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First published online July 10, 2003; 10.1104/pp.103.023945 Plant Physiology 132:2174-2183 (2003) © 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists Overproduction of Cytokinins in Petunia Flowers Transformed with PSAG12-IPT Delays Corolla Senescence and Decreases Sensitivity to Ethylene1Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523 (H.C.); Department of Horticulture and Crop Science, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, The Ohio State University, Wooster, Ohio 44691 (M.L.J.); United States Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service, Corvallis, Oregon 97331 (G.M.B.); and Department of Environmental Horticulture, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611 (D.G.C.)
Plant senescence is regulated by a coordinated genetic program mediated in part by changes in ethylene, abscisic acid (ABA), and cytokinin content. Transgenic plants with delayed senescence are useful for studying interactions between these signaling mechanisms. Expression of ipt, a cytokinin biosynthetic gene from Agrobacterium tumefaciens, under the control of the promoter from a senescence-associated gene (SAG12) has been one approach used to delay senescence. We transformed petunia (Petunia x hybrida cv V26) with PSAG12-IPT. Two independently transformed lines with extended flower longevity (I-1-7-22 and I-3-18-34) were used to study the effects of elevated cytokinin content on ethylene synthesis and sensitivity and ABA accumulation in petunia corollas. Floral senescence in these lines was delayed 6 to 10 d relative to wild-type (WT) flowers. Ipt transcripts increased in abundance after pollination and were accompanied by increased cytokinin accumulation. Endogenous ethylene production was induced by pollination in both WT and IPT corollas, but this increase was delayed in IPT flowers. Flowers from IPT plants were less sensitive to exogenous ethylene and required longer treatment times to induce endogenous ethylene production, corolla senescence, and up-regulation of the senescence-related Cys protease phcp1. Accumulation of ABA, another hormone regulating flower senescence, was significantly greater in WT corollas, confirming that floral senescence was delayed in IPT plants. These results extend our understanding of the hormone interactions that regulate flower senescence and provide a means of increasing flower longevity.
Flower senescence represents the last stage of floral development and results in wilting or abscission of whole flowers or flower parts (Stead and Van Doorn, 1994
Senescence is accompanied by changes in endogenous ethylene, abscisic acid
(ABA), and cytokinins, and these changes are believed to mediate signaling
events that control the process. In many flowers, senescence is accompanied by
a burst of ethylene production, and treatment with exogenous ethylene
accelerates ethylene production and corolla senescence
(Borochov and Woodson, 1989
In contrast to the actions of ethylene and ABA, cytokinins delay senescence
in vegetative and floral tissues (Van
Staden et al., 1988
Results from exogenous application of cytokinins in vase solutions have
been variable (Weaver, 1972
Interactions between cytokinins and other hormones during senescence have
been less studied. Cytokinin applications to carnation flowers delay
senescence and are associated with reduced ethylene biosynthesis and decreased
sensitivity to ethylene (Eisinger,
1977
Until very recently, no genes involved in cytokinin biosynthesis had been
identified from plants (Kakimoto,
2001
An approach to target the expression of ipt to senescing tissues
with the promoter from SAG12, a senescence-associated gene from Arabidopsis,
demonstrated a direct effect of cytokinins on plant senescence
(Gan and Amasino, 1995 We used transgenic petunias expressing the PSAG12-IPT chimeric gene to determine the effects of increased cytokinin levels in petals on flower senescence and to investigate the interactions between cytokinin accumulation and ethylene production, ethylene sensitivity, and ABA accumulation. Comparisons with non-transformed control plants demonstrated interactions between these signaling molecules that resulted in significantly delayed floral senescence.
Analysis of SAG12-IPT Transgenic Petunias
Two independently transformed lines with increased flower longevity were
identified. These two transgenic lines, designated I-1-7-22 and I-3-18-34 (or
IPT22 and IPT34) also showed delayed leaf senescence and contained a single
copy of the ipt transgene
(Dervinis, 1999 The first visual symptom of flower senescence, corolla wilting, was observed in unpollinated WT flowers by 160 h after anthesis (Table I). Pollination accelerated the onset of senescence, and pollinated WT flowers were senescent by 51 h after pollination (hap). Naturally senescing IPT22 and IPT34 flowers did not show symptoms of wilting until 303 or 284 h after anthesis, respectively. This represented a 6-d increase in bloom display life over WT flowers. Senescence was not significantly accelerated by pollination in IPT22 or IPT34 flowers, which wilted at 294 and 272 hap, respectively.
The ipt gene was up-regulated by pollination in IPT22 and IPT34 corollas (Fig. 1). Initial experiments with RNA gel blots using 10 to 20 µg of total RNA and 32P-labeled ipt probe were not sensitive enough to detect ipt message in corollas after pollination (data not shown). Fluorescence-based quantitative reverse transcription (RT)-PCR (real time RT-PCR) was therefore used to determine relative levels of ipt transcript in IPT22 and IPT34 corollas at various times after pollination. Ipt transcript was detected in corollas from these plants as early as anthesis (0 hap). Similar increases in ipt transcript abundance were detected from 0 to 12 hap in both IPT22 and IPT34 corollas. Ipt transcript accumulation increased at 18 hap in IPT22 corollas. Transcript levels continued to increase at 24 hap and then decreased at 36 hap. An increase in ipt mRNAs was detected at 48 hap in IPT34 corollas. Both transgenic lines had the largest accumulation of ipt mRNAs at 48 hap. This represented a 60-fold increase in the level of ipt transcripts detected at anthesis (0 hap). Transcript abundance then decreased at 72 hap in both IPT22 and IPT34 corollas. Under the experimental conditions described (see "Materials and Methods") ipt mRNAs were not detected in WT corolla samples.
Enhanced cytokinin levels in transgenic corollas confirmed that the ipt gene detected in IPT22 and IPT34 corollas was producing a functional isopentenyltransferase. At anthesis (0 hap), corollas from both transgenic lines had higher cytokinin content than WT flowers (Table II). Although the predominant cytokinins that accumulated in IPT corollas after pollination were zeatin (Z) and Z riboside (ZR), the difference between WT and transgenic flowers at 0 hap was due to quantities of iPA and isopentenyladenine (iP). The quantities of iPA-type cytokinins in transgenic corollas at 0 hap were greater than twice that measured in WT corollas. Z and ZR increased in IPT22 and IPT34 corollas at 18 hap. The change in ZR content from 12 to 18 hap represented a 10-fold increase in IPT22 corollas compared with a 2-fold increase in IPT34 corollas. Total cytokinins were highest in both transgenic lines at 48 hap. Very low levels of ZR were detected in WT corollas after pollination but Z was undetectable. At 48 hap, total cytokinin content of IPT corollas was 25-fold greater than that measured in WT plants. Total cytokinins in both transgenic lines decreased at 72 hap. The cytokinin content of WT corollas was lowest at 72 hap when flowers were completely wilted.
In addition to accelerating corolla wilting, pollination induced ethylene production from the corolla (Fig. 2A). WT corollas had a peak of ethylene production at 24 hap followed by a larger peak (29 nL g-1 h-1), coinciding with corolla wilting, at 48 hap. This first ethylene peak was not detected in IPT22 corollas, and ethylene production was delayed until 48 hap. IPT34 corollas had a slight increase in ethylene production at 24 hap followed by a larger peak at 48 hap that was similar to that detected from IPT22 corollas. Flowers from IPT22 and IPT34 did not show visual symptoms of flower senescence until 288 and 264 hap, respectively (Fig. 2B). Expression of the ethylene biosynthetic gene 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) oxidase (phaco1) confirmed that the induction of elevated ethylene biosynthesis by pollination was delayed in transgenic IPT flowers (Fig. 2C). Phaco1 transcript was undetectable in corollas at anthesis, but a large increase was detected at 24 hap in WT. This up-regulation was delayed until 48 hap in IPT22 corollas. Phaco1 mRNAs increased in IPT34 corollas at 24 hap, but levels were only 25% of those detected in WT corollas at the same time. Transcript abundance was greatest at 48 hap in WT, IPT22, and IPT34 corollas.
WT corollas produced elevated ethylene levels following 9 and 12 h of exposure to 2 µL L-1 ethylene treatment, whereas flowers from transgenic plants required extended exposure to ethylene to increase ethylene production (Fig. 3A). Ethylene production by IPT22 corollas increased slightly after 24 h of treatment. Elevated levels of ethylene production greater than 50 nL g-1 h-1 were detected from IPT34 corollas after 36 h of treatment. After 48 h of ethylene treatment, WT corollas were beginning to show symptoms of corolla wilting, whereas IPT22 and IPT34 corollas were not (data not shown).
The expression of the ethylene up-regulated Cys protease, phcp1, was used as a molecular indicator of responsiveness to ethylene (Fig. 3B). Phcp1 transcripts were detected at basal levels in untreated (0 h) corollas. The abundance of phcp1 transcripts at 0 h was greatest in WT corollas, whereas transcripts were just barely detectable in IPT22 and IPT34 corollas. Increases in phcp1 accumulation were detected in WT corollas following 12 h of treatment with 2 µL L-1 ethylene. In IPT22 flowers, 48 h of ethylene treatment was needed before increases in phcp1 transcripts were detected, whereas increases in phcp1 abundance were detected after 36 h in IPT34 corollas. WT and IPT flowers treated with air for 48 h (controls) were not producing detectable levels of ethylene, and the abundance of phcp1 mRNAs was similar to that detected in 0 h corollas (data not shown). Treating flowers with 2 µL L-1 ethylene for 12 h did not result in noticeable wilting in any of the lines (Fig. 4, 0 panel). These flowers were then left on the laboratory bench in air to observe the effects of the ethylene treatment on senescence. WT flowers wilted 48 h after removal from ethylene, whereas IPT flowers did not wilt until 96 h. WT flowers (air controls) that were never treated with ethylene wilted at 72 h. IPT controls started to show signs of senescence at 96 h but were not as severely wilted as the IPT flowers treated with ethylene.
The 12-h ethylene treatment did not affect total cytokinin content of WT corollas, but resulted in a 50-fold increase in cytokinin levels in IPT corollas (Fig. 5A). This increase was largely due to increases in ZR and Z (Table II). Ethylene application resulted in a large increase in the accumulation of ipt transcripts in both IPT22 and IPT34 corollas (Fig. 5B).
To determine whether there were differences in endogenous ABA concentration in WT and IPT lines, ABA was quantified in corollas following pollination (Fig. 6). ABA levels increased in WT corollas beginning at 24 hap and increased to greater than 1,000 ng g-1 dry weight at 72 hap. Similar increases were not detected in the transgenic lines, and maximum levels only reached 221 and 111 ng g-1 dry weight at 72 hap in IPT22 and IPT34, respectively.
The exogenous application of cytokinins has been shown to delay flower senescence, but the effects have been variable and depend on concentration, cytokinin form, pulse versus continuous application, or the stage of development at which the flower is treated (Eisinger, 1977 We used petunia plants transformed with PSAG12-IPT to quantify the impact of ipt expression on cytokinin accumulation in petunia corollas and to investigate the interactions of cytokinins with ethylene biosynthesis, ethylene sensitivity, and endogenous ABA levels during the progression of flower senescence. These plants exhibited significant delays in flower senescence associated with increases in ipt transcript abundance and corolla cytokinin content.
Despite senescence-specific regulation of the SAG12 promoter in
Arabidopsis, the promoter was not as tightly regulated in petunia. Both IPT22
and IPT34 petunias had detectable ipt transcripts and elevated
cytokinin levels in non-senescing corollas (0 hap). Transgenic plants from the
line IPT34 had a normal phenotype with the exception of delayed leaf and
flower senescence, whereas IPT22 plants had other cytokinin phenotypes
including decreased adventitious rooting and increased branching
(Dervinis, 1999
The sag12 gene is expressed late in the senescence process, after
Arabidopsis leaves are visibly yellowing
(Weaver et al., 1998
The cytokinins that accumulated after pollination in IPT petunias were
predominantly Z and ZR. Other plants that have been transformed with the
A. tumefaciens ipt gene have also preferentially accumulated Z and ZR
with little or no accumulation of iPA type cytokinins
(Faiss et al., 1997
Cytokinin-ethylene interactions during flower senescence have been
postulated (Mayak and Kofranek,
1976
The impact of cytokinins on ethylene production is dose dependent. Although
our study and previous ones demonstrate that application or accumulation of
enhanced cytokinin content decreases ethylene production, other research shows
that submicromolar concentrations of cytokinins induce ethylene biosynthesis
(Cary et al., 1995
Large increases in cytokinin accumulation and ipt mRNA abundance
were detected in IPT22 and IPT34 corollas following 12 h of ethylene
treatment. Sag12 transcript accumulation was also reported in
Arabidopsis leaves after ethylene treatment, but this was believed to be an
indirect response to ethylene-induced senescence rather than a primary
response to ethylene itself (Weaver et
al., 1998
Despite the increase in endogenous ethylene induced by pollination, the IPT
flowers did not senesce at the same time as WT flowers, suggesting that floral
ethylene concentration alone was not sufficient to induce senescence. As
flowers age, they become more responsive to ethylene-mediated acceleration of
senescence (Nichols, 1968
In addition to ethylene, ABA levels increase during the senescence of some
flowers (LePage-Degivry et al.,
1991
There is increasing genetic evidence that the activities of cytokinin, ABA,
and ethylene are linked. Phenotypic analysis is now revealing that several of
the hormone-response mutants have altered sensitivity to more than one hormone
(Schmulling et al., 1999
Plant Material
Petunia (Petunia x hybrida cv V26) was transformed with the
Psag12-IPT-Nos chimeric gene construct provided by Dr. Richard Amasino
(University of Wisconsin, Madison) according to the methods of Jorgensen et
al. (1996 Seed from WT, IPT22, and IPT34 plants was sown on top of soil less mix (Promix BX, Premier Horticulture) in 6-cell packs. All plants were established in the greenhouse after seed germination in a growth chamber with intermittent hand misting. Plants were moved to 10-cm pots after 4 weeks and fertilized once a week with N at 300 mg L-1 from 15N-5P-15K CalMag (The Scotts Co., Marysville, OH).
Flower senescence was visually rated during natural senescence and following pollination. One day before anthesis, flower corollas were slit with a sharp razor blade, and anthers were removed to prevent self-pollination. On the day of flower opening (anthesis) five flowers from different plants were either self-pollinated or left unpollinated. At the same time each day, flowers were evaluated for corolla wilting, the first visual symptom of senescence. This evaluation was repeated twice, and the data reported represent the mean time until flower wilting ± SE for all three experiments (n = 15).
To determine corolla ethylene production, flowers were harvested at 0, 12, 18, 24, 36, 48, and 72 hap. Twelve flowers were collected for each time point. Three corollas were weighed together and sealed in a 15-mL vial. After 20 min, 1 mL of gas was removed from each vial and analyzed for ethylene using a gas chromatograph equipped with an Haysep R packed column and flame ionization detector (Varian, Walnut Creek, CA). Ethylene production experiments were conducted three times, and graphed values represent the mean ethylene production ± SE. Following ethylene measurements, corollas were frozen in liquid N2, and stored at -80°C for RNA extraction or cytokinin characterization. The effects of ethylene treatment were determined using flowers harvested at anthesis, placed in test tubes of deionized water, and transferred to 24-L chambers where ethylene was injected to a final concentration of 2 µL L-1. Control flowers were sealed in chambers with ethylene-free air. At 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, and 48 h after treatment, flowers were removed from the chamber and placed in room air for 20 min to allow applied ethylene to diffuse away before corolla ethylene production was measured. Following ethylene measurements, corollas were frozen in liquid N2, and stored at -80°C for RNA extraction or cytokinin determination. Data presented are the mean ethylene production ± SE for the first experiment. In a separate experiment, flowers were treated with 2 µL L-1 ethylene or air for 12 h and then rated for visual symptoms of senescence (corolla wilting) at 24-h intervals after removal. All ethylene treatments were repeated a minimum of two times with similar results.
Corollas from six flowers were collected at 0, 12, 18, 24, 36, 48, and 72
hap and after 12 h of ethylene treatment and lyophilized. Tissue
(approximately 100 mg per sample) was ground in liquid N2, and
cytokinins were extracted in 100% (v/v) ethanol for 30 min. After 9 volumes of
40 mM ammonium acetate (pH 6.5) was added to the extract,
cytokinins were isolated on C18 SepPaks (Waters, Bedford, MA), purified, and
quantified in triplicate samples using a previously described combined
HPLC-immunoassay method (Banowetz,
1992
An ELISA using a monoclonal anti-ABA antibody
(Banowetz et al., 1994
Total RNA from WT, IPT22, and IPT34 corollas was extracted using TRIZOL reagent (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). RNA samples were treated with RQ1 RNase-free DNase (Promega, Madison, WI) to remove any contaminating genomic DNA and were quantified by determining A260 using a Beckman DU 640 Spectrophotometer (Beckman Coulter, Fullerton, CA). Relative abundance of the ipt transgene was determined using real-time RT-PCR. Five hundred nanograms of RNA was reverse transcribed and amplified using the QuantiTect SYBR Green RT-PCR kit (Qiagen USA, Valencia, CA). Using the DNA Engine Opticon Continuous Fluorescence Detector (MJ Research Incorporated, Boston) RNA was reverse transcribed for 30 min at 50°C. Following activation of the HotStar TaqDNA polymerase at 95°C for 15 min, PCR was conducted for 35 cycles of denaturation at 94°C for 15 s, annealing at 55°C for 30 s, and elongation at 72°C for 30 s. Relative amounts of transcript were determined by comparing the products with an external standard RNA curve (Lightcycler Control RNA kit, Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany). Actin was amplified as an endogenous control to standardize the amount of sample RNA added to each reaction. Primers were constructed to amplify 152- and 176-bp amplicons of ipt and actin, respectively. The primers included ipt forward 5'-GCC TCT GGT GAA GGG TAT CA-3', ipt reverse 5'-CCG CAC TCC AAT AAC TGC TT-3', actin forward 5'-TTG TCC GTG ACA TGA AGG AA-3', and actin reverse 5'-TCGATGGCTGGAAGAGAACT-3'. Samples were run in triplicate, and data presented are the mean of the three replications ± SE. The presence of a single amplicon of the predicted size was confirmed by performing melting curve analyses of the data as well as by visualizing products on an agarose gel.
For RNA gel-blot analyses, 10 µg of total RNA from corollas at various
times after pollination and following ethylene treatment was separated by
electrophoresis through a 1.2% (w/v) agarose gel containing 2.2 M
formaldehyde. Separated RNAs were transferred to Hybond-N membranes (Amersham
Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ) and cross-linked with a Stratalinker controlled
UV light source (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). Membranes were hybridized and
washed as previously described (Jones et
al., 1995
ANOVA, means, and SEs were generated using SAS (v6.0, SAS Institute, Cary, NC). All reported significances were at P = 0.01 or greater.
We acknowledge Don Chen for technical assistance with the cytokinin and ABA analysis and Sarah Ball, Sarah Negley, and John Ray for their assistance with plant growth and maintenance in the greenhouse. We also thank Dr. Dean Fraga at the College of Wooster for the use of the DNA Engine Opticon. Received March 21, 2003; returned for revision April 11, 2003; accepted May 13, 2003.
1 This research was supported by the American Floral Endowment (grant to M.L.J. and D.G.C.). Salaries and research support were provided in part by State and Federal funds appropriated to the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, The Ohio State University. This is journal article number HCS 0205. * Corresponding author; e-mail jones.1968{at}osu.edu; fax 3302633887.
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