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Plant Physiology 138:1185-1194 (2005) © 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists Osmotic Signaling in Plants. Multiple Pathways Mediated by Emerging Kinase FamiliesInstitut des Sciences du Végétal, Unité Propre de Recherche 2355, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 91198 Gif-sur-Yvette cedex, France
To survive and develop normally, plants must constantly perceive changes in their environment and respond properly through a variety of molecular mechanisms. What are the processes by which plant cells sense extracellular modifications, specifically transmit the signal from the outside to the inside of the cell, and ultimately to the nucleus where changes in gene expression may occur? These questions, which are crucial for plant survival and consequently for animal life, are becoming well documented in some aspects. Current knowledge of plant signaling networks was first based on the identification of some receptors that perceive the signal as well as many transcription factors and target genes that mediate the responses. However, the list of the identified regulatory components linking receptors to cellular responses is still largely incomplete and the understanding of molecular mechanisms regulating signal transduction pathways is really poor. One of the most important abiotic stresses for crop productivity concerns plant dehydration. Plants suffer from dehydration under high salinity and drought, as well as low-temperature conditions, all of which cause hyperosmotic stress characterized by a decreased turgor pressure and water loss. Dehydration triggers the biosynthesis of the abscisic acid (ABA) hormone and it has been known for a long time that a significant set of genes, induced by drought, salt, and cold stresses, are also activated by ABA. The use of common components and pathways in plant response to related stresses allows plants to acclimate partially to a range of adverse conditions after exposure to only one specific stress. In addition to these common signaling elements, highly specific signaling mechanisms occur, allowing precise plant adaptation. For example, several genes induced by salt, drought, and cold stress are not responsive to exogenous ABA treatment, indicating the existence of ABA-independent signal transduction cascades in addition to the ABA-mediated pathways. This article briefly describes actual knowledge of the signaling pathways induced by conditions of drought, cold, and high salinity. Little information is available concerning the receptors of osmolarity, whereas much is known about the numerous transcription factors acting in the regulation of gene expression. This abundant knowledge, including recent advances, is summarized here. But the main focus of this article concerns the growing number of identified molecules that catalyze the phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of water stress-signaling proteins. Limited information is available regarding the different groups of plant protein phosphatases and their involvement in osmotic signaling. On the contrary, a significant amount of data concerns the role of plant mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) in osmoregulation. More generally, MAPK cascades are now recognized as major signal transduction mechanisms in plants, as in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and mammals. Interestingly, recent studies have identified novel plant-specific families of protein kinases that play important roles in osmotic signaling pathways. Their phosphorylation activity can be modulated by calcium, either directly (calcium-dependent protein kinase [CDPK]) or via a calcium-binding protein (calcineurin B-like [CBL] sensor and CBL-interacting protein kinase [CIPK]), but can be independent of calcium as well (Suc nonfermenting-related kinase [SnRK] 2). We have particularly emphasized these three emerging families of protein kinases that are presumed to function in plants as mediators of osmotic adaptation. A glossary of different names used for the same signaling component is included to facilitate reading.
AtCPK10: AtCDPK1; AtCPK30: AtCDPK1a; McCPK1: McCDPK1; SOS3: AtCBL4; AtCBL1: SCaBP5; AtCBL2: SCaBP1; AtCBL3: SCaBP3; SOS2: CIPK24, SnRK3.11; CIPK3: PKS12, SnRK3.17; AtMKK1: AtMEK1; SnRK2.4: ASK1, OSKL7; SnRK2.6: OST1, SRKE; SnRK2.8: SRKC, OSKL4; CBF1: DREB1B; CBF2: DREB1C; CBF3: DREB1A; CBF4: DREB1D.
Searching for Osmosensors in Plants
In yeast, hyperosmolarity can be sensed by a two-component system composed of the SLN1 His kinase, the YPD1 phosphorelay intermediate, and the SSK1 response regulator, leading to the activation of the HOG1 MAPK pathway. The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) SLN1 homolog, AtHK1, is able to suppress the salt-sensitive phenotype of the yeast double-mutant sln1
Signal perception at the plasma membrane leads to the production of second messengers that initiate cascades of signaling events. Among them, calcium has been extensively studied and its involvement in osmotic signaling has been recently reviewed (Chinnusamy et al., 2004
Other phospholipids, in particular phosphatidic acid (PA), seem to have important roles in osmotic signaling (Munnik and Meijer, 2001
It is well known that osmotic stresses induce oxidative damage, which can be reduced by the activation of antioxidant enzymes and the biosynthesis of osmolytes acting as reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavengers. However, an increasing number of studies suggest that ROS could also play a signaling role, as in response to biotic stresses in which ROS production is partly due to a plasma membrane NADPH oxidase. Although major ROS production induced by hyperosmotic stress occurs at intracellular sites, it was also shown that a cell wall diamine oxidase (Lin and Kao, 2002
Calcium Sensing: Involvement of CDPKs and CBLs-CIPKs Changes in calcium concentration can be sensed by two kinds of proteins: the sensor relays, including CBL proteins, and the sensor responders, including CDPKs. For sensor relays, the conformational changes induced by calcium binding are relayed to an interacting partner whose structure or activity is then modified. On the contrary, sensor responders display their own enzyme activity, which is directly affected by calcium binding.
The involvement of CDPKs in osmotic signaling has been suggested by the transcriptional induction of CPK genes in response to salinity, cold, or drought (Saijo et al., 2000
The nonenzymatic CBLs interact with kinase partners, the CIPKs, also called salt overly sensitive (SOS) 2-like protein kinases (PKSs) or SnRK3s. A recent review of these two families indicated a complex network of interactions between members of the CBL and CIPK families, which was observed in two-hybrid and in vitro experiments (Gong et al., 2004
Concerning the other proteins of the families, the transcripts of the CIPK3 gene accumulated in response to ABA, cold, and salt stress, and the corresponding protein was proposed to regulate the response pathways to these treatments (Kim et al., 2003
Much interest was focused on MAPKs because of the well-known HOG1 MAPK cascade involved in hyperosmotic signaling in yeast. So far, several MAPKs were shown to be activated by abiotic stresses in different plant species. In Arabidopsis detached leaves, AtMPK4 and AtMPK6 were activated by cold, drought, saline stress, and sorbitol, indicating an important role of these two kinases in a general response to hyperosmotic stresses (Ichimura et al., 2000
In comparison with Arabidopsis, less data are available in other plant species. In tobacco, a rapid and transient activation of the MAPK salicylic acid-induced protein kinase (SIPK) was demonstrated in response to hyperosmolarity induced by several osmolytes (Droillard et al., 2000
Using in-gel kinase assays, several proteins were shown to be activated by hyperosmotic stresses with different features than MAPKs. They are activated in a sustained manner throughout the stress kinetics and they can phosphorylate both myelin basic protein and histone. In tobacco cells, Mikolajczyk et al. (2000)
Very recently, other members of the Arabidopsis SnRK2 family were also demonstrated to be involved in osmotic signaling. Using a family-specific antibody able to recognize the 10 Arabidopsis SnRK2s, it was shown that hyperosmolarity activated at least four members of the family in vivo (Boudsocq et al., 2004
Figure 2 summarizes the different kinase families that have been identified so far as components of hyperosmotic signaling. In addition to these kinases, some plant homologs of shaggy-like protein kinases are likely to play a role, since overexpression of one AtSK induces NaCl stress responses and results in enhanced NaCl tolerance in Arabidopsis (Piao et al., 2001
Protein Phosphatases: The Other Side of the Mirror
Studies have been focused mainly on phosphatases involved in the regulation of MAPKs, which are transiently activated by phosphorylation. Several phosphatases, including protein Tyr phosphatase (PTP), dual-specificity protein Tyr phosphatase (DsPTP), and protein Ser/Thr phosphatase 2C (PP2C), were shown to down-regulate MAPKs that are involved in osmotic signaling. AtPTP1 dephosphorylates AtMPK4 and AtMPK6 in vitro on Tyr, leading to inactivation of the kinases (Huang et al., 2000
Environmental stresses induce the expression of many genes that can be classified into two groups. The first group corresponds to proteins involved in transduction pathways, such as transcription factors, whereas the second group includes effector proteins like the enzymes of osmolyte biosynthesis. Many studies have been focused on transcription factors involved in gene expression regulation and they have been extensively reviewed (Shinozaki et al., 2003
Concerning ABA-dependent pathways, two kinds of cis-acting sequences are involved in ABA-mediated gene expression. The first one is the ABA-responsive element (ABRE). It has been shown that the bZIP transcription factors ABRE-binding factor (ABF)/ABRE binding protein (AREB) can activate the stress-responsive RD29A promoter through binding to the ABRE motifs (Fig. 3, pathway I). This activation is increased by an ABA-induced post-translational modification, e.g. phosphorylation (Uno et al., 2000
On the other hand, ABA-independent expression of stress-responsive genes can occur through dehydration-responsive element (DRE)/C-repeat (CRT) cis-acting elements. The binding factors CBF/DREB1 (CRT-binding factor/DRE-binding factor 1) and DREB2 mediate gene expression in response to cold and drought/salinity, respectively (Fig. 3, pathways VII and III). Interestingly, the CBF4 protein seems to mediate drought response unlike the other CBFs (Haake et al., 2002
This classification in seven distinct pathways suggests that each signal transduction is independent. However, transient expression assays have indicated that CBF and DREB2 proteins could cooperate with ABFs to better activate the RD29A promoter, indicating the existence of cross-talk between ABA-dependent and ABA-independent pathways (Narusaka et al., 2003
Signal transduction cascades, from sensing dehydration to the expression of various stress-responsive genes, have been studied in plants in some aspects, leading to significant knowledge. First of all, the model system of stomata closure in guard cells has opened many interesting studies mainly focused on the involvement of the ABA hormone. Besides this model, information is also available on transcription factors responding to drought, salt, and cold via ABA-dependent or ABA-independent pathways. Concerning the kinase-mediated signal transduction, the SOS pathway, which is specific to salt stress, is probably the most documented and represents a major calcium-mediated pathway for the regulation of plant salt tolerance and ion homeostasis. On the contrary, the other kinase-mediated pathways are still poorly understood, although some components have been identified at the molecular level. For example, the involvement of two Arabidopsis MAPKs, AtMPK4 and AtMPK6, in response to salt or hyperosmolarity, has been well characterized, but studies on upstream protein kinases and phosphatases, which both regulate the MAPKs, are still scarce. Major research domains have been opened recently, with emerging osmotic signaling compounds, like the osmosensors, the second messengers PA and ROS, and the three families of kinases more precisely discussed here. It is worth noting that CDPKs and CIPKs are regulated by calcium, whereas SnRK2 kinases are completely independent of calcium for both their activity and upstream signaling steps. A focus on this novel component is required, notably to get functional evidence in planta on the putative osmosensors or to discover the roles of the numerous members of the CDPK and CIPK families. It is interesting that SnRK2s seem to play an important function in osmotic signaling, with the complete family appearing specifically activated by drought and salt, in contrast to the other involved kinase families, like CDPKs or CIPKs.
Many other components remain to be discovered and some clues can already be mentioned. In particular, information on protein kinase substrates, which may be transcription factors, as well as cytoplasmic or membrane proteins, is very limited. In this regard, the first plant MAPK substrate has been recently identified and corresponds to the rate-limiting enzyme of ethylene biosynthesis. The MAPK acting on this substrate is AtMPK6, which is already known as an important mediator in stress signaling (Liu and Zhang, 2004
We thank Dr. H. Barbier-Brygoo for a critical reading of the manuscript and Dr. R. Oomen for helpful comments. Received February 14, 2005; returned for revision March 25, 2005; accepted March 27, 2005.
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.105.061275. * Corresponding author; e-mail christiane.lauriere{at}isv.cnrs-gif.fr; fax 33169823768.
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