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First published online June 17, 2005; 10.1104/pp.104.057836 Plant Physiology 138:1469-1480 (2005) © 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists Localized Hormone Fluxes and Early Haustorium Development in the Hemiparasitic Plant Triphysaria versicolor1Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, California 95616
Perhaps the most obvious phenotypes associated with chemical signaling between plants are manifested by parasitic species of Orobanchaceae. The development of haustoria, invasive root structures that allow hemiparasitic plants to transition from autotrophic to heterotrophic growth, is rapid, highly synchronous, and readily observed in vitro. Haustorium development is initiated in aseptic roots of the facultative parasite Triphysaria versicolor when exposed to phenolic molecules associated with host root exudates and rhizosphere bioactivity. Morphological features of early haustorium ontogeny include rapid cessation of root elongation, expansion, and differentiation of epidermal cells into haustorial hairs, and cortical cell expansion. These developmental processes were stimulated in aseptic T. versicolor seedlings by the application of exogenous phytohormones and inhibited by the application of hormone antagonists. Surgically dissected root tips formed haustoria if the root was exposed to haustorial-inducing factors prior to dissection. In contrast, root tips that were dissected prior to inducing-factor treatment were unable to form haustoria unless supplemented with indole-3-acetic acid. A transient transformation assay demonstrated that auxin and ethylene-responsive promoters were up-regulated when T. versicolor was exposed to either exogenous hormones or purified haustoria-inducing factors. These experiments demonstrate that localized auxin and ethylene accumulation are early events in haustorium development and that parasitic plants recruit established plant developmental mechanisms to realize parasite-specific functions.
It has been estimated that over 4,000 species of angiosperms are able to directly invade and parasitize other plants (Nickrent, 2003
It is clear from several lines of evidence that parasitic plants evolved from nonparasitic autotrophs (Kuijt, 1969
Parasitic plants in the Orobanchaceae initiate haustorium development in response to specific phenolic derivatives present in host root exudates. The purification and identification of haustorial-inducing factors (HIFs) exploited earlier observations that haustorium development can be visually monitored by applying host root factors to aseptic parasite seedlings in vitro (Atsatt et al., 1978
The early ontogeny of haustorium development has been described for several root parasites including Striga asiatica, Agalinis purpurea, and Triphysaria versicolor (Atsatt and Musselman, 1977
The first phenotype observed upon exposure of parasite roots to HIFs is the almost immediate cessation of root tip elongation. Shortly thereafter, epidermal cells localized in a ring just behind the root tip begin to develop into hairs that upon maturation exude adhesive molecules that bind the haustoria to the host root (Baird and Riopel, 1985
Subsequent developmental processes differ between obligate and facultative parasites. In facultative hemiparasites, haustorium development initiates proximal to the tip meristem. After about 12 h of elongation arrest, the root tip reinitiates its normal developmental program, resulting in one or more haustoria being positioned laterally along the maturing root. In contrast, haustorium development in Striga and Orobanche results in the irreversible differentiation of tip meristem into a primary haustorium that terminates further root growth (Okonkwo and Nwoke, 1978
It has been recently postulated that polar accumulation of auxin is a universal feature of early plant organogenesis (Benková et al., 2003
Exogenous Phytohormones and Early Haustorium Development Early morphogenic changes in parasite roots exposed to HIFs suggested a role for endogenous plant hormones in haustorium initiation and development. Figure 1 is a composite photograph showing root phenotypes in seedlings of the parasite T. versicolor and Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) exposed to HIFs or hormones. When treated with active HIFs, such as Arabidopsis root exudates or DMBQ, T. versicolor roots formed large, well-defined haustoria that are seen as hairy, swollen bulges approximately 0.5 mm in length and 0.3 mm in width. Similar phenotypes were not observed when Arabidopsis roots were treated with HIFs.
Exposure of either T. versicolor or Arabidopsis roots to indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) or the ethylene precursor aminocyclopropanecarboxylic acid (ACC) resulted in some epidermal hair development and/or swelling, though not as localized or defined as obtained with HIFs (Fig. 1). As previously noted (Wolf and Timko, 1991
Previous studies showed that T. versicolor root cultures maintained in the presence of IAA formed haustoria more readily than in its absence (Tomilov et al., 2004
Other synthetic auxins, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D), 1-naphthalene acetic acid (NAA), and indole-3-butyric acid (IBA), also stimulated the development of haustorial structures in the presence of low concentrations of DMBQ, though not to the same levels as IAA (Fig. 2B). The auxins were generally most effective at concentrations between 0.1 and 1.0 µM with higher auxin concentrations reducing haustoria formation. Exposure to these auxins in the absence of DMBQ also resulted in some root hair development and tip swelling, though not of the size, definition, or regularity of haustoria produced with DMBQ (Fig. 1). Commercial IAA was equally active to that purified in the lab by HPLC arguing against an active contaminant in the preparation (data not shown; LeClere et al., 2002
2,3,5-Triiodobenzoic acid (TIBA) is a competitive auxin efflux inhibitor and p-chlorophenoxyisobutyric acid (PCIB) is a competitive auxin antagonist (Geldner et al., 2001
Time course experiments showed that TIBA and PCIB were most inhibitory when applied to T. versicolor roots together with DMBQ (Fig. 3, C and D). Application of TIBA 2 h after DMBQ resulted in a doubling in the number of roots with haustoria compared to the simultaneous treatment. There was no apparent inhibition when TIBA was added 6 h after DMBQ. This is consistent with auxin transport and action being important within a few hours of DMBQ exposure. A different observation was made when TIBA was applied specifically to root tips by growing the roots from agar without TIBA into agar containing TIBA. When TIBA was applied at the root tip in this manner, hair proliferation and cortical swelling occurred at the tip, reminiscent of terminal-primary haustoria of Striga. Arabidopsis seedlings similarly treated did not have this phenotype (Fig. 4). This suggested that confining auxin transport to the tip triggers morphogenic events associated with haustorium development.
Pharmacological experiments also correlated haustorium development with ethylene production. The effect of enhanced ethylene production was evaluated by applying ACC to T. versicolor roots at the time of DMBQ induction. Figure 2C shows that ACC at concentrations between 0.01 and 1.0 µM enhanced haustorium formation in the presence of 1.0 µM DMBQ. Reciprocally, the ethylene synthesis inhibitor L- -(2-aminoethoxyvinyl) Gly (AVG) and the ethylene action inhibitor AgNO3 reduced haustorium formation almost completely (Fig. 3, E and F).
Early studies showed that root cultures lacking all above ground parts are competent to form haustoria (Tomilov et al., 2004
Interestingly, root tips smaller than 2 mm in length were competent to form haustoria when DMBQ was applied 3 h before, but not after, dissection. When 0.5-mm root tips were dissected from T. versicolor roots after exposure to DMBQ, 30% to 50% of the tips became swollen and covered with haustorial hairs (Fig. 5, A and B). Similar results were obtained when haustoria was induced using Arabidopsis root exudates or the flavonoid peonidin (Fig. 5C). This suggested that a factor(s) required for early cell swelling in response to DMBQ was present in root tissues proximal to the haustoria initiation site. Dissected root tips did form haustoria when IAA was added together with DMBQ. As seen in Figure 5C, the inclusion of IAA allowed 0.5-mm root tips to form haustoria at similar frequencies as nondissected tips. These experiments were consistent with auxin present in root tissues proximal to the haustorium initiation site being necessary for early haustorium development.
The spatial and temporal accumulation of auxin and ethylene in T. versicolor roots was monitored using two reporter gene constructs regulated by hormone-responsive promoters. The IAA2::GUS reporter gene contains the 424 to +1 AUX1 promoter sequence cloned into the
Transient transformation protocols were optimized using pCAMBIA 1305.2, a cauliflower mosaic virus 35S-GUS construction containing a catalase intron in the GUS gene to eliminate expression in Agrobacterium tumefaciens (Roberts et al., 2004
The optimized transformation protocol was then used to introduce the auxin (IAA2::GUS) and ethylene (5xEBS::GUS) reporters into T. versicolor. Two days after vacuum infiltration, roots were divided into groups and exposed to DMBQ, IAA, ACC, or water. GUS activity was monitored visually and spectroscopically after staining. Seedlings infiltrated with the IAA2::GUS reporter and exposed to water showed relatively more GUS staining in root tips when compared to whole roots (Figs. 6 and 7B). When transformed roots were exposed to exogenous IAA, there was roughly a 3-fold increase in GUS activity in both root tips and whole roots. DMBQ treatments lead to similar levels of GUS expression in root tips, but there was significantly less expression in whole roots than with IAA. This suggested that auxin accumulation in response to DMBQ was preferentially localized to root tips.
Roots transiently expressing the ethylene-responsive reporter 5xEBS::GUS weakly expressed GUS in both whole roots and root tips after water treatment (Figs. 6 and 7C). Treatment with ACC resulted in increased GUS expression throughout the root and tip. When transformed roots were exposed to DMBQ, GUS expression was enhanced in root tips relative to the rest of the root (Fig. 7C). This was similar to what was observed with the IAA2:GUS construction. The localized accumulation of auxin at haustorium initiation sites is consistent with the observation that lateral roots frequently emerged from these sites. As seen in Figure 8, lateral roots were frequently observed originating at haustoria initiation sites. Lateral roots were induced at haustoria initiation sites by both DMBQ as well as Arabidopsis (host) roots. Laterals emerged at the point of contact with Arabidopsis even without invasion of the host root (top right photo). This was T. versicolor specific, and under the same conditions Arabidopsis did not develop lateral roots.
Ethylene Production Is Associated with Early Haustorium Development Ethylene production in T. versicolor root cultures that were exposed to DMBQ or water was directly measured in the void space of the cultures. Two root cultures were compared; one was recently subcultured and formed haustoria at a high frequency (approximately 60% of tips form haustoria). The second root culture was older and had little competence to form haustoria (<5% of tips form haustoria). Both root cultures produced roughly equal amounts of ethylene over the time course of the experiment when maintained in water (Fig. 9). However when exposed to DMBQ, the concentration of ethylene increased in the haustorium-competent root cultures about 6-fold compared to the water treatment. In contrast, when DMBQ was added to the haustorium nonforming culture, ethylene levels did not increase. This experiment associates ethylene production with early haustorium development.
The localized accumulation of auxin is a necessary component of probably all organogenic events in plants, including the establishment of cellular polarity and asymmetric cell divisions (Benková et al., 2003 Inhibition of auxin transport or ethylene biosynthesis reduces haustorium development, and these deficiencies are overcome by exogenous application of the appropriate hormone. Transcriptional regulation of auxin and ethylene-responsive promoters by exogenous DMBQ suggested that DMBQ triggered the accumulation and/or production of these hormones in T. versicolor root tips.
Exogenous auxin enhances haustorium development. Enhancement with 0.2 µM IAA was observed at low DMBQ concentrations when the proportion of root tips forming haustoria was suboptimal. Higher IAA concentrations inhibited haustorium initiation (Fig. 2A). This might explain the observation that NAA and IAA inhibit haustorium induction in Striga (Keyes et al., 2000
Dissection experiments demonstrated that the auxin that accumulates at the haustorium initiation site is derived at least in part from proximal root tissues. T. versicolor root tips dissected 3 h after HIF exposure were competent to form haustoria while those dissected before HIF exposure were not. This shows that haustorium development requires a plant factor that is transported to the haustoria initiation site within 3 h of exposure. Exogenous IAA compensated for the factor transported to the tips, suggesting that the factor missing from the dissected root tips was auxin. Auxin is known to be actively transported to root tips from growing shoots (Lomax et al., 1995
Hormone fluxes alter root morphologies in response to rhizosphere challenges ( Hirsch et al., 1989
It has been known for some time that auxin levels are enhanced in rhizobium-induced nodules and that the application of auxin transport inhibitors induces nodulation or pseudonodulation (Badenoch-Jones et al., 1984
We hypothesize that in root parasites, HIF exposure leads to a local block of acropetal auxin efflux that subsequently arrests cell division and promotes ethylene biosynthesis and cell expansion. Some flavonoids are known to block auxin efflux (Brown et al., 2001 These experiments show that T. versicolor uses existing plant regulatory mechanisms for realizing early haustorium development. Auxin- and ethylene-regulatory pathways have repeatedly been recruited in the association between roots and other organisms; this has now been extended to at least one association between roots of different plants. The genetic determinants that distinguish parasitic from nonparasitic plants have yet to be identified but presumably function at a stage prior to hormone action.
Chemicals and Media The auxins IAA; 2,4-D; NAA; and IBA were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis). The IAA was further purified for some experiments by HPLC chromatography using C18 column and methanol/acetic acid gradient. The polar auxin transport inhibitor TIBA, the auxin action inhibitor PCIB, ethylene precursor ACC, and ethylene biosynthesis inhibitor AVG-Gly hydrochloride (AVG-HCl) was obtained from Aldrich (Milwaukee, WI). N,N-dimethylformamide was obtained from Sigma (Steinheim, Germany). DMBQ was purchased from Pfaltz and Bauer (Waterbury, CT) and X-Glu (cyclohexylammonium salt) from Gold Biotechnology (St. Louis).
The T-DNA vector pCAMBIA 1305.2 was obtained from CAMBIA (Canberra, Australia). This T-DNA vector contains a hygromycin resistance gene as well as the Staphylococcus GUSPlus reporter gene driven by a cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter. A catalase intron interrupts the GUS-coding sequence to ensure expression only after transfer into the plant cell (Roberts et al., 2004
Triphysaria is a broad host range, facultative parasite that grows as an annual wildflower in coastal and grassland stands along the Pacific Coast (Hickman, 1993 Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana ecotype Columbia) seeds were obtained from Lehle Seeds (Round Rock, TX).
T. versicolor root cultures were derived from decapitated seedlings incubated in Hoagland medium supplemented with 2% (w/v) Glc under an auxin step-down protocol (Tomilov et al., 2004 Root cultures are most primed to form haustoria within 2 weeks of transfer into hormone-free media. After about a month in hormone-free media, root cultures essentially loose haustoria competence. These were used as low-haustoria-responding roots in experiments described in this manuscript.
The assay of haustorium development has been described in detail elsewhere (Jamison and Yoder, 2001 Root tips were locally exposed to different molecules by growing the root from basal media into media containing the test factor. To do this, T. versicolor and Arabidopsis were germinated on agar medium and 1- to 2-week-old seedlings placed on agar solidified on a microscope slide. These slides were then placed on the surface of agar medium containing the test factors and oriented such that the roots grew down along the surface of the agar. Root tips were locally exposed to test factor when the roots crossed into the test agar.
Agrobacterium tumefaciens C58C1 bearing T-DNA derived plasmids were vacuum infiltrated into T. versicolor seedlings as described below. The A. tumefaciens contained one of the three plasmids: pCAMBIA 1305.2 (CAMBIA), IAA2:GUS fusion in pBI121 (Swarup et al., 2001 Agrobacteria were grown 48 h in liquid culture at 28°C with agitation at 350 rpm in media supplemented with kanamycin (50 mg/L) and tetracycline (5 mg/L). The bacteria were pelleted by centrifugation and suspended in Murashige and Skoog media at an OD600 of 0.5. The cultures were returned to the shaker for an additional hour before infiltration. T. versicolor seeds were germinated and seedlings maintained in the dark for 3 months at 2°C. One gram of sterile, etiolated seedlings (approximately 1,000 seedlings) were placed into a 10-mL syringe together with 2 mL of A. tumefaciens suspension. A vacuum was applied by hand after which the suspension was incubated at room temperature for 1 h with gentle agitation (Tadeusz Wroblewski, University of California, Davis, personal communication). T. versicolor explants were then transferred into fresh Murashige and Skoog media for 2 d. The etiolated seedlings were less susceptible to exogenous factors so higher concentrations (100 µM) of inducers and hormones were applied.
GUS activity was histochemically stained and visualized (Jefferson et al., 1987
Ethylene was measured by gas chromatography as described by Grossmann and Kwiatkowski (1995) Upon request, all novel materials described in this publication will be made available in a timely manner for noncommercial research purposes, subject to the requisite permission from any third-party owners of all or parts of the material. Obtaining any permissions will be the responsibility of the requestor.
We thank Dr. Denneal Jamison (California State University, Sacramento) and Russell Reagan (University of California, Davis) for helpful discussion and comments. We also thank Drs. Lars W.J. Anderson and Doreen Gee (U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service Exotic and Invasive Weed Research, Davis, CA) for help with HPLC purification of TIBA and auxins, Tadeusz Wroblewski (University of California, Davis) for consultations with transient transformation of seedlings, and Prof. Joseph R. Ecker (The Salk Institute) for the 5xEBS:GUS-A fusion plasmid. Received December 8, 2004; returned for revision December 8, 2004; accepted March 16, 2005.
1 This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (grant no. 0236545).
2 These authors contributed equally to the paper. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.057836. * Corresponding author; e-mail jiyoder{at}ucdavis.edu; fax 5307529659.
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