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Plant Physiology 136:3427-3434 (2004) © 2004 American Society of Plant Biologists Endoplasmic Reticulum, Oleosins, and Oils in Seeds and Tapetum Cells1Center for Plant Cell Biology, Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, University of California, Riverside, California 92521
Diverse organisms contain neutral lipids in subcellular particles for food reserves and other purposes. These lipid particles are present in seeds, flowers, pollen and fruit of higher plants, the vegetative and reproductive organs of primitive plants, algae, fungi, nematodes, mammalian glands and brown adipose tissue of mammals, and bacteria. Of all these lipid particles, the oil bodies (OBs) in seeds are the most prominent and best studied. Seeds of most plant species store oils (triacylglycerols [TAGs]) as a food reserve for germination and postgerminative growth. TAGs are present in small subcellular spherical OBs of approximately 1 µm in diameter. Each OB has a matrix of TAGs surrounded by a layer of phospholipids (PLs) and structural proteins termed oleosins. The small size of OBs provides a large surface area per unit TAG, which would facilitate lipase binding and lipolysis during germination. OBs inside the cells of mature seeds or in isolated preparations are remarkably stable and do not aggregate or coalesce. This stability is in contrast to the instability of artificial liposomes made from amphipathic and neutral lipids; the liposomes gradually coalesce after formation. Seed OBs are stable because their surface is shielded by a layer of oleosins. In maturing seeds, TAGs, PLs, and oleosins are synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), from which budding OBs are released.
Research on seed OBs and oleosins has been reviewed by Huang (1992
Oleosins in seeds are small proteins of about 15 to 26 kD. They completely cover the surface of the subcellular OB (Fig. 1B). They can be abundant in seeds with a high proportion of oils and small OBs (therefore more OB surface area). For example, Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seeds have more than 40% (wt/wt) oils and small OBs of approximately 0.5-µm diameter, and 10% of the seed proteins are oleosins. The ratio of oils to oleosins determines the size and even the shape of the OBs. This phenomenon is best illustrated in maize (Zea mays) lines that have been bred for high and low oil contents; kernels containing a high oil-to-oleosin ratio have large and spherical OBs, whereas those containing a low ratio have small and irregularly shaped OBs.
More than 200 genes encoding oleosins have been identified. Nonplant organisms do not have oleosins. Recently, genes encoding oleosins on the storage OBs in Arabidopsis pollen (Kim et al., 2002
An oleosin molecule can be divided into three portions according to its amino acid sequence (Fig. 1A). The N-terminal portion can be short or long (e.g. 668 residues in Arabidopsis) and is hydrophilic. The central portion is a long hydrophobic stretch of 72 residues. The C-terminal portion can be short or very long (e.g. 281,000 residues in Arabidopsis oleosins), and its approximately 30 residues adjacent to the central hydrophobic stretch can form an amphipathic The central hydrophobic stretch of 72 uninterrupted hydrophobic residues is the hallmark of an oleosin. No other protein in any organism has such a long hydrophobic stretch. Proteins on the surface of extracellular or intracellular lipid droplets, such as apolipoproteins, perilipin, adipophilin, and caveolin in mammals, phasin in bacteria, and the plastid lipid-associated protein (PAP), do not have a long hydrophobic stretch; their polypeptides run parallel to the surface of, rather than penetrate into, the lipid droplets. The 72-residue hydrophobic stretch of an oleosin is long enough (a trans-membrane [PL bilayer] peptide has 2025 residues) to form a hairpin that penetrates the surface PL monolayer of an OB into the matrix (Fig. 1B).
The center of the hydrophobic stretch has three Pro residues and one Ser residue that could interact to form a "Pro knot." This proposal (Fig. 1A) is based on the presence of the relatively less hydrophobic Pro and Ser residues among the other more hydrophobic residues and TAGs in the matrix of an OB, as well as the well-known fact that Pro residues on polypeptides are breakers or turners of
All researchers agree with the central hydrophobic stretch forming a hairpin structure with a Pro knot at the turn but disagree on the secondary structures of the two hairpin arms. Earlier, the two arms were proposed to be an anti-parallel
It has been hypothesized that the long hydrophobic stretch was evolved from duplications of a trans-membrane peptide in a primitive plant or algae. This could explain the residue symmetry of the 2 arms of the hairpin structure and the length of the 72-residue hydrophobic stretch being 4 times that of a trans-membrane peptide (2 x 2 x approximately 20 residues; Huang, 1996 The N- and C-terminal portions of an oleosin on the surface of a seed OB may act as a receptor for the binding of lipase or glyoxysomes during germination. This possibility can be tested. The test can be made with use of seed lipase protein derived from a cloned lipase gene or with Arabidopsis mutants defective of glyoxysomal surface proteins.
OBs and their constituent TAGs, PLs, and oleosins are all synthesized on the ER. Diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DAG AT), the last enzyme and the only one unique to the synthesis of TAG, as well as enzymes for the synthesis of precursor DAG and PLs, are associated with the rough ER (RER). It is most likely that an alternative TAG-synthesizing enzyme that can transfer the acyl moiety from PLs instead of acyl-CoA to DAG is also located in the ER. The presence of these enzymes in the ER is not surprising in view of the hydrophobicity of the TAG and its metabolic precursors. TAGs synthesized in the ER are sequestered in the hydrophobic region (i.e. the acyl region of the PL bilayer). Continuation of TAG accumulation at a region of the ER forms a budding OB, which is enclosed by a single layer of PLs (Fig. 1C). This budding OB covered with a PL monolayer is stabilized by the inclusion of oleosins to its surface.
The ribosome-mRNA with a nascent oleosin peptide can be guided to the ER via the signal-recognition particle (SRP) pathway. The mRNA for the synthesis of oleosin is associated with the RER. Translation of oleosin mRNA in an in vitro synthesis system is retarded or enhanced when SRP or microsomes are added, respectively (Loer and Herman, 1993
The targeting of oleosin to the ER occurs with use of SRP components and microsomes from yeast, mammals, or plants, and thus the unique aspect of the targeting is the targeting signals in the oleosin molecule. Modified oleosins produced via gene recombination can be tested for their stable insertion into microsomes in vitro or the ER in vivo (Abell et al., 1997
The nascent oleosin polypeptide synthesized or being synthesized on the ER assumes a topology on the basis of its hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions with the PL bilayer. The hydrophilic N- and C-terminal portions interact with the PL layers on the cytosolic side of the ER (Fig. 1C). The central hydrophobic stretch buries itself in the hydrophobic acyl portion of the PL bilayer. There is much evidence from in vivo and in vitro experiments for such a topology of the oleosin (Abell et al., 1997 Both the newly synthesized oleosins and the temporarily located TAGs on the ER diffuse to the budding OBs. This movement is made possible in accordance with the fluid mosaic model of membrane action and thermodynamic considerations. The TAGs and the oleosins will both be more stable in the hydrophobic environment of a budding OB.
A native oleosin stably inserted into the ER diffuses to the budding OB, but a stably inserted artificially modified oleosin may not. The latter scenario has been used to study the signals on the oleosin that allow the protein on the ER to diffuse to the OB (Abell et al., 1997
Oleosins must be on the cytosolic side of the ER to be able to diffuse to the budding OBs. An N-terminal ER targeting peptide from a nonoleosin protein attached to the N terminus of an oleosin, produced via gene cloning, can pull the N-terminal portion of the oleosin but not the hydrophobic stretch with or without the C-terminal portion into the ER lumen (Abell et al., 2002
Can a ribosome-mRNA-oleosin complex be targeted to the ER or budding OBs directly without the involvement of the SRP pathway? All the evidence from in vitro experiments shows that the SRP system can be involved. If the SRP is not involved in vivo, the ribosome-mRNA-oleosin complex with the hydrophobic stretch dangling outward in vitro could bind to the hydrophobic pocket of added SRP. Certainly, it has been shown that in vitro-synthesized oleosin cannot insert into mature OBs co- or posttranslationally (Hills et al., 1993
As the newly synthesized TAGs and oleosins on the ER diffuse to and converge at the budding OB, a gradient of enrichment of these two components should exist from the point of synthesis to the budding OB. This concentration gradient can explain the immunocytochemical observation that more oleosins are present in the ER near the budding OBs (Herman, 1987 When will a budding OB on the ER be released (Fig. 1C)? An early release will generate a smaller OB, and vice versa. The size of an OB is determined partly or completely by the relative amount or rate of synthesis of oils and oleosins. High-oil maize kernels (having a high oil-to-oleosin ratio) generated by breeding have larger OBs, whereas low-oil kernels have smaller OBs with irregularly shaped surface. If the cells do not synthesize oleosins, as those in the fatty mesocarp of fruits, the OBs become very large (following paragraph). Is there a special mechanism for the physical release of the budding OB from the ER? The oleosins accumulated on the bud surface may interact among themselves to produce a physical force of constriction at the neck of the bud, thereby releasing the OB. Or, the physical release may require specific proteins (e.g. dynamins) or actions of the ER or cytosol. This possibility can be tested by screening for Arabidopsis mutants whose seeds have larger or smaller OBs or only budding OBs with use of light microscopy after lipid staining; some of these mutants may be defective in the action for the physical release of OBs from the ER. In the fatty mesocarp of fruits such as avocado (Persea americana), oil palm (Elaeis guineensis), and olive (Olea europaea), each cell has only several large lipid globules, which occupy the bulk of the cell volume. There is little or no oleosins on the lipid globules. The mesocarp lipids are for attraction to animals for seed dispersion and thus are not required to be in small entities as the OBs in seeds. Mostly likely, the TAGs are synthesized in the ER, as are the seed OBs, but without the cosynthesis of oleosins (Fig. 1C). As a consequence, the budding OB enclosed only by PL becomes larger before it is released from the ER; this is equivalent to the synthesis of larger OBs in maize kernels having a high oil-to-oleosin ratio. It is possible that the mesocarp cells can be modified to synthesize small OBs instead of large lipid globules if oleosin is allowed to be cosynthesized via genetic engineering. Although conceptually this genetic engineering project can be easily achieved, in practice it is difficult because the better-known avocado, oil palm, and olive containing fatty mesocarp are tree crops.
The presence of oleosins in tapetum cells of anthers in Arabidopsis and Brassica was discovered a decade ago from unexpected gene cloning results (de Oliveira et al., 1993
In Arabidopsis, nine genes encode the tapetum oleosins, eight of which are in tandem on chromosome 5 (Kim et al., 2002
Tapetum oleosins are located in a novel organelle called the tapetosome (Wu et al., 1997
The contents of the tapetosomes and elaioplasts are selectively retained and discharged to the anther locule after the death of the tapetum cells during the final stage of anther development. The oleosins, but not the TAGs of the tapetosomes, and the steryl esters, but not the structural protein PAP of the elaioplasts, are selectively retained and transferred to the pollen surface, forming the bulk of the pollen coat (Wu et al., 1997
Although the steryl esters and other lipids on the pollen form a useful waterproofing layer, the function of the abundant oleosins there is not clear. In Brassica, the predominant 45- or 48-kD oleosin on the pollen has been cleaved selectively into two fragments, one containing the N-terminal portion and the central hydrophobic stretch, and the other the long hydrophilic C-terminal portion (Ross and Murphy, 1996 Because of its Gly-rich nature, this oleosin (and extrapolating to other oleosins) on the pollen has been speculated to be involved in interacting with the cell walls of the stigma cells. Such a speculation should be taken with caution. Oleosins have undergone rapid evolutionary changes, and both the tapetum and seed oleosins have repeats of short peptides at the C termini; some of these repeats have high Gly contents, whereas others do not. The rapidity and extensiveness of the changes at the C termini may reflect the minimal structural constraints on this part of the protein to perform functions. The high Gly contents at the C termini of oleosins may be fortuitous, and certainly the Gly-rich C termini in some seed oleosins do not have an apparent function for interaction with the cell wall. In fact, the short repeats at the C termini of the most abundant tapetum oleosins have not just high Gly content but also high Ser and Lys content, making the oleosin also Ser-rich and Lys-rich (the Arabidopsis 53-kD oleosin has 26 mol %, 16%, and 14%, and the Brassica 48-kD oleosin 21%, 16%, and 11% Gly, Ser, and Lys, respectively).
An oleosin molecule may serve dual functions on the pollen and subsequently on the stigma because of its amphipathic property. Its N- and C-terminal portions are hydrophilic, and its central portion is hydrophobic. The amphipathic oleosin can act as an emulsifying agent to uniformly coat the pollen with steryl esters and other ingredients. It can also aid water uptake for germination after the pollen grain has landed on the stigma. Brassicaceae have dry stigmas, and water must be drawn from the stigma interior to the pollen for germination and tube growth. Steryl esters and other neutral lipids are not amphipathic, and no other coat ingredient is known to be able to act as a wick. The abundant and amphipathic oleosins could be such a wick. On the basis of these two proposed functions, the addition of repeats of short peptides, which are all fairly hydrophilic, to the C termini of different oleosins and the fragmentation of the Brassica 45- or 48-kD oleosins into two halves do not affect the functioning of the oleosins. The proposed functions are in agreement with the observation that the pollen of an Arabidopsis mutant null in the major pollen coat oleosin does not hydrate efficiently on the stigma (Mayfield and Preuss, 2000
The tapetosome is a novel organelle with a unique morphology (Wu et al., 1997
What is the function of the putative ER-derived vesicles in the tapetosomes? The constituents of their membrane and lumen in comparison with those of the ER cisternae are not known; this information is crucial. These vesicles in the tapetosomes may aid the transfer of oleosins from the lyzed tapetum cells to the pollen surface. They may possess proteins, such as cell incompatibility factors and other signaling proteins, for the pollen surface; these proteins would subsequently exert action on the stigma. They may contain ions such as calcium and boron for the pollen surface; these ions would subsequently modulate the cell wall structures of the stigma. Or, they may contain flavonoids and other secondary metabolites for the pollen surface; these pollen-surface metabolites are well-known but of undefined functions. Subcellular fractionation and modern microscopy can be used to test the presence of these possible ingredients in the tapetosome vesicles and the putative interaction between the ER and the vesicles during biogenesis. Future studies of the tapetum oleosins and tapetosomes should aim at expanding the existing findings to non-Brassicaceae species, exploring the structure and function relationship between the tapetosomes and the ER, pinpointing the roles of the oleosins on pollen, and examining the contents of the putative ER-derived vesicles in the tapetosomes. Working hypotheses exist and are testable. In addition, use of Arabidopsis mutants defective in individual constituents will aid these tests.
Figure 1B was prepared by Dr. Jason Tzen while in the authors' laboratory. Received August 2, 2004; returned for revision September 9, 2004; accepted September 13, 2004.
1 This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (MCB0131358) and by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (National Research Initiative Competitive Grant no. 200001512). www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.051060. * Corresponding author; e-mail anthony.huang{at}ucr.edu; fax 9517874437.
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