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First published online November 6, 2003; 10.1104/pp.103.030742 Plant Physiology 133:1779-1790 (2003) © 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists
Possible Involvement of Leaf Gibberellins in the Clock-Controlled Expression of XSP30, a Gene Encoding a Xylem Sap Lectin, in Cucumber Roots1Institute of Biological Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8572, Japan (A.O., C.S., T.M., H.K., S.S.); and Noda Institute for Scientific Research, Noda, Chiba 278-0037, Japan (S.M.)
Root-produced organic compounds in xylem sap, such as hormones and amino acids, are known to be important in plant development. Recently, biochemical approaches have revealed the identities of several xylem sap proteins, but the biological functions and the regulation of the production of these proteins are not fully understood. XYLEM SAP PROTEIN 30 kD (XSP30), which is specifically expressed in the roots of cucumber (Cucumis sativus), encodes a lectin and is hypothesized as affecting the development of above-ground organs. In this report, we demonstrate that XSP30 gene expression and the level of XSP30 protein fluctuate in a diurnal rhythm in cucumber roots. The rhythmic gene expression continues for at least two or three cycles, even under continuous light or dark conditions, demonstrating that the expression of this gene is controlled by a circadian clock. Removal of mature leaves or treatment of shoots with uniconazole-P, an inhibitor of gibberellic acid (GA) biosynthesis, dampens the amplitude of the rhythmic expression; the application of GA negates these effects. These results suggest that light signals perceived by above-ground organs, as well as GA that is produced, possibly, in mature leaves, are important for the rhythmic expression of XSP30 in roots. This is the first demonstration of the regulation of the expression of a clock-controlled gene by GA.
The higher plant body consists of functionally specialized organs such as the leaf, stem, flower, and root. Because plants grow in changing environments, it is essential for different organs to interact to ensure that the plant body develops and functions properly. Information transfer between organs is essential for synchronized plant development (Bernier, 1988
Recently, macromolecules have been found in xylem sap, including oligo- and polysaccharides (Satoh et al., 1992
A major environmental factor for plants, the diurnal light cycle, is perceived mainly in leaves, but signal transduction resulting from this cue is controlled in many organs (McClung, 2001
In our previous study of cucumber xylem sap, a novel 30-kD protein (XSP30) was identified (Masuda et al., 1999 In this report, we show that XSP30 expression in cucumber roots follows a diurnal pattern, and that the oscillation in the expression of its gene is controlled by a circadian clock, which is, in turn, possibly affected by leaf gibberellins. The specific expression of XSP30 in root vascular tissues is also shown. This is the first report of a circadian control of a root-specific gene that is affected by GA.
Root-Specific Expression of the XSP30 Gene
We have found that XSP30 is expressed only in root tissue (Masuda et al., 1999
Gel-blot analysis of total RNA prepared from the roots of cucumber seedlings of different ages showed that XSP30 expression was barely detectable in the roots of 4-d-old seedlings, but increased gradually with maturity, concurrent with leaf development, after 6 d (Fig. 1E).
To test whether environmental signals affect XSP30 gene expression in cucumber roots, we examined XSP30 mRNA levels in plants under various conditions. In the course of this study, we found that XSP30 gene expression showed a diurnal pattern under a photoperiod of 16 h of light/8 h of dark (Fig. 2, A and B). XSP30 gene expression peaked at time 16 and decreased to trough level at around time 4. Peaks in expression levels occurred at time 16, except for during the first cycle.
The amount of XSP30 protein in root xylem sap was evaluated by immunoblotting with anti-XSP30 serum (Masuda et al., 1999
The XSP30 mRNA level began to increase before dusk and to decrease before dawn (Fig. 2, A and B). This anticipation of the diurnal rhythm is a common feature in circadian rhythms. When seedlings grown under a 16-h light/8-h dark photoperiod for 13 days were transferred to continuous dark (DD) or continuous light (LL), the XSP30 gene showed a rhythmic pattern of expression for at least two cycles under DD (Fig. 3, A and B) and three cycles under LL (Fig. 3, D and E). The data were Fourier transformed and the periods were estimated as 26.59 (±8.713) hours in DD and 20.31 (±1.547) hours in LL (Fig. 3, C and F). To confirm the strength of rhythms, the relative amplitude errors (RAE, see "Material and Methods") were calculated as 0.308 (0.6 > RAE) in DD and 0.731 (1 > RAE > 0.6) in LL. A perfect sine wave gives an RAE of 0 and RAE = 1 defines the limit of statistical significance of rhythm, suggesting substantial and weak rhythms of XSP30 expression in DD and LL, respectively. The experiments of Figure 3 have been performed three times. Statistically significant rhythms were detected twice, and in the third replicate (data not shown), the time courses were suggestive, although not statistically significant. Therefore, we conclude that a circadian clock contributes to the regulation of expression of XSP30.
Light signals are important for the entrainment of a circadian clock. Aboveground organs are thought to receive the light signals that control a variety of biological processes in plants. We have recently demonstrated that cotyledons are required for cell division during tissue reunion in the cortex of cut cucumber (Asahina et al., 2002
Gene expression in roots was examined after removal of the first leaf or the cotyledons and shoot apex from 13-d-old seedlings. Rhythmic expression of XSP30 was observed during at least the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th d after removal of the cotyledon and shoot apex (Fig. 5, A and C). XSP30 expression peaked at times 40, 64, and 88 on the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th d after removal, respectively. In contrast, the XSP30 mRNA level was significantly lower in plants from which only the first leaf was removed (Fig. 5, B and C). These results suggest that mature leaves are required for the high amplitude of the diurnal expression of XSP30 in cucumber roots, and that translocatable signals, possibly including plant hormones such as GAs, auxins, and brassinosteroids may be involved in this process.
A gibberellin biosynthesis inhibitor (uniconazole-P), an auxin polar transport inhibitor (2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid), or a brassinosteroid biosynthesis inhibitor (brassinazole; Asami et al., 2000
To examine the involvement of endogenous gibberellins in activating XSP30 expression, uniconazole-P was applied to the shoots of intact plants. This resulted in a dramatic decrease in XSP30 expression within the 48 h after the uniconazole-P treatment (Fig. 7, A and C), but rhythmic expression with a lower amplitude was observed during the 3rd and 4th d. Simultaneous application of GA3 with uniconazole-P resulted in no change in the oscillation pattern, with maximum expression at time 64 and 88 on the 3rd and 4th d, respectively (Fig. 7, B and C). The data in Figure 7 were Fourier transformed and the periods and the RAE were estimated as 22.82 (±0.909) hours and 0.366 in plants treated without GA and 23.79 (±1.224) hours and 0.341 in plants treated with GA. To elucidate whether gibberellin transported from the shoot affects the expression of XSP30 in roots, 10-4 M GA3 was supplied to the roots of uniconazole-P-treated plants. The application of GA3 to roots did not reverse the effects of uniconazole-P (data not shown). These results suggest that gibberellins produced in leaves are involved in the control of the diurnally oscillating pattern of XSP30 gene expression in cucumber roots.
Diurnal Control of XSP30 Gene Expression in Roots
In plants, leaf movements, hypocotyl elongation, stomatal opening, and floral induction are controlled by a circadian clock (McClung, 2001
The regulation of the period, which is the time after which a definite phase of the oscillation reoccurs, and the amplitude, which is the difference between maximum value and mean value in a sinusoidal oscillation, is quite important for the proper functioning of clock-controlled genes in various biological processes. For example, the expression of the floral activator gene CONSTANS (CO) is controlled by a circadian clock. The diurnal pattern of CO mRNA accumulation is different in inductive (long days) versus noninductive (short days) photoperiods (Suarez-Lopez et al., 2001
We report evidence that gibberellin is involved in the expression of XSP30 in roots (Figs. 6 and 7). One of the major sites of production of gibberellin, which controls various aspects of plant development, is the leaf (Yamaguchi and Kamiya, 2000 The effect of gibberellin on the regulation of XSP30 gene expression appears to be independent of the possible circadian regulation. In other words, the diurnal oscillation pattern of XSP30 expression does not appear to be controlled by the oscillating level of endogenous gibberellin, because application of high concentrations of GA did not disrupt the diurnal expression pattern of XSP30 (Figs. 6 and 7). GA is likely involved in the regulation of the amplitude or maximum expression level of XSP30, but not the periodicity, which might be controlled by a circadian clock (Figs. 2 and 3).
It is possible to interpret our results based on this hypothesis. The XSP30 expression cycles because the clock, if it is involved, may be gating the responsiveness of XSP30 expression to GA, because GA (or some signal downstream of GA) transport to the roots may oscillate over the diurnal cycle, or both. Diurnal GA synthesis in sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) partly supports this idea (Foster and Morgan, 1995
We tested whether inhibitors of gibberellin, auxin, and brassinosteroid biosynthesis or transport affected the diurnal oscillation pattern of XSP30 gene expression, and we found that only the GA biosynthesis inhibitor, uniconazole-P, had a significant effect in our experimental conditions (Fig. 7 and A. Odah and S. Satoh, unpublished data). However, there is a possibility that signals other than gibberellin also participate in the diurnal expression pattern of XSP30 in roots. One signaling molecule candidate is IAA, which controls the rate of internodal elongation, and the endogenous levels of which fluctuate in a circadian rhythm in Arabidopsis (Jouve et al., 1999
The overall expression pattern of XSP30 may be fine-tuned by GA and by the circadian clock. This is quite similar to the growth pattern of the Arabidopsis inflorescence stem in which the circadian clock modulates auxin transport, auxin sensitivity, or both, to yield a rhythm in the rate of elongation (Jouve et al., 1998
Several examples of the effects of gibberellins applied directly to roots have been reported (Tanimoto, 1994
The XSP30 promoter directed GUS expression specifically in the xylem parenchyma and pericycle cells in the central cylinder of mature transgenic hairy roots (Fig. 1). Thus, XSP30 is likely to be produced in the vascular tissues of mature roots. CRGRP-1 and CRGRP-2, genes that encode other xylem sap proteins, are also expressed in xylem parenchyma cells in the central cylinder of cucumber roots, and these proteins are transported to aboveground organs via xylem vessels (Sakuta et al., 2000). Production of proteins in the central cylinder of the root is probably necessary for the loading of macromolecules into xylem vessels. For example, the gene encoding the putative phosphate channel PHO1, which is hypothesized to load phosphate into the xylem, is expressed preferentially in parenchyma cells in the central cylinder of Arabidopsis roots (Hamburger et al., 2002
In summary, our results suggest that GA originating in the leaf, or some signal downstream of GA, provides important inducer(s) to generate high amplitude diurnal oscillations of the XSP30 gene expression. A circadian clock might be involved in the rhythmic expression of the gene, and both of these factors may optimize and fine-tune XSP30 gene expression in xylem parenchyma and pericycle cells of mature cucumber roots (Fig. 2). Any reciprocal regulation between circadian clocks and GA functions is still unclear. Possible clues include the expression of the GA20 oxidase gene being controlled by daily light/dark cycles, and the involvement of PHOR1, a GA-signaling mediator, in the photoperiodic control of tuber formation in potatoes (Carrera et al., 1999
Plant Materials Seeds of cucumber (Cucumis sativus cv Shimoshirazu-jibai) were obtained from the Sakata Seed Co. (Kanagawa, Japan). Cucumber plants were grown in artificial soil (Kurehakagaku, Tokyo) under white fluorescent light (40 µmol m-2 s-1) with a 16-h light/8-h dark photoperiod at 28°C.
Full-length cDNA probes for XSP30 (DDBJ; AB025717), ubiquitin, and rDNA were prepared using the PCR. Total RNA (10 µg lane-1) was isolated as described previously (Sakuta et al., 1998
To analyze the XSP30 promoter, XSP30 genomic DNA was cloned by thermal asymmetric interlaced PCR (Liu et al., 1995
An 820-bp DNA fragment of the XSP30 genomic sequence upstream of the putative initiation codon (PXSP30) was amplified by PCR. The product was cloned upstream of, and in frame with, the GUS coding sequence in a modified pBI121 vector, which contains the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter fused upstream of the hygromycin phosphotransferase gene (Iwai et al., 2001
For GUS staining, hairy roots that emerged from the cotyledons were immersed in 1 mg mL-1 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-
Xylem sap was collected, as described previously (Sakuta et al., 1998
Proteins were transferred from SDS-PAGE gels to nitrocellulose filters (ADVANTEC, Tokyo) in 25 mM Tris, 192 mM Gly, and 20% (v/v) methanol at 40 V for 2 h (Gershoni and Palade, 1982
The shoots of seedlings were removed at dawn with a razor blade at the middle of the hypocotyl, 15 d after sowing. Roots were collected from these seedlings every 4 h for RNA preparation. The first leaf or the cotyledons plus the shoot apex of the cucumber plants was cut off, 13 d after sowing, at dawn with a razor blade, and the roots were collected every 8 h for RNA preparation.
GA3 and uniconazole-P were dissolved in ethanol and the concentration of the solution was diluted 1,000-fold in 0.1% (v/v) Tween 20. The leaves and the shoot apex of 13-d-old plants were sprayed with 2 x 10-4 M GA3, 10-4 M uniconazole-P, or, as a control, 0.1% (v/v) ethanol, each with 0.1% (v/v) Tween 20. Roots were collected every 8 h for RNA preparation.
We thank Dr. Seiyei Yamakawa, Taichi Oguchi, Masashi Asahina, and Madoka Shimizu of the University of Tsukuba (Tsukuba, Japan) for their valuable suggestions. Received July 23, 2003; returned for revision August 19, 2003; accepted August 21, 2003.
1 This work was supported in part by the "Research for the Future" Program of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (grant no. JSPS-RFTF97L00601). Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.103.030742. * Corresponding author; e-mail pdp{at}sakura.cc.tsukuba.ac.jp; fax 81-29-853-4579.
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