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Plant Physiology 138:127-130 (2005) © 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists Abiotic Stress and Plant Genome Evolution. Search for New ModelsPlant Sciences Group, Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United Kingdom (A.A.); Department of Plant Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801 (H.J.B.); and Center for Plant Environmental Stress Physiology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 479072010 (R.A.B.)
The remarkable ability of plants to adapt to many different adverse environments is a fascinating process. Research into the physiology and metabolism of so-called extremophiles not only fosters better understanding of the evolutionary processes that have created the diversity of life as it exists on earth, but also has economic implications for agricultural biotechnology and the development of novel products. The capacity to sequence genomes and the availability of novel molecular tools have now catapulted biological research into eras of genomics and post-genomics, creating an opportunity to apply genomic techniques to extremophile models. This has led plant scientists to search for such models among the relatives of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), the most universally used species in molecular plant research owing to its many technical advantages and the wealth of available biological information. A workshop held in Paris in September 2004 united scientists from the United States, Canada, Japan, Israel, and Europe under the header Integrating International Research on Plant Abiotic Stress Tolerance Using Arabidopsis Relative Model Systems (ARMS): Thellungiella halophila. The aim of this Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)-funded meeting, coorganized by Anna Amtmann (University of Glasgow, UK) and Arnould Savouré (University of Paris VI, France), was to explore the use of Thellungiella as a model extremophile and to develop strategies for its development by the international community.
T. halophila (salt cress; synonymous to Thellungiella salsuginea; Al-Shebaz et al., 1999
There was a general consensus among conferees that differential salt tolerance of the two species is mirrored by differential ion homeostasis. In contrast with Arabidopsis, Thellungiella restricts Na+ accumulation in the shoots while maintaining superior uptake capacity for K+ (Inan et al., 2004
Ion transport pathways in Thellungiella responsible for Na+ and K+ uptake are studied in the laboratory of Anna Amtmann (Volkov et al., 2004
Another important aspect of salt tolerance is the accumulation of compatible solutes in the cytoplasm to osmotically balance the ions that accumulate in the vacuole during salt adaptation (Inan et al., 2004
The chemical composition of leaf cuticular waxes from Arabidopsis and two Thellungiella ecotypes has been analyzed (Teusink et al., 2002
High DNA sequence homology allows for the use of Arabidopsis microarray platforms for expression profiling of Thellungiella. Full-length cDNA arrays (Seki et al., 2002 Arabidopsis arrays deliver information about close homologs of Arabidopsis genes, but only a Thellungiella genome sequence and Thellungiella-specific transcript profiles can identify the novel stress-responsive genes that have evolved in this species. Barbara Moffatt (University of Waterloo, Canada) reported on the isolation of >3,000 nonredundant expressed sequence tags (ESTs) from cDNA libraries of the Yukon ecotype and spotting them onto slides. Hybridizations with this Thellungiella array have identified several species-specific genes that are regulated by salt, drought, and/or cold. These genes are being examined using genetic and molecular analyses. An analysis by cDNA-AFLP of about 3,000 transcripts in the laboratory of Erik Souer yielded 17 Thellungiella genes that were either up- or down-regulated by salt stress.
What promotes Thellungiella from a mere curiosity to a model system is its amenability to molecular techniques and, hence, its accessibility for genomic and post-genomic approaches. Indispensable molecular tools for Thellungiella are under construction in the United States, Canada, China, and Japan. Altogether 1,800 EST sequences from the Shandong ecotype have been deposited at the National Center for Biotechnology Information under the names T. halophila and T. salsuginea (Wang et al., 2004 Jian-Kang Zhu introduced work of several groups in China active in Thellungiella research and outlined new genomic tools available, including a BIBAC2 expression library (Qi Xie, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing) and libraries in GATEWAY vectors for overexpression and green fluorescent protein labeling of Thellungiella proteins in Arabidopsis (Chengbin Xiang, University of Science and Technology, Anhui, China). Transgenic Arabidopsis lines are being screened for increased salt tolerance and patterns of green fluorescent protein expression. Ethylmethane sulfonate and T-DNA insertion mutant lines of Thellungiella have been created by Jian-Kang Zhu and Ray Bressan (Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN). Ongoing screens include germination and growth on salt, rescue from salt, growth on the Pro analog azetidine, and lack of vernalization requirement. These lines are available to interested researchers for screening projects. A collection of promoter regions of stress-induced Thellungiella genes and RNAi lines for assessment of stress relevance were produced by Hans Bohnert's group. Some BAC sequences have now been obtained by Hans Bohnert and Jian-Kang Zhu. Comparison with the Arabidopsis genome indicates syntenic regions that show insertions absent from the Arabidopsis genome. Whereas most groups represented at the Paris meeting work with the Shandong ecotype originating from the seacoast of northeast China, Marilyn Griffith (University of Waterloo, Canada) and colleagues collected a Thellungiella ecotype from alkaline salt flats in the Yukon Territory of Canada. The habitat of ecotype Yukon is characterized by a semiarid climate with a very short growing season. The permafrost soils are saturated with calcium carbonate, magnesium sulfate, and sodium chloride and are deficient in essential macronutrients. This ecotype is also far more freezing tolerant than Arabidopsis, with LT50 values of 13°C for nonacclimated plants and 19°C when acclimated. Hui Zhang, Ziyi Cao (China Agriculture University, Beijing), and Ray Bressan collected additional ecotypes that are being developed as separate lines. In addition to ecotypes Shandong and Yukon, the collection includes ecotypes from Colorado and Xinjiang and other provinces in China with extreme climate conditions, which should greatly facilitate map-based cloning of mutated genes. Ray Bressan reported that about 80% of EST loci examined between Shandong and Yukon ecotypes showed single nucleotide polymorphisms. Seeds of another recognized Thellungiella species, Thellungiella parvula, have been collected in Central Turkey and are available from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center in Columbus, Ohio. This species is as salt tolerant as T. halophila (salsuginea) but has distinct morphological features and shows additional flood tolerance. Physiological differences between Thellungiella ecotypes and species are currently being characterized, with particular emphasis on differences in germination and flowering times.
Protocols for physiological experiments, plant maintenance, and molecular techniques were discussed at workshop sessions. Thellungiella exhibits the typical extremophile features that can pose difficulties when adapting protocols originally established for Arabidopsis. In particular, extended periods of germination and flowering, especially under nonoptional conditions, have to be taken into account when carrying out phenotypic analysis and transformation. Ray Bressan discussed practical tips on plant health, stratification, and vernalization requirements and for the improvement of transformation rates. This and other practical information may be retrieved from (or contributed to) the Web site http://thellungiella.org. The participants recognized that the individual choice of experimental material (field or laboratory) and treatments (identical stress conditions or conditions that provoke similar stress) depended on the particular question investigated. The group decided on a list of parameters that should be considered and documented in future reports, to be available at the Web site. Workshops also identified knowledge gaps in Thellungiella characteristics, including physiological parameters (e.g. membrane potential, cellular morphology, seed viability) and accompanying factors (e.g. developmental stage, light, ionic background), that still await systematic evaluation.
Thellungiella research is well under way, generating results on physiology, gene expression, and biochemistry that distinguish this extremophile from its helpless cousin Arabidopsis, making it a valuable model for the study of abiotic stress tolerance. Genomic tools in place and being created will amplify its potential as an experimental system. Research efforts in the following areas should be intensified: (1) transporter genes and signaling pathways affecting ion homeostasis under salt stress; (2) the biochemistry and regulation of metabolic pathways leading to the synthesis of compatible solutes and maintenance of metabolic activity under stress; and (3) the genes involved in protein protection and injury repair during extreme salt shock, drought, and cold stress. Essential resources needed for the immediate future are as follows. (1) Transcript libraries. In particular, tagged full-length libraries will facilitate the identification of Arabidopsis/Thellungiella paralogs and the discovery of novel alleles through reciprocal transformation studies. (2) Saturation mutagenesis of the genome. Collections of T-DNA insertion lines for forward and reverse genetic approaches to discover stress-related genes require consistent and efficient transformation protocols for Thellungiella. This will make possible the in planta functional dissection of genes through the exciting ability to exchange genes and gene domains and promoters between the two species. (3) A genomic-scale effort to screen gain-of-function lines using BIBAC2 transformation of Thellungiella genes into Arabidopsis. (4) A genome sequence. To allow the plant science community to fully exploit the tremendous potential of this extremophile model, large-scale sequencing of the Thellungiella genome was considered a most urgent issue. The Thellungiella genome sequence could immediately be merged with the superior Arabidopsis tools and thus provide ample opportunity for comparative functional genomics, e.g. an immediate tool box of PCR markers for map-based cloning, for gene identification from insertion tag cloning, etc. Jian-Kang Zhu emphasized the importance of data sharing within the scientific community as a requisite for progress, and all participants expressed their wish to intensify collaboration. As a result of the meeting, a Web page is developing (http://thellungiella.org) that will give users access to genomic tools, research data, and technical protocols. Future meetings, open to all interested, will be announced on this page. We invite the community to consider the Thellungiella model for their research and to take advantage of its obvious potential to deepen our understanding of plant genome evolution and abiotic stress responses. The Amalfi coast of Italy is under consideration for a follow-up meeting to begin to reduce stress on the participants.
We thank the BBSRC (UK) for financial support of the meeting and all participants for their comments on the manuscript. Received January 20, 2005; returned for revision January 28, 2005; accepted January 28, 2005.
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.105.059972. * Corresponding author; e-mail a.amtmann{at}bio.gla.ac.uk; fax 00441413304447.
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