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First published online December 23, 2004; 10.1104/pp.104.053082 Plant Physiology 137:209-219 (2005) © 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists Generation of Active Pools of Abscisic Acid Revealed by In Vivo Imaging of Water-Stressed Arabidopsis1Lehrstuhl für Botanik, Technische Universität München, D85354 Freising, Germany (A.C., T.H., I.T., E.G.); and Lehrstuhl für Pflanzenphysiologie, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, D44801 Bochum, Germany (A.M.)
A noninvasive, cell-autonomous reporter system was developed to monitor the generation and distribution of physiologically active pools of abscisic acid (ABA). ABA response (abi1-1) and biosynthesis (aba2-1) mutants of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) were used to validate the system in the presence and absence of water stress. In the absence of water stress, low levels of ABA-dependent reporter activation were observed in the columella cells and quiescent center of the root as well as in the vascular tissues and stomata of cotyledons, suggesting a nonstress-related role for ABA in these cell types. Exposure of seedlings to exogenous ABA resulted in a uniform pattern of reporter expression. In marked contrast, reporter expression in response to drought stress was predominantly confined to the vasculature and stomata. Surprisingly, water stress applied to the root system resulted in the generation of ABA pools in the shoot but not in the root. The analysis of the response dynamics revealed a spread of physiologically active ABA from the vascular tissue into the areoles of the cotyledons. Later, ABA preferentially activated gene expression in guard cells. The primary sites of ABA action identified by in planta imaging corresponded to the sites of ABA biosynthesis, i.e. guard cells and cells associated with vascular veins. Hence, water stress recognized by the root system predominantly results in shoot-localized ABA action that culminates in a focused response in guard cells.
Abscisic acid (ABA) plays a major role in plants' responses to biotic and abiotic stresses; increases in ABA levels have been reported during salt, cold, drought exposure, and wounding (Zeevaart and Creelman, 1988
Although ABA is considered to be a "stress hormone" (Zeevaart and Creelman, 1988
During water stress, ABA is thought to be generated in the root and transported to the shoot to mediate stomatal closure as well as more general adaptive shoot responses. Our understanding of the effect of drought stress on the generation of ABA pools in intact plants has to date relied largely on whole leaf and xylem sap measurements (Jackson, 1993
For a better understanding of the regulatory role of ABA as an adaptive signal during drought stress, information about the dynamics of generation and distribution of physiologically active ABA pools is necessary. The comprehensive analysis of ABA action requires an evaluation of phytohormone action in a three-dimensional, cell-autonomous manner and, preferably, in vivo with noninvasive tools to reduce the impact of experimental manipulation. Several systems for in planta imaging were established, including luciferase (LUC)-based reporters (Millar et al., 1995 In this report, we used two ABA-specific promoters to analyze ABA-indicative reporter responses at the whole plant level in a noninvasive system with single cell resolution. The study revealed insights into the spatial and temporal pattern of ABA action in the presence and absence of water stress.
Development and Validation of ABA-Specific, Sensitive Reporter Systems
Two ABA-specific promoters were used in this study, pLTI65/pRD29B (Nordin et al., 1993
Reporter activation was seen above 0.3 µM and was saturated at approximately 30 µM in both the root and cotyledons (Fig. 1). The sensitivity and the dynamic range of pAtHB6::LUC at micromolar concentrations of ABA argue for the suitability of the reporter system to detect changes in endogenous ABA levels, at least during conditions of elevated phytohormone concentrations. To confirm this, we tested the ability of the pAtHB6::LUC and pRD29B::LUC reporter systems to respond to moderate water stress (
In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), both ABA-deficient and ABA-insensitive mutants have been isolated (Koornneef et al., 1998 In the wild type, the intensity of reporter activation in the shoot depended on the water potential of the root medium (Fig. 3A). Within the water potential examined ranging from 0.2 to 1.0 MPa, a reporter response was detectable below 0.4 MPa, with maximal induction of up to 40-fold at 1.0 MPa. With roots exposed to Murashige and Skoog medium (approximately 0.2 MPa) and Murashige and Skoog containing 80 mM mannitol (0.4 MPa), no induction of pAtHB6::LUC expression was observed in the wild type or in the mutants aba2-1 and abi1-1 (Fig. 3A). These water potentials were not sufficient to elevate detectably the ABA level either (Fig. 3B). The endogenous ABA level increased below 0.4 MPa and concomitant with reporter induction up to 100-fold at 1.0 MPa in wild type. ABA levels rose 14-fold in abi1-1 shoots at 1.0 MPa, whereas no increase in reporter expression occurred in the aba2-1. The results emphasize water-stress- and ABA-dependent activation of pAtHB6::LUC expression.
Distribution of ABA Pools in the Absence of Stress Although ABA is thought to play important roles in the absence of stress, the mode and sites of ABA action under such conditions have not been elucidated. We therefore monitored ABA pools in well-watered plants using our ABA-specific promoters to drive the expression of both LUC and GUS reporter genes (Figs. 4 and 5). Well-watered pAtHB6::LUC and pRD29B::LUC seedlings revealed a faint but detectable LUC expression throughout the seedling (Fig. 4A) with no prominent recognizable areas of increased reporter activity in the absence of exogenous ABA. Low levels of GUS expression were detected in the shoot apical meristem, cotyledonary veins, guard cells, and in cells of the cotyledon hydathode (Fig. 5, A and F). In the root, the pRD29B::GUS plants showed clearly localized reporter expression in columella cells and the root quiescent center (Fig. 5P).
Visualization of GUS expression in cells of the root and hypocotyl stele required prolonged staining. Analysis of pRD29B::GUS reporter expression in the ABA-deficient aba2-1 or in the ABA-insensitive abi1-1 mutant backgrounds suggested that the pattern of reporter activity of pRD29B::GUS seedlings reflects gene regulation controlled indeed by endogenous ABA that escapes detection by the LUC system (Fig. 4A). In conclusion, our findings indicate that in the absence of stress, ABA signaling occurs in specific tissues and cell types.
Water stress induces ABA biosynthesis and, as a consequence, elevated ABA levels are found in water-stressed plants (Harris et al., 1988
Water stress (
Current models postulate that, in response to water withdrawal, ABA pools are generated in the root and translocated to the shoot. It seemed surprising that our reporter systems failed to detect significant ABA pools in root tissue of water-stressed plants. We therefore reevaluated our findings by directly measuring ABA concentrations of shoot and root tissue 24 h after application of water stress (
Dynamics of ABA Action in Response to Osmotic Stress
The above experiments document the sites of ABA action 1 d after the onset of water stress. The LUC reporter is well suited for monitoring changes of reporter expression within hours (Millar et al., 1992 In the shoot, reporter expression was just detectable and evenly distributed at the onset of the experiment (Fig. 8, A, F, and K). The signal increased within 2 h of stress exposure in hypocotyl and cotyledons (Fig. 8B). Four hours after the application of drought stress, reporter activation was prominent around the vasculature of the cotyledons (Fig. 8, C and H) and subsequently dissipated throughout the cotyledon (6 h; Fig. 8, D and I). Thereafter, LUC expression within the cotyledons culminated more and more in stomata and clearly focused in guard cells at time point 14 h (compare Fig. 8, M, N, O, and Q). In roots, only background levels of reporter activity were detectable at time points 2 to 6 h (data not shown). However, a clear signal increase was observed in roots stressed for 10 and 14 h along the root vasculature that extended into the veins of hypocotyl and cotyledons (Fig. 8, E and S). Later on, the reporter response in the root decreased close to resting levels within 24 h after stress initiation. The dynamics of LUC activation were comparably observed with the pRD29B::LUC line, however, at a reduced sensitivity. In addition, a parallel analysis of pRD29B::LUC lines in the aba2-1 and abi1-1 backgrounds confirmed the ABA specificity of the signals recorded (data not shown).
To study the distribution of active ABA pools in planta in the presence and absence of water stress, we made use of the noninvasive LUC reporter gene under the control of the ABA-specific promoters pAtHB6 and pRD29B. We used abi1-1 and aba2-1 mutant backgrounds to validate the system. ABA-specific in vivo imaging revealed the presence and relative abundance of physiologically active pools of ABA at the whole seedling level with single cell resolution. The pAtHB6 promoter was more ABA sensitive than the pRD29B, and the GUS reporter appears to be advantageous for monitoring very low levels of ABA-controlled gene expression not discerned by the LUC reporter. A difference in reporter stability (de Ruijter et al., 2003
Current models postulate that water stress sensed by the root system generates ABA within the root, which subsequently is translocated to the shoot for regulation of transpiration (Wilkinson and Davies, 2002
Under the assumption that this model is correct, a potential explanation for our finding may be the rapid export of ABA from roots to shoots, such that ABA generated de novo in the root is efficiently depleted. Thus, changes in pool sizes could be too small to be detected. However, we are tempted to speculate that water stress sensed by the root induces a long distance-acting signal, which triggers ABA biosynthesis in the shoot. Such a concept is supported by grafting experiments, which revealed that ABA biosynthesis of tomato roots exposed to low-water potentials is not sufficient to induce proper stomatal closure in ABA-deficient shoots (Holbrook et al., 2002
In well-watered plants, ABA-specific gene expression was localized to the root columella, the cells of the quiescent center, and vascular tissues of root and shoot. Root tips are known as sites of ABA accumulation in the absence of stress (Rivier et al., 1977
The quiescent center of the root meristem comprises four cells, the so-called stem cells, which are mitotically inactive due to an arrest in the cell cycle (Dolan et al., 1993
Ten hours after the application of water stress to the root system, ABA pools were found almost exclusively in the stomata and vasculature of the shoot. The pattern of ABA action seems to coincide with sites of ABA biosynthesis. ABA aldehyde oxidase AAO3 catalyzes the final step in ABA biosynthesis (Seo et al., 2000
Despite the differential response of organs and cell types observed in planta during water stress, the whole plant has the capacity to respond to ABA as shown by exogenous ABA administration. This is conceivable because adaptation of a plant to low water potentials requires the concerted effort of the multicellular organism. Reduced water availability to root cells is counteracted by enhancement of the driving force of water uptake, the cellular osmotic potential. ABA provides a signal to mediate osmotic increase in root cells (Robertson et al., 1990
The communication between root and shoot during water stress as well as the role of ABA in this process are still a conundrum (Sobeih et al., 2004
Plant Materials and Growth Conditions
Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seeds were surface sterilized for 25 min with 80% ethanol containing 0.1% (v/v) Triton X-100 and for 3 min with 3% sodium hypochlorite solution. Sterilized seeds were then rinsed 5 times with sterile water and subsequently spread onto petri dishes containing Murashige and Skoog medium (Murashige and Skoog, 1962
The RD29B promoter (1,771 to 25) was PCR-amplified by using Arabidopsis (ecotype Columbia [Col-0]) genomic DNA as template and the primers 5'-TCCCCGCGGCTCAAGTTTACTTCATCC-3' and 5'-GCGGATCCTTCAAGTGAATCAATCATCAAAC-3'. These primers introduced single BamHI and SacII sites into the promoter fragment, which was fused with the GUS gene derived from pBI121 (Jefferson et al., 1987
Arabidopsis reporter lines were generated by genomic integration of reporter genes consisting of either a pAtHB6 or pRD29B promoter fragment fused to the LUC or GUS gene using Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain MP90 and Arabidopsis plants ecotype Col-0 and RLD as described (Meyer et al., 1994
For ABA exposure experiments, 4-d-old seedlings were transferred to Murashige and Skoog agar plates containing 5 g/L Suc and different concentrations of (+) cis-trans-ABA (Lomon Bio Technology, Deyang City, China). Seedlings were then sprayed with the same ABA concentration as supplied with the agar media in 10 mM MES buffer, pH 5.8. Exposure time to ABA was 24 h unless otherwise indicated. For water stress treatments, seedlings were transferred onto agar plates that contained different concentrations of mannitol (Figs. 2, 3, and 7) or that had been equilibrated with PEG6000 (Figs. 4, 5, 6, and 8; Fluka Chemie GmbH, Buchs, Switzerland) solutions of different concentrations to adjust water potentials according to van der Weele et al. (2000)
Transgenic seedlings carrying the GUS reporter gene were fixed in cold (4°C) 90% acetone and stained for GUS activity according to Jefferson et al. (1987)
ABA was extracted from seedlings and quantified by gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry according to Müller et al. (2002)
For imaging of LUC activity, plants were sprayed with a 1-mM solution of luciferin (PJK, Kleinblittersdorf, Germany) in 10 mM MES, pH 7.0, 0.01% Tween 80. Light emission was detected by an intensified CCD camera (ORCAII ERG; Hamamatsu Photonics, Hamamatsu City, Japan) equipped with a Schneider Xenon 0.95/25 Objective (Schneider, Kreuznach, Germany) in a dark box. Collection of light started after 10 min preincubation in the dark for 10 min with 4 x 4 pixel binning. The intensity of light emission from plant organs of interest was measured after background subtraction using Simple PCI 5.2 software (Compix, Cranberry Township, PA). Gray levels of pixels within the measuring area corrected for background activity are referred to as CCD-RLU). Detection of luminescence on a cellular level was performed with an inverted microscope (Axiovert 200; Carl Zeiss, Göttingen, Germany) equipped with Fluar objectives and the CCD camera mounted to the microscope base port. Seedlings were placed in a drop of luciferin solution in small (50 x 20 x 2 mm) self-constructed chambers that were sealed at the bottom with a coverslip. Seedlings were covered with black cheesecloth to reduce light reflection, and the whole chamber was loosely covered with a coverslip to reduce evaporation. Pixel binning was between 1 and 4, and exposure times varied between 10 and 30 min as indicated. Upon request, materials integral to the findings presented in this publication will be made available in a timely manner to all investigators on similar terms for noncommercial research purposes. To obtain material, please contact Dr. E. Grill, grill{at}botanik.biologie.tu-muenchen.de.
We thank the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie for their financial support and F. Assaad and U. Schuberth for help in preparing the manuscript. Received September 7, 2004; returned for revision November 29, 2004; accepted November 29, 2004.
1 This work was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Fonds der Chemischen Industrie. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.053082. * Corresponding author; e-mail alexander.christmann{at}wzw.tum.de; fax 498161715432.
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