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First published online April 22, 2005; 10.1104/pp.105.060137 Plant Physiology 138:196-206 (2005) © 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists Functional Characterization and Expression Analysis of a Gene, OsENT2, Encoding an Equilibrative Nucleoside Transporter in Rice Suggest a Function in Cytokinin Transport1RIKEN (The Institute of Physical and Chemical Research) Plant Science Center, Tsurumi-ku, Yokohama 2300045, Japan
We identified four genes for potential equilibrative nucleoside transporters (ENTs) from rice (Oryza sativa; designated OsENT1 through OsENT4). Growth analysis of budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) cells expressing OsENTs showed that OsENT2 transported adenosine and uridine with high affinity (adenosine, Km = 3.0 µM; uridine, Km = 0.7 µM). Purine or pyrimidine nucleosides and 2'-deoxynucleosides strongly inhibited adenosine transport via OsENT2, suggesting that OsENT2 possesses broad substrate specificity. OsENT2-mediated adenosine transport was resistant to the typical inhibitors of mammalian ENTs, nitrobenzylmercaptopurine ribonucleoside, dilazep, and dipyridamole. The transport activity was maximal at pH 5.0 and decreased slightly at lower as well as higher pH. In competition experiments with various cytokinins, adenosine transport by OsENT2 was inhibited by isopentenyladenine riboside (iPR). Direct measurements with radiolabeled cytokinins demonstrated that OsENT2 mediated uptake of iPR (Km = 32 µM) and trans-zeatin riboside (Km = 660 µM), suggesting that OsENT2 participates in iPR transport in planta. In mature plants, OsENT2 was predominantly expressed in roots. The OsENT2 promoter drove the expression of the -glucuronidase reporter gene in the scutellum during germination and in vascular tissues in germinated plants, suggesting a participation of OsENT2 in the retrieval of endosperm-derived nucleosides by the germinating embryo and in the long-distance transport of nucleosides in growing plants, respectively.
Nucleotides participate in various biochemical processes in plants (Stasolla et al., 2003
Nucleosides are readily taken up into plant cells. Pollen cells of petunia (Petunia hybrida) are able to uptake exogenous nucleosides via both an active transport system and a facilitated diffusion (Kamboj and Jackson, 1984
Although plant cells are capable of absorbing nucleosides, our knowledge of the mechanism of the process is limited. In general, nucleoside transporters have been categorized into concentrative nucleoside transporters (CNTs) and equilibrative nucleoside transporters (ENTs), which share no structural similarity (Hyde et al., 2001 Here, we report the isolation of four ENT genes from rice designated OsENT1 through OsENT4. We demonstrate that OsENT2 is predominantly expressed in the vasculature and that its gene product can transport a wide spectrum of nucleosides, including nucleoside-type CKs. Potential functions of OsENT2 during rice development and participation in CK nucleoside transport are discussed.
Isolation of Members of the ENT Gene Family in Rice To identify rice ENT genes, a BLAST search was performed in rice genome databases using the amino acid sequence of AtENT1 as a query. Four ENT genes were found and designated OsENT1, OsENT2, OsENT3, and OsENT4. The genes are distributed over two chromosomes (chromosome 8, OsENT1; chromosome 7, OsENT2, OsENT3, and OsENT4). The bacterial artificial chromosome clone (accession no. AP005125) on chromosome 7 contains a tandem repeat of three related OsENTs (OsENT2, OsENT3, and OsENT4). The cDNA clones of all OsENTs were found in the database of full-length cDNA clones from japonica rice at the Knowledge-based Oryza Molecular biological Encyclopedia (KOME; http://cdna01.dna.affrc.go.jp/cDNA): OsENT1 (accession no. AK059439), OsENT2 (AK102045, AK058524), OsENT3 (AK101098), and OsENT4 (AK065096). We obtained the cDNA clones of OsENT2 and OsENT4 from the Rice Genome Resource Center (www.rgrc.dna.affrc.go.jp). The OsENT1 cDNA clone deposited in the database at KOME appeared truncated, while the OsENT3 cDNA clone was not available from any of the above sources. Therefore, we isolated the cDNA clones of OsENT1 and OsENT3 by reverse transcription-PCR. The cDNA clones of OsENT1, OsENT2, and OsENT3 contained reading frames of 423, 418, and 418 amino acids, respectively (Fig. 1A). These three OsENTs possessed 11 putative TMs (Fig. 1A). On the other hand, the OsENT4 cDNA clone contained a reading frame of 276 amino acids (Fig. 1A). Comparisons of the nucleotide sequence of the OsENT4 cDNA clone with that of the bacterial artificial chromosome clone (AP005125) revealed that OsENT4 carried a stop codon in the eighth exon. Thus, OsENT4 may be a pseudogene, at least in the Nipponbare cultivar, or it may encode a truncated form of typical ENT. OsENT1 exhibited 65% and 45% amino acid sequence identity with AtENT1 and AtENT8, respectively. OsENT2 and OsENT3 shared 71% amino acid sequence identity. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that OsENT2 and OsENT3 are more highly homologous to a group of Arabidopsis ENTs consisting of AtENT2 through AtENT7 than to AtENT1 or AtENT8 (Fig. 1B).
Expression Patterns of OsENTs in Mature Rice Plants To evaluate levels of OsENT expression in different organs, the accumulation of OsENT transcripts was analyzed by quantitative real-time PCR using RNA samples extracted from various organs of mature rice plants. The transcripts of OsENTs were detected in all organs tested, but their distribution patterns differed (Fig. 2). Transcripts of OsENT2, OsENT3, and OsENT4 accumulated predominantly in roots, whereas that of OsENT1 did not show any pronounced preference. Accumulation levels of the OsENT2 transcript were significantly higher than those of the other OsENTs in all organs tested, suggesting that OsENT2 is the dominant form of the rice ENT family.
Growth Analysis of Yeast Expressing OsENTs
Under normal conditions, yeast cells do not uptake exogenous adenosine because of the lack of an endogenous transport system for the nucleoside and cannot use it as a purine source (Mässer et al., 1999
Transport Properties of Yeast Cells Expressing OsENT2
The properties of OsENT2-mediated adenosine and uridine transport were examined using the ade2 and
The sensitivity of OsENT2-mediated uptake of [3H]adenosine uptake to typical inhibitors of mammalian ENT proteins, such as NBMPR, dilazep, dipyridamole, and the protonophore, carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl-hydrazone (CCCP), was tested. The effector concentrations and duration of the treatment in our experiments were almost identical to those in previous studies on AtENTs (Möhlmann et al., 2001
OsENT2 Transports Nucleoside-Type CKs in Yeast
Recently, the Arabidopsis purine transporters AtPUP1 and AtPUP2 have been shown to translocate adenine and its various derivatives, such as caffeine, and as well as CK nucleobases (Gillissen et al., 2000
OsENT2 Is Predominantly Expressed in the Vasculature and during Germination
To study the tissue specificity of OsENT2 expression throughout plant development, the promoter region was isolated and fused to the Escherichia coli In 1-d-old seedlings, a strong signal for OsENT2 promoter activity was detected predominantly in the root primordium and in the scutellum (Fig. 7A). Intense staining was also observed in the root and in the coleoptile tip of 2-d-old seedlings (Fig. 7B). OsENT2 mRNA accumulation was induced within 6 h after the initiation of germination by imbibition of the dry seeds, indicating that OsENT2 gene expression is up-regulated at the earliest stages of germination (Fig. 7C). The GUS staining in the scutellum was observed for at least 2 weeks after the start of imbibition (data not shown).
In adult plants, the OsENT2 promoter was active in the vasculature throughout the whole plant (roots, stems, leaves, and grains; Fig. 8, AF). In roots, GUS staining derived from the OsENT2 promoter activity was observed within the stele and lateral roots, but not in epidermal, exodermal, or cortical cells (Fig. 8, A and B). In leaf sheaths, GUS activity was detected exclusively in the phloem (Fig. 8D). In 10-DPA-old grains, the GUS signal was found in the vascular bundle on the dorsal side and in the inner integument (Fig. 8F). Taken together, these results suggested that OsENT2 participates in the long-distance transport of nucleosides.
In contrast to the Arabidopsis genome, which harbors eight ENT genes, the rice genome contains only four (Fig. 1A). OsENT1, OsENT2, and OsENT3 possessed the 11 putative TMs that are typical of ENTs. On the other hand, OsENT4 appeared to be carboxy-terminally truncated. In this context, it is interesting that the human ENT2 gene (hENT2) is alternatively spliced to produce a number of variants, including a hydrophobic nucleolar family of proteins (Sankar et al., 2002
Growth analysis of yeast cells expressing OsENTs and competition tests indicated that OsENT2 can transport both purine and pyrimidine nucleosides, while OsENT1, OsENT3, and OsENT4 did not exhibit any transport competence (Fig. 3; Table I). Not all ENTs may be functionally expressed in this yeast system: For instance, AtENT8, an Arabidopsis ENT, also did not exhibit transport activity when it was expressed in ade2 and fui1 mutants (Wormit et al., 2004
OsENT2 resembles AtENT1, AtENT3, AtENT4, AtENT6, and AtENT7 (Möhlmann et al., 2001
Our analysis of cloned OsENT2 implicates a role of the ENT as a CK nucleoside transporter. At first sight, the affinity constant for the CK nucleosides, especially that of tZR, may seem high (Fig. 6) compared to the predicted concentration of CKs in plant tissues in the nanomolar range. In some enzymes of the purine salvage pathway and of CK metabolism, the affinity constants and specificity constants have been determined. As for cloned Arabidopsis adenosine kinases, Km values for iPR and adenosine were 3 to 5 µM and 0.3 to 0.5 µM, respectively, while the Vmax/Km for iPR was 100-fold lower than for adenosine (Moffatt et al., 2000
Analysis of OsENT2 promoter:GUS transgenic rice enabled us to deduce the physiological function of OsENT2 (Figs. 7 and 8). OsENT2 was predominantly expressed in the scutellum of the germinating seed (Fig. 7A). The epithelium layer in the dorsal portion of the scutellum elongates and develops during germination and functions as the absorptive tissue of storage reserves from the endosperm (Hoshikawa, 1989
Predominant expression of OsENT2 in vascular tissues throughout the whole plant (Fig. 8, AF), and particularly in the phloem of leaf sheaths (Fig. 8D), suggests an involvement of OsENT2 in the long-distance transport of nucleosides by loading and unloading into and from the phloem, respectively. OsENT2 was expressed in the vascular tissues of grains during the period of seed loading, pointing to a role of OsENT2 in providing grains with nucleosides, possibly derived from senescing tissues where nucleosides are liberated by the nucleolytic breakdown of RNA and DNA. Long-distance translocation of nucleoside-type CKs is believed to occur in the xylem and phloem (Letham, 1994
Distinct distributions of iPR and tZR in phloem and xylem, respectively, were reported in Sinapis alba (Lejeune et al., 1994
Plant Materials and Growth Conditions
For the determination of organ distribution of OsENT mRNA and histochemical analysis, rice (Oryza sativa) L. cv Nipponbare plants were hydroponically grown in an environment-controlled greenhouse at a 12-h-light (30°C)/12-h-dark (25°C) photoperiod as described by Kamachi et al. (1991)
The OsENT genes were identified by BLAST queries in GenBank (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST), The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR rice genome project; http://www.tigr.org/tdb/e2k1/osa1/index.shtml), the DNA Data Bank of Japan (DDBJ; http://www.ddbj.nig.ac.jp/search/blast-j.html), and the rice cDNA database at KOME (http://cdna01.dna.affrc.go.jp/cDNA) using the amino acid sequence of AtENT1 as a search sequence. To amplify cDNAs of OsENT1 and OsENT3 using reverse transcription-PCR, the following primers were used: 5'-AAGATCCCCACCCAAATCCACCTC-3' and 5'-AGCATGGCACTATGATACACTGAC-3' for OsENT1; 5'-GGGTCATCCTAGTTGACTACAAAC-3' and 5'-TGGGAAAAAGACATGTAATGCAACTATG-3' for OsENT3. Total RNA was prepared from 3-week-old seedlings with the RNeasy plant mini kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA) with RNase-free DNase I (Qiagen). cDNA was synthesized by SuperScriptII reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) with oligo(dT)1218 primers. The amplified fragment was cloned into pCR-Blunt-TOPO (Invitrogen) and sequenced to confirm that no substitution had occurred during PCR. Analysis of cDNA and amino acid sequences was carried out using GENETYX-MAC version 11 (Software Development, Tokyo). To investigate phylogenetic relationships among OsENTs and AtENTs, the amino acid sequences were aligned using the ClustalW program (Thompson et al., 1994
Total RNA was prepared from the roots, stems, leaves, and young grains (10 DPA) of ripening rice plants with the RNeasy plant mini kit (Qiagen) and from mature grains by the method of Shirzadegan et al. (1991)
The coding regions of OsENT cDNAs were amplified by PCR using the primers 5'-TGGATCCAAGCGAAAGGCTCAAGAAAGC-3' and 5'-GTCTAGATCAAATGACCCAAAACCAAGC-3' for OsENT1; 5'-GAAGCTTATCATGAGCCTCGAGGTCGCA-3' and 5'-GTCTAGATCACCAGCCTTTTCCTATC-3' for OsENT2; 5'-AGGTACCATGGCATATGGTAAAGGAG-3' and 5'-GTCTAGATCACCACCCTTTACCTATC-3' for OsENT3; 5'-AGGTACCATGGGCAGCTCTTCCTCC-3' and 5'-ACTCGAGCTATCTGTTGCTTAATCG-3' for OsENT4. The amplified fragments were cloned into pCR-Blunt-TOPO (Invitrogen) and sequenced. The OsENT1 cDNA was cut out as a BamHI-XbaI fragment and was cloned into BamHI-XbaI sites of pYES2 (Invitrogen). The OsENT2 cDNA was cut out as a HindIII-XbaI fragment and was ligated into HindIII-XbaI sites of pYES2. The OsENT3 cDNA was cut out as a KpnI-XbaI fragment and was cloned into KpnI-XbaI sites of pYES2. The OsENT4 cDNA was cut out as a KpnI-XhoI fragment and was ligated into KpnI-XhoI sites of pYES2. The resulting plasmids were transformed into a yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) ade2 strain (BY4735, Mat
The uptake of tritiated adenosine, iPR, and tZR was evaluated by using the BY4735 ade2 yeast strain, while that of [3H]uridine was assessed in the yeast mutant
Genomic sequences containing putative promoter regions of OsENT2 (2,012 to 1 bp from the translational initiation codon) were amplified by PCR with genomic DNA. Primers were forward, 5'-GAAGCTTCTTCTTTGATTTTTATGGTCATC-3' and reverse, 5'-AGTCGACGATAAAGTTCACCTGCGCCTATTC-3'. The resulting PCR product was cloned into pCR-Blunt-TOPO (Invitrogen) and verified by complete sequencing. The verified fragments were introduced into the upstream region of the open reading flame of the GUS gene that is inserted into the SmaI-SpeI site of the pCAMBIA1390 vector (CAMBIA, Canberra, Australia).
Agrobacterium tumefaciens (EHA101) carrying the above construct was used to transform rice following the method of Hiei et al. (1994)
Histochemical analysis of GUS activity was performed by the method of Jefferson (1987
iP, tZ, benzyladenine, dihydrozeatin, iPR, tZR, and dihydrozeatin riboside were purchased from Sigma, cis-zeatin from ICN Biomedicals (Irvine, CA), benzyladenine riboside from Fluka (Buchs, Switzerland), and [2-3H]adenosine (TRK423; 814 GBq/mmol) and [5-3H]uridine (TRK178; 1.04 TBq/mmol) from Amersham Biosciences (Uppsala). The preparations and quality checks of [3H]iPR and [3H]tZR were performed as described previously (Takei et al., 2003 Sequence data from this article have been deposited with the EMBL/GenBank data libraries under accession numbers AP005125, AK059439, AK102045, AK058524, AK101098, AK065096, and AB201113.
We thank the Rice Genome Project of the National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences and the Rice Genome Resource Center, Japan, for providing us with full-length cDNAs of OsENT2 and OsENT4. We are grateful to Dr. T. Sakamoto, University of Tokyo, for the kind gift of the pCAMBIA1390-GUS vector and the Agrobacterium EHA101 strain. We also thank Dr. J. Zuo for sharing unpublished data. Received January 28, 2005; returned for revision February 28, 2005; accepted March 4, 2005.
1 This work was supported by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology and by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on functional analysis of genes relevant to agriculturally important traits in rice genome (grant no. IP3003 to H.S.) from the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Japan. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.105.060137. * Corresponding author; e-mail sakaki{at}postman.riken.go.jp; fax 81455039609.
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