalin at different
developmental stages. Leaves from 10-d-old plants were bombarded with
GFP-mTalin construct, and cells expressing GFP-mTalin were imaged using
confocal microscopy as described in the text. Pavement cells at three
developmental stages are shown: b, g, and k, Stage I cells before lobe
initiation; c, h, and m, stage II cells forming lobes; and e, j, and o, stage
III cells with fully extended lobes. More than 60 cells were imaged for each
stage of cell in every genotype. Shown are cells with representative actin
organization. a to e, Leaf pavement cells of WT plants. f to j, Leaf epidermal
cells of arp3-1 plants. k to o, Leaf epidermal cells of
arp2-1 plants. a, c, e, f, h, j, k, m, and o show
three-dimensional images projected from laser scanning. b, d, g, i, l, and n
are single medial sections of a, c, f, h, k, and m, respectively. Arrows in c,
h, and m point to the diffuse F-actin patches associated with growing lobes.
Arrowheads in h and m point to diffuse F-actin associated with neck regions.
Asterisks in h and i indicate the nucleus of the cell. Bar = 15 µm for all
images. B, Quantitative analysis of association of diffuse cortical F-actin
with the tip of expanding lobes in pavement cells. Measurements were done on
30 stage II cells by visual examination. The percentage of strong diffuse
cortical F-actin associated with lobes for WT, arp2-1, and
arp3-1 pavement cells are 70.83 ± 10.57, 50.22
± 12.08, and 47.08 ± 10.91, respectively. Statistical analyses
(t test) showed that the percentage of strong diffuse F-actin
associated with lobes of both mutant pavement cells is significantly reduced
(n = 30, P 0.05).
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Actin organization in the trichomes of distorted mutants has been
extensively characterized (Mathur et al.,
1999 ; Szymanski et al.,
1999 ; Schwab et al.,
2003 ). To assess whether the Arabidopsis Arp2/3 complex affects
the same pathway as the DISTORTED genes, we examined F-actin in the
arp2-1 and arp3-1 mutant trichomes. Young WT trichomes
contain network-like fine actin filaments that are oriented randomly and
diffuse cortical F-actin in growing branches as well as the stalk. Thick actin
cables are rarely detected in these cells. A network of fine actin bundles is
found in the stalk of WT mature trichomes, whereas the mature branches usually
contain longitudinal actin cables (Fig.
6). In both arp2-1 and arp3-1 mutants, actin
structural defects were detected in the young as well as in the mature
trichomes. Thick actin cables occurred in young mutant trichomes, whereas both
fine actin network and diffuse F-actin were greatly reduced in their swollen
stalks and stunted branches. In the mature mutant trichome, the severity of
the F-actin structure alteration was also correlated with the deformation of
the trichome. When the trichome shape was severely deformed with very limited
growth of branches, transverse actin bundles were observed in both the stalk
and the branches, analogous to the actin cytoskeleton in the mature pavement
cells of the mutants. All of these actin cytoskeleton structure defects
observed in Arp2/3 subunit mutants are similar to the description of
DISTORTED mutants (Mathur et al.,
1999 ; Schwab et al.,
2003 ). Previous work has shown that disruption of the actin
cytoskeleton by cytochalasin D induces the same cell shape changes in
trichomes, suggesting that it is the loss of a certain actin population such
as the fine actin network and diffuse actin that are responsible for the
trichome phenotypes.

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Figure 6. Actin organization in trichomes of arp3-1 and
arp2-1 plants. F-actin was visualized as described in
Figure 5. All images shown are
projections. Bar in A is for A, D, and G. Bar in B is for B, E, and H. Bar in
C is for C, F, and I. Bar = 20 µm. A, D, and G, Young trichomes from a WT,
arp2-1, and arp3-1 plants, respectively.
Arrow in A points to diffuse cortical F-actin signal in a rapid growing
branch. Arrows in D and G indicate the loss of fine F-actin in the mutant
branches. Arrowheads in D and G point to thick actin cables. B, E, and H,
Stalks of mature trichomes from WT, arp2-1, and
arp3-1 plants, respectively. C, F, and I, Branches of mature
trichomes from WT, arp2-1, and arp3-1
plant, respectively.
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DISCUSSION
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In this work, we have identified all subunits of the putative Arabidopsis
Arp2/3 complex and investigated the function of three subunit genes using
T-DNA insertion mutants. This work represents an important step of the
description and functional analysis of a conserved actin-nucleating machinery
in the plant kingdom. Importantly, we have demonstrated a critical role for
the putative Arabidopsis Arp2/3 complex in cell polarity development and cell
morphogenesis. Similar functional roles for this complex have been reported in
yeast but not in any multicellular organisms. Interestingly, our results
suggest that the putative Arabidopsis Arp2/3 complex modulates polar cell
expansion probably through localizing diffuse cortical actin to the site of
growth, a role previously unknown for the Arp2/3 complex in other organisms.
However, this complex appears to control cell polarity development in
trichomes through activating the formation of a network of cortical fine actin
bundles. Similarly, this complex is known to activate the formation of
cortical actin patches in yeast and a dense actin network in the leading edge
of migrating Dictyostelium sp. and animal cells.
Genetic studies in yeast have shown that the Arp2/3 complex is an essential
actin nucleation machinery (Winter et al.,
1999 ). Deletion of any subunit gene causes defects in either actin
patch formation or actin patch movement, leading to lethality. However, none
of the homozygous T-DNA mutants for the Arabidopsis Arp2/3 subunits affect the
viability of the plants or cause dramatic defects in organ development. This
situation is somewhat similar to the observations in multicellular animals.
The Arp2/3 complex has been identified in human and various animal model
systems (fruitfly, Caenorhabditis elegans, and Dictyostelium
sp.). The loss-of-function mutations in fruitfly ARPC1 and ARP3 genes only
affect a subset of actin rearrangements and cause defects in ring canal
expansion during oogenesis (Hudson and
Cooley, 2002 ), whereas RNAi suppression of any of the Arp2/3
subunit genes in C. elegans only affect ventral closure
(Sawa et al., 2003 ).
Interestingly, none of our arp2/3 subunit mutants show dramatic developmental
defects. It is possible that loss of Arp2, Arp3, or ARPC5 gene alone does not
completely disrupt the activity of the complex. It has been shown that the
human Arp2/3 complex subunits p34 and p16 are not essential for the activity
of the complex in a reconstitution assay system
(Gournier et al., 2001 ). It
will be interesting to see whether a phenotype related to actin cytoskeleton
dynamics is more severe in a mutant in which more than one Arabidopsis Arp2/3
subunit units are knocked out.
In animal cell systems, it has been proposed that a predominant role of
this actin-nucleating complex is to promote the polymerization of branched
actin filaments and the formation of a highly dense branched actin network in
the leading edge that allows membrane protrusion and cell migration. Indeed,
genetic studies in fly and worm have shown that the Arp2/3 complex is
important for cell migration (Hudson and
Cooley, 2002 ; Sawa et al.,
2003 ). Therefore, our findings about the function of the Arp2/3
complex in cell morphogenesis in pavement cells and trichomes are interesting.
Shape formation in these cells is dependent upon the spatial pattern of
deposition and remodeling of cell walls, which bear the turgor pressure that
drives cell expansion. This raises an interesting question: whether the plant
Arp2/3 complex has a distinctly different cellular and biochemical function
from the animal counterpart, or whether shape formation in leaf epidermal
cells such as pavement cells and trichomes necessitates a more complex model
than previously posed, one in which cells can accommodate targeted expansion
requiring the Arp2/3 complex-mediated actin polymerization or remodeling.
The defects in the expansion of pavement cell lobes and trichome branches
observed in all mutants examined define a role for the putative Arp2/3 complex
in the modulation of polar cell expansion, which is crucial for cell
morphogenesis in plants. How might the Arp2/3 complex control polar cell
expansion? In leaf pavement cells, lobe expansion is thought to require a
population of ROP GTPase-dependent diffuse F-actin localized to the tip of
lobes, which might function to deliver cell wall and cell membrane materials
to the active growing site via post-Golgi vesicles. In the Arp2/3 subunit
mutant plants, lobes are formed, but their extension is severely inhibited.
This is consistent with our observation that the diffuse cortical F-actin,
although decreased in amount due to a more random distribution, is found in
the lobes of the mutant pavement cells. The ectopic distribution of the
diffuse cortical F-actin in the neck region in the mutant did not lead to
increased expansion in that region, most likely due to the presence of a
mechanism to suppress cell expansion here, such as transverse cortical
microtubules (Mathur and Hulskamp,
2002 ). We propose that the random distribution of the diffuse
cortical F-actin is the direct result of the defect in the Arp2/3 complex
activity and that it is not due to cell shape changes per se. Evidence to
support this is the fact that DN-rop2 expression also inhibits lobe extension
but does not cause redistribution of the cortical F-actin
(Fu et al., 2002 ). From these
observations, we conclude that at least one function of the Arp2/3 complex is
to modulate the localization of diffuse cortical F-actin in plant cells.
During trichome branch formation, a diffuse form of F-actin is also
apparent near the tip of the branch in WT plants and is reduced in the stunted
mutant branches. This reduction could be due to its random distribution, as
occurs in pavement cells, or to its reduced assembly. The dramatic isotropic
growth in the mutant trichome stalks makes it difficult to distinguish between
these possibilities or to determine whether the change in the actin
cytoskeleton is the result or the cause of cell shape changes. In maize
(Zea mays) leaf pavement cells, mutations in BRK1, which
encodes a homolog of HSPC300 that regulates the Arp2/3 complex in mammalian
cells, eliminate lobes and associated diffuse cortical actin
(Frank et al., 2003 ). This
raises the possibility that the Arp2/3 complex may be required for the
assembly of a fine actin network in some plant cells. Additionally or
alternatively, the Arabidopsis Arp2/3 complex could regulate polar cell
expansion through other mechanisms, e.g. targeting of post-Golgi vesicles or
movement of other endomembrane structures or organelles (which ultimately
affect polar secretion). Arp2/3 complex-mediated actin polymerization has been
shown to regulate the trafficking of vesicles
(Rozelle et al., 2000 ;
Fucini et al., 2002 ;
Luna et al., 2002 ;
Stamnes, 2002 ) and pathogen
movement in animal cells (Welch et al.,
1997b ). In budding yeast, arc35-1, a mutation in the
ARPC2 subunit, affects calmodulin localization to the active growing sites
where rapid endocytosis and exocytosis occur. Overexpression of calmodulin in
the arc35-1 cells suppresses the defects both in the actin and
microtubule cytoskeleton. Given that so many proteins need to be specifically
targeted to their destination, the Arp2/3 complex may receive various signals
to activate actin polymerization during multiple steps of vesicle trafficking
to confer the specificity of vesicle targeting.
The isotropic growth in the trichome stalk of the Arp2/3 subunit mutants is
very interesting because it suggests a role for the Arp2/3 complex in the
control of cell polarity development. This role is similar to one of the roles
of the yeast Arp2/3 complex (Morrell et
al., 1999 ). Mutations in several Arp2/3 subunits cause defects in
the establishment of cell polarity in the mother cell during cell division,
leading to the unrestricted isotropic growth of the mother cell. This defect
is thought to be due to the abolishment of actin patch-mediated endocytosis,
which is essential for cell polarity establishment. Interestingly, we found
that the swollen mutant stalk lacks the extensive cortical network of fine
actin bundles normally found in WT trichome stalks, but contains some thick
actin bundles. Complete disruption of F-actin by cytochalasin D phenocopies
the Arp2/3 subunit mutants (Mathur et al.,
1999 ), suggesting that it is the loss of some actin population(s)
that is responsible for the depolarization of the stalk. The formation of
thick actin bundles is probably an indirect effect due to the increased
G-actin pool from the loss of a fine actin network. Thus, these observations
imply that the Arabidopsis Arp2/3 complex controls the establishment of cell
polarity by regulating the assembly of a fine actin network.
An interesting question would be: How can this actin network control cell
polarity, through endocytosis as in yeast or by other mechanisms? It was
proposed that the phenotype of distorted mutants is a result of
disrupted directional vesicular trafficking
(Mathur et al., 1999 ).
Directed vesicle targeting could be controlled by the fine actin network or
directly by the Arp2/3 complex-mediated actin polymerization. Interestingly, a
recent study on the distorted mutants combined with cytochalasin
treatments suggest that F-actin may regulate the orientation of cortical
microtubules, which could directly control cell polarity
(Mathur et al., 1999 ). Given
the conserved functional role for the Arp2/3 complex in cell polarity
(Mellman and Warren, 2000 ), it
is important and interesting to determine the mechanism by which the
Arabidopsis Arp2/3 complex regulates this fundamental process.
Another interesting question that needs future attention is how the
Arabidopsis Arp2/3 complex is regulated. The Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome domains
family of proteins, the effectors of Cdc42 and the activators of the Arp2/3
complex, have not been found in the Arabidopsis genome. Furthermore, ROP
GTPases do not seem to activate the formation of diffuse cortical F-actin
through the Arp2/3 complex in pavement cells, and the DN-rop2 expression does
not produce trichome defects, although it eliminates diffuse cortical F-actin
in pavement cells (Fu et al.,
2002 ). Additionally, arp2-1 and arp3-1 mutant
plants have minor defects in root hair and pollen tube growth (S. Li,
unpublished data), processes that show tip growth dependence on actin and ROP
GTPases (Fu et al., 2001 ;
Jones et al., 2002 ). These
observations suggest that additional actin polymerization mechanism(s) exist
in plants. In yeast and animals, various Arp2/3 activators that are
structurally divergent have been identified besides the Cdc42/Wiskott-Aldrich
Syndrome domains (Higgs and Pollard,
2001 ). Therefore, the plant Arp2/3 complex is likely to be
regulated by novel mechanisms. The identification of the plant activators of
the Arp2/3 complex will be of tremendous interest in the future. Development
of an in vitro assay for the plant Arp2/3 complex will be essential for the
identification of its activators.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS
|
|---|
Database Search and Bioinformatics
To identify additional putative Arabidopsis Arp2/3 subunits, the yeast
Arp2/3 subunit cDNAs (Winter et al.,
1997 ) were used as queries for a BLAST search of the National
Center for Biotechnology Information database
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
and The Arabidopsis Information Resource database
(http://www.arabidopsis.org).
From this search, we identified putatively annotated coding sequences for
genes of ARP3, ARPC1, and ARPC3. The coding
sequences for ARPC2, ARPC4, and ARPC5 were
predicted based on the gene organizations of their counterparts in yeast. The
accession numbers for ARP3 ARPC1, ARPC2, ARPC3, ARPC4, and ARPC5 are:
At1g13180, At2g30910/At2g31300, At1g30825, At1g60430, At4g14140, and
At4g01710, respectively. The amino acid alignment was conducted by ClustalW
program
(http://www.ebi.ac.uk/clustalw).
DNA Manipulation and Plasmid Construction
To confirm that these six annotated Arp2/3 subunit sequences are indeed
expressed, we amplified cDNAs for each subunit from a flower cDNA library (a
gift from Hong Ma [Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA]) using
PCR primers covering the predicted Arp2/3 subunit-coding sequences (see
supplemental data). PCR fragments of each were then subcloned into an AT
cloning vector pGEM-T (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). The resulting six clones
were then sequenced.
T-DNA Mutant Identification and Reverse Transcription and PCR
Analysis
Putative T-DNA lines were ordered from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource
Center. The accession numbers for arp2-1, arp2-2,
arp3-1, and arpc5-1/p16-1 are SALK_03448,
SALK_077920, SALK_010045, and SALK_123936, respectively. For arp2-1,
arp2-2, and arpc5-1/p16-1, T-DNA insertions were
verified by PCR reactions using T-DNA LB primers and gene-specific primers.
Homozygotes of each line were identified by RT-PCR using RNA extracted from
inflorescences.
For the analysis of the transcription of each subunit, total RNA was
isolated from different Arabidopsis tissues using the TRIZOL Reagent
(Invitrogen). For silique and stem RNAs, two additional chloroform extractions
were performed. Reverse transcription and PCR amplification were carried out
as described previously. For the ARPC4 gene, 30 cycles of PCR
amplification were used. For other Arp2/3 subunit genes, 25 cycles of PCR
amplification (94°C for 45s, at 54°C for 45s, and at 72°C for 1
min 30s) were carried out using primers shown in
Table I. As PCR amplification
and loading controls, the same template cDNA was amplified using primers for
the constitutive actin-2 gene. The actin-3
gene was used as a control in pollen RT-PCR. Twenty microliters of each PCR
product was loaded on an 0.8% (w/v) agarose gel to visualize the amplified
subunit cDNAs. Five microliters of actin PCR product was loaded as a
control.
Light Microscopy Analysis of Leaf Epidermal Cell Shapes and Trichome
Phenotypes
All experiments described in this study involve Arabidopsis ecotype Col-0.
Arabidopsis plants were grown in growth chambers at 25°C under a light
regime of 8 h of darkness and 16 h of light. The morphology of leaf pavement
cells from WT and mutant plants was analyzed using cleared intact leaves as
described previously (Fu et al.,
2002 ). The fourth rosette leaf from 2-week-old plants was immersed
in 5% (w/v) NaOH, boiled for 1 min, washed with distilled water, and incubated
in bleach until it became clear. Cleared leaves were observed with an inverted
microscope (Eclipse TE300, Nikon, Tokyo) equipped with a cooled CCD camera
(C474295, Hamamatsu, Hamamatsu City, Japan). The measurement of neck
width and lobe height of pavement cells was conducted using Metamorph 4.5
software (Universal Imaging, West Chester, PA). Trichome phenotypes were
analyzed using a M2 Bio Epi-fluorescence microscope (Zeiss, Thornwood, NY)
with a digital camera.
Scanning Electron Microscopy
Ten-day-old seedlings were fixed in 37% (w/v) formaldehyde, glacial acetic
acid, 70% (v/v) ethanol (5:5:90, v/v) solution for 48 h and dehydrated in an
ethanol series (70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%, and 100%, v/v). After critical
point drying and coating, samples were observed with a Philips XL30-FEG
scanning electron microscope (FEI Company, Hillsboro, OR). Images were taken
and processed using Adobe Photoshop 5.5 (Adobe Systems, Mountain View, CA)
Particle Bombardment-Mediated Transient Expression in Arabidopsis
Leaves
Rosette leaves collected from 10-d-old plants were used for transient
expression using a particle bombardment procedure described previously
(Fu et al., 2002 ). All plasmid
DNAs were amplified in the Escherichia coli strain Top 10 and
purified using Qiagen plasmid Midi or Mini Kits according to the
manufacturer's instructions (Qiagen USA, Valencia, CA). Routinely, 0.5-mg gold
particles were coated with 0.5 µg of pBI221:GFP-mTalin DNA. Bombarded
leaves were kept on damp filter paper before observation under the confocal
microscope as described below.
Visualization of F-Actin and Confocal Microscopy
To visualize F-actin in the leaf pavement cells and trichomes, GFP-mTalin
was expressed transiently as described above. Sixteen to 24 h after
bombardment, leaf pavement cells or trichomes expressing GFP-mTalin were
observed using a confocal microscope (MRC 600, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules,
CA) as described previously (Fu et al.,
2001 ). Optical sections (0.5 µm) were used to collect a
three-dimensional projection. Confocal images were analyzed using Metamorph
4.5 software and processed using Adobe Photoshop 5.5. For the quantification
of association of strong diffuse F-actin with lobes, confocal projection
images of actin cytoskeleton in stage II pavement cells from both WT and both
mutant plants were randomly mixed together. The counting was based on visual
examination. After sorting, the percentage of diffuse F-actin associated with
lobes was assigned to individual samples.
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 parts of the
material. Obtaining any permission will be the responsibility of the
requestor.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
|---|
We are grateful to Bin Shuai and Ying Gu for their assistance with the
scanning electron microscopy. We thank Dr. Martha Orozco-Cardenas for her help
with the microscopy.
Received June 13, 2003;
returned for revision June 15, 2003;
accepted June 16, 2003.
 |
FOOTNOTES
|
|---|
1 This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (grant nos.
IBN0115078 and MCB0111082 to Z.Y. and IBN 0077886 to
E.M.L.). 
[w] The online version of this article contains Web-only data. The supplemental
material is available at
http://www.plantphysiol.org. 
*
Corresponding author; e-mail
lord{at}citrus.ucr.edu;
fax 9097874437.
 |
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