|
|
||||||||
|
First published online September 23, 2005; 10.1104/pp.105.066753 Plant Physiology 139:909-919 (2005) © 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists Mutation of the RESURRECTION1 Locus of Arabidopsis Reveals an Association of Cuticular Wax with Embryo Development1Crop Gene Engineering Key Laboratory of Hunan Province, Hunan Agricultural University, Changsha, China, 410128 (Xinbo C.); and Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907 (S.M.G., X.L., Xinlu C., R.A.B., M.A.J.)
Insertional mutagenesis of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) was used to identify a novel recessive mutant, designated resurrection1 (rst1), which possesses a dramatic alteration in its cuticular waxes and produces shrunken nonviable seeds due to arrested embryo development. The RST1 gene sequence associated with these phenotypes was verified by three independent, allelic, insertion mutants, designated rst1-1, rst1-2, and rst1-3, with inserts in the first exon, 12th intron, and fourth exon, respectively. These three rst1 allelic mutants have nearly identical alterations in their wax profiles and embryo development. Compared to wild type, the wax on rst1 inflorescence stems is reduced nearly 60% in total amount, has a proportional reduction in aldehydes and aldehyde metabolites, and has a proportional increase in acids, primary alcohols, and esters. Compared to wild type, the C29 alkanes on rst1 are nearly 6-fold lower, and the C30 primary alcohols are 4-fold higher. These results indicate that rst1 causes shunting of most wax precursors away from alkane synthesis and into the primary-alcohol-producing branch of the pathway. In contrast to stems, the wax on rst1 mutant leaves increased roughly 43% in amount relative to the wild type, with the major increase occurring in the C31 and C33 alkanes. Unique among known wax mutants, approximately 70% of rst1 seeds are shrunken and nonviable, with these being randomly distributed within both inflorescence and silique. Viable seeds of rst1 are slightly larger than those of wild type, and although the viable rst1 seeds contain more total triacylglycerol-derived fatty acids, the proportions of these fatty acids are not significantly different from wild type. Shrunken seeds contain 34% of the fatty acids of wild-type seeds, with proportionally more palmitic, stearic, and oleic acids, and less of the longer and more desaturated homologs. Histological analysis of aborted rst1 seeds revealed that embryo development terminates at the approximate heart-shaped stage, whereas viable rst1 and wild-type embryos develop similarly. The RST1 gene encodes a predicted 1,841-amino acid novel protein with a molecular mass of 203.6 kD and a theoretical pI of 6.21. The RST1 transcript was found in all tissues examined including leaves, flowers, roots, stems, and siliques, but accumulation levels were not correlated with the degree to which different organs appeared affected by the mutation. The new RST1 gene reveals a novel genetic connection between lipid synthesis and embryo development; however, RST1's exact role is still quite unknown. The degree to which RST1 is associated with lipid signaling in development is an important focus of ongoing studies.
Plant lipids, including phospholipids (Meijer and Munnik, 2003 -ketoacyl synthase enzymes, likewise cause major changes in overall plant morphology, including new postgenital fusion phenotypes and altered stomatal index.
Although several wax mutants in Arabidopsis show reduced reproductive capacity due to suppressed pollen recognition by the stigma (Fiebig et al., 2000 We recently used insertion mutagenesis to identify a recessive mutant in Arabidopsis, designated resurrection1 (rst1), which exhibits altered cuticular wax synthesis and arrested embryo development. We describe here the novel RST1 gene, and how mutation in its sequence specifically alters both cuticle and embryo formation. The new ideas arising from this work regarding the role of aliphatic lipids in signaling plant development are also discussed.
Isolation and Genetic Analysis of the rst1 Mutants
Approximately 35,000 families from a T-DNA mutagenized T2 population of Arabidopsis ecotype C24 (created as in Weigel et al., 2000 To establish basic inheritance, all three rst1 alleles were backcrossed to their respective isogenic wild types (with rst1-2 and rst1-3 also being reciprocally crossed). The seed and wax phenotypes of all resulting F1s were clearly wild type (at least 25 F1s scored for each), indicating recessive inheritance. Seeds heterozygous for rst1 do not abort at elevated rates, whether growing on wild-type or homozygous rst1 mutant parents. Segregating F2 seeds on F1 plants heterozygous for rst1 have an elevated proportion of aborted seeds. This provides additional evidence that abortion is not affected by the maternal genotype since the heterozygous parent still displays seed abortion, presumably due to abortion of a portion of the seeds that are homozygous for rst1 within the segregating F2 seed population. Thus, a heterozygous parent does not complement the seed abortion defect of the rst1 homozygous seeds that it carries. Reduced inflorescence stem glaucousness, and the presence or absence of many dark-red, wrinkled seeds in the siliques, were used as a visual score for both the mutant wax and seed traits, respectively. The glossy stems and wrinkled seed phenotypes showed 100% cosegregation in three large F2 populations derived from rst1 backcrosses to wild type. There was no evidence in any one of these three alleles of environmental effects on these traits, even though we closely examined the effect of photoperiod, salt, and drought on rst1-1 wax and seed formation (data not shown). As such, monogenic recessive inheritance of the wax and seed defects for all rst1 alleles is thus clearly established. The wax and seed phenotypes of all three rst1 allelic mutants were found to be nearly identical, so only data from the rst1-2 mutant (in the third Columbia backcross generation) and its isogenic parent Columbia are presented below (unless noted).
Stem surfaces of the rst1 mutants are much more glossy green than the respective isogenic wild-type stems, which display the normal glaucous stem wax coating. Leaf surfaces of both the wild type and respective rst1 mutants lack visible waxes. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to show that the density of wax crystals on stems of the rst1-2 mutant was reduced relative to the wild type; however, the shape and proportion of each of the wax crystal types was not altered dramatically (Fig. 1). Relative to wild type, total wax amount per area on rst1-2 stems was reduced 59.1% (Table I). Waxes of rst1-2 had a large proportional reduction in the aldehyde, alkane, secondary alcohol, and ketone classes, and a proportional increase in the acid, primary alcohol, and ester classes (Table I). For individual wax homologs, the largest changes on rst1-2 stems occurred in the C29 alkanes that decreased 5.7-fold and the C30 primary alcohols that increased 4.4-fold (Fig. 2). Interestingly, the total wax amount on rst1-2 leaves was elevated 43% above wild-type levels (Table I). Except for aldehydes, the amount of all rst1-2 leaf wax classes was elevated, with the largest increase occurring in the alkane class (Table I; Fig. 3). The C31 and C33 homologs of rst1-2 leaf alkanes were increased more than any other (Fig. 3).
Transmission electron microscopy with osmium stain and light microscopy with Sudan IV lipid stain were used to examine the cuticle membrane covering both the stem and embryo cotyledonary surface of rst1-2 and wild type. However, no visible differences were evident between rst1-2 and wild-type cuticles on these organs (data not shown). Additionally, transpiration rates of whole flowering plants growing in pots (as examined in Chen et al., 2003
In a pool of 520 seeds from 30 rst1-2 plants, 70% of the seeds were visibly smaller, darker reddish-brown, and highly shrunken and wrinkled (Fig. 4A). When 100 each of wild-type, rst1-2 shrunken, and rst1-2 normal seeds were tested for seed germination, nearly all of the wild-type and normal rst1-2 seeds germinated, whereas none of the rst1-2 shrunken seeds germinated. Visual examination of siliques with mature seeds revealed both green and white seed types (Fig. 4B). Although embryos could be seen in mature green seeds of the rst1 mutants using light microscopy, an embryo could not be likewise delineated in the white seeds when viewed through the seed coat of cleared seeds (Fig. 4C). Additional studies using the seeds from five randomly selected siliques from six plants each of wild type and rst1-2 revealed that the occurrence of embryo abortion was completely random throughout the inflorescence and within the siliques (i.e. no differences between apical and basal sections of inflorescence or silique).
The wrinkled coat trait of mature seeds was clearly linked with and resulted from embryo abortion, and more than 100 mature wrinkled seeds selected randomly from the F2 populations described above all possessed tiny, aborted embryos (visualized using light microscopy). Moreover, the embryo defective mutant seeds were easily identified when very young, as the young mutant seeds did not display the green coloration typical of normal immature seeds (due to chlorophyll accumulation in normal embryos). Well over 100 immature white seeds were carefully observed in siliques to develop into mature seeds having dark-red, wrinkled, and shrunken phenotypes and aborted embryos, whereas immature green seeds developed normal, nonwrinkled seed coats and fully formed embryos. Moreover, a calculation of percentage of immature white seeds from 275 total seeds (from five randomly selected siliques from six replicate plants) was the same as the percentage of dark-red, wrinkled seeds in a pool of 520 dried and matured seeds from a bulked rst1-2 seed population, showing that 70% of the seeds were defective.
Wild-type Columbia air-dried seeds had an average weight per seed of 16.9 ± 1.0 µg. The average weights per seed of the rst1-2 normal and wrinkled (shriveled) seeds grown under the same conditions were 25.7 ± 0.6 µg and 5.4 ± 0.3 µg, respectively. No seeds were produced in 30 emasculated wild-type and rst1-2 mutant flowers, indicating that, unlike previously described fertilization independent seed mutants (Kohler et al., 2003 In a random sampling of 45 aborted embryos from siliques 12 d after anthesis, arrest of embryo development was observed as early as the late globular stage and as late as the early torpedo stage, with most embryos classified as aborting at the mid-heart stage (Fig. 5, AD). Paraffin embedding and sectioning showed that 8-d-old wild-type (Fig. 5E) and normal rst1-2 (data not shown) seeds at the same developmental stage had visually similar embryos that completely filled the seed. Aborted heart-shaped embryos appeared to possess normal cell patterning up to the heart-shaped stage (Fig. 5, E and F). Duplication of the endosperm nuclei and cellularization of the endosperm tissue appeared normal, beginning 2 d after anthesis, in all rst1-2 seeds examined (data not shown).
Seed Oil Composition To determine whether the rst1 mutation affected lipids of the seed (triacylglycerols) in addition to lipids of the stem (waxes), detailed analysis of seed triacylglycerol-derived fatty acids was performed. Results indicated that the normal-type mature seeds on rst1-2 mutants had essentially identical acid proportions as seeds of wild type (Fig. 6); however, the total acid amount per seed was elevated from 3.35 µg (19.8% of seed weight) in wild type to 6.07 µg (23.6% of seed weight) in normal-type seeds of rst1-2. The mature but shrunken seeds of rst1-2 were severely deficient in these lipids, with total acid amount per seed decreasing to an average 0.4 µg (6.8% of seed weight) and with an especially large reduction in the longer and more desaturated acid constituents (Fig. 6). Rather than the C18:2 acid (linoleic acid) being the major constituent as in wild-type and normal-type rst1-2 seeds, the C18:1 acid (oleic acid) accumulated most in the aborted rst1 seeds (Fig. 6).
Leaf Epidermal Morphology Because many cuticle wax mutants are known to alter stomatal shape and stomatal index, the epidermal cell morphology of both the adaxial and abaxial surfaces of the rosette leaves of wild type and rst1-2 mutants was determined. No significant difference could be observed in leaf epidermal pavement or guard cell shape, leaf stomatal index, or trichome number between wild-type and rst1-2 plants (data not shown).
Southern-blot analysis using the BAR gene fragment as probe showed that the original rst1-1 mutant had at least two inserts (data not shown). However, thermal asymmetric interlaced PCR (Liu et al., 1995 The rst1-1 insert occurred in the first exon of a putative Arabidopsis novel gene (At3g27670, MGF10.8). The expressed sequence tag (EST) H76516 was found to be identical to the putative 3' cDNA of this gene, and the associated clone (197C20) was ordered from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center (ABRC) and sequenced. The full-length EST was 1,157 bp, and included sequence of the last four putative exons (17th to 20th exons) of At3g27670, a 139-bp 3' untranslated region (UTR), and a 12-bp polyA. A 1,778-bp 5' cDNA fragment was obtained by 5' RACE using primers designed from the putative At3g27670 cDNA. The sequence included a 204-bp 5' UTR and the first four putative exons of At3g27670. A 3,555-bp cDNA fragment was amplified from the cDNA using primers designed from the 5' RACE and the EST clone fragment sequences. This reverse transcription (RT)-PCR fragment had a 294-bp overlap to the 5' RACE fragment at the 5' end and a 465-bp overlap to the sequenced EST clone at the 3' end. Sequencing revealed an additional exon of 78 bp between the originally predicted 14th and 15th exons of the putative At3g27670 ORF. As such, the actual full-length RST1 ORF was thus found to span 8,164 bp of genomic DNA and have 21 exons and 20 introns. The full-length predicted transcript is 5,881 bp, and has a coding region of 5,526 bp, a 204-bp 5' UTR, and a 139-bp 3' UTR. The 5' UTR contains a stop codon immediately before the start codon, and there were no other alternative start codons within it. The full RST1 nucleotide sequence and associated annotation is now available under GenBank accession number AY307371.
Two knockout rst1 mutants were obtained from the SALK Institute through the ABRC stock center. The first Columbia rst1 mutant (SALK_ 070359, designated rst1-2) had a single T-DNA insert in the 12th intron, and another Columbia rst1 mutant (SALK_129280, designated rst1-3) had a single T-DNA insert in the 4th exon. SALK assistance was obtained from the SIGnAL Web site at http://signal.salk.edu. Both rst1-2 and rst1-3 showed the same increase in stem glossiness, change in wax composition and structure, and wrinkled seed phenotype as did rst1-1. As for rst1-1, backcross F2 populations were used to select mutant lines that were homozygous for single rst1-2 and rst1-3 inserts, and cosegregation (at least 50 mutant plants each) of the inserts with the altered cuticle and seed phenotypes was verified. The RST1 locus was not closer than an estimated 20 cM to any of the existing cer loci on chromosome 5 (Rashotte et al., 2004
The RST1 transcript encodes a predicted polypeptide of 1,841 amino acids with a molecular mass of 203.6 kD and a theoretical pI of 6.21. No alternative ORFs were identified. The RST1 protein does not show high identity to any protein of known function; however, it was 34% (636/1,841) identical and had 51% (964/1,841) positives to the 1,842-amino acid annotated rice protein OJ1276_B06.27 (GenBank BAB92518). Also, RST1 was 28% (32/113) identical and had 51% (51/113) positives to a 113-amino acid fragment of the 1,801-amino acid human hypothetical protein FLJ20357 (GenBank AAN17740). No integral membrane domain was found in the RST1 protein by the TMHMM program. Using TargetP (http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/TargetP/), RST1 was predicted to target the mitochondria with TargetP score of 0.550 and probable signal sequence length of 78 amino acids. The rice protein OJ1276_B06.27 (having highest identity to RST1) is predicted to target the chloroplast with a TargetP score of 0.554 and probable signal sequence length of 74 amino acids, whereas the rice RST1's targeting to mitochondria had only a 0.110 TargetP score. A PROSITE database (http://us.expasy.org/prosite/) search found three possible domains in RST1, the aldo/keto reductase family putative active site signature in residue 874-889 (accession no. PS00063), the cytochrome C family heme-binding site signature in residue 1512-1517 (accession no. PS00190), and the G-protein-coupled receptor family 1 signature (Rhodopsin like) in residue 1733-1749. Interestingly, the Oryza protein OJ1276_B06.27 has none of these three conserved domains.
The 5' RACE RST1 cDNA fragment was used as a probe in RNA gel-blotting experiments. Using RNA blotting, transcripts were not detected in stems, rosette leaves, siliques, and whole flowers of wild-type C24 and wild-type Columbia after 7-d exposure, indicating probable low expression in the whole plant (data not shown). However, one-step RT-PCR did reveal the presence of RST1 transcripts in these same tissues, and suggested that the amount of RST1 transcript was higher in leaves and flowers and lower in roots, stems, and siliques of wild type (Fig. 7A). RT-PCR with leaves using primers flanking the rst1-1 T-DNA insert site did not produce amplified product in any of the three allelic rst1 mutants. RT-PCR using primers to sequences downstream from the rst1-1 T-DNA insert site amplified products in the rst1-1 mutant, but not in rst1-2 (Fig. 7B) or rst1-3 (data not shown). Thus, both rst1-2 and rst1-3 were null alleles, appearing to have completely blocked transcript expression, whereas rst1-1 produced a truncated RST1 transcript driven by the 35S promoter on the activation insert. Interestingly, the rst1-1 mutant often displayed short, more rounded leaves that senesced early, and inflorescences that emerged later via axillary buds (appearing to "come back to life after senescence" and leading to our naming the mutant resurrection1 [rst1]). Linkage between this novel, slightly truncated rst1-1 allele and incomplete penetrance of these novel leaf developmental phenotypes will be described in subsequent reports. Verification that rst1-1's truncated transcript is responsible for the additional phenotypes and their inheritance will require substantial experimentation to verify.
Mutations in cuticle genes such as ATT1, CER1, CER6, WAX2, and others are known to influence various aspects of plant development, including fertility, postgenital fusion, epidermal architecture, and leaf size and shape (Gray et al., 2000
As a proportion of total waxes, rst1 inflorescence stems have a major deficiency in aldehydes and aldehyde metabolites, whereas all other wax classes are proportionally elevated. The very high elevation in C30 alcohols and reduction in C29 alkanes on rst1 stems leads to an interpretation that the C30 acyl-CoA precursors are being shunted toward the C30 primary alcohol branch (pool) of the wax pathway and away from the C29 aldehyde to C29 alkane generating pathway. The RST1 gene product may thus have a direct function in acyl-CoA reduction to aldehydes, but likely not acyl-CoA conversion to primary alcohols, free fatty acids, or esters (Fig. 8). Whether RST1's short, predicted 15-amino acid sequence homology to an aldo/keto reductase active site signature indicates a possible role in the acyl-CoA reduction required for aldehyde synthesis is yet to be established. The reason for the increase in wax amount on rst1 null mutant leaves is unknown. This condition is not without precedent, however, as cuticle mutants in Sorghum, such as bm4, that have reduced leaf sheath waxes have increased leaf blade waxes (Rich, 1994
The aborted seeds of rst1 have greatly reduced amounts of triacylglycerol-derived fatty acids, with constituent profiles shifted toward elevations in shorter and more saturated chains. Viable seeds in rst1 plants were slightly larger but had normal proportions of these storage lipids. The reduced acids in aborted rst1 seeds may have been caused by the early termination of embryo formation. Accumulation of triacylglycerols (with their covalently linked fatty acids) begins rapidly with the onset of the torpedo stage when lipid bodies first appear in the expanding cotyledons (Bowman, 1994
Numerous embryo-lethal mutants in Arabidopsis show termination of embryo development during the preglobular to cotyledonary stages (Tzafrir et al., 2003
The rst1 mutant in Arabidopsis shows incomplete penetrance of seed abortion, with 70% of seeds becoming shrunken and nonviable. The only other plant mutant showing similar incomplete penetrance of seed abortion is amp1 in Arabidopsis (Helliwell et al., 2001
Considerable evidence has emerged in recent years that implicate epigenetic control in embryo development, including a role for gene imprinting (Chaudhury et al., 2001 The rst1 mutant reveals an unexpected connection between synthesis of cuticular waxes and formation of the embryo. The RST1 gene encodes a very large but novel protein with homologies to proteins in organisms as diverse as humans and rice. Future studies to examine RST1 gene expression and function in Arabidopsis could shed much light on very long chain lipid involvement in embryo development.
Genetic Analysis of the rst1 Mutant
The activation T-DNA vector pSKI015 was used to generate an insertion mutant population (T1) in the genetic background of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana L.) Heynhold ecotype C24 as in Weigel et al. (2000)
SEM was used to analyze epicuticular wax crystallization patterns. Leaf and stem (first internode above the rosette) samples were collected from the Arabidopsis wild type and rst1 mutants after 6 weeks of growth. Four replicates of each sample were mounted on aluminum stubs and sputter coated with gold palladium using six 30-s bursts from the sputter coater. Previous research showed that air-dried samples coated in this way were similar to specimens prepared using low-temperature SEM with little evidence of artifacts in wax crystallization patterns observed (Jenks et al., 1992
For compositional analysis, cuticular wax samples were extracted from the leaves and stems of flowering Arabidopsis wild type and rst1 mutants after 6 weeks of growth. Leaf and stem (representing the first through fifth internodes) samples were inserted into a 20-mL standard glass scintillation vial, and approximately 15 mL of GC-grade hexane added. The tissues were agitated for 30 s and the solvent decanted off into new scintillation vials. Tissues and vials were given a 1-s rinse with approximately 2 mL of hexane, and then the solution decanted into the sample vial. The leaf extracts thus contain waxes from both abaxial and adaxial leaf surfaces and, like stems, showed no coloration due to chlorophyll or other internal lipids. Wax compositional analysis was according to Jenks et al. (1995)
Seeds were scored visually and using a dissecting light microscope for darker red coloration, smaller size, and wrinkled seed coat. Live embryos were examined under light microscopy by immersing seeds in a few drops of 1 M KOH placed on a glass side, then placing a coverslip on top and applying gentle pressure to force the embryos out of the seed coat. Seeds were cleared using lactic acid. Paraffin embedding was done by immersing siliques in formaldehyde-acetic acid for 48 h, dehydrating siliques in a graded ethanol/tert-butanol series, and then immersing in graded tert-butanol/paraplast series. After sectioning of paraffin blocks, paraplast was removed with xylene, followed by hydrating the specimens with a graded ETOH/H2O series. Specimens were then stained with 1% toluidine blue. The quantitative and observational data presented for seed or embryo represented the average of at least four siliques each on at least six plants.
Seed lipid triacylglycerides were extracted by crushing 25 seeds per sample (100 seeds for shrunken seeds) in a 4-mL glass vial with 1 mL hexane and 50 ppm butylated hydroxytoluene (Sigma). After incubation at 50°C for 15 min, vials were centrifuged at 13,000g for 15 min to pellet seed debris. Hexane containing triacylglycerides were decanted to a new vial. Heptadecanoic acid was added as an internal standard, followed by blowing down the sample to dryness with nitrogen stream. Transesterification was done by adding 700 µL of 3 N HCl in methanol (Supelco) and incubating at 80°C for 2 h. After cooling, 1 mL hexane and 1.5 mL of 0.9% (w/v) NaCl were added, followed by gentle agitation for 1 min. After phase separation, 250 mL of the top organic phase was transferred to a new vial for injection into a Hewlett-Packard 5890 series II GC equipped with a flame ionization detector. The GC was equipped with a 12-m, 0.2-mm HP-1 capillary column with helium as the carrier gas. The GC was programmed with an initial temperature of 80°C and increased at 15°C min1 to 200°C, then the temperature was increased at 2°C min1 to 220°C, and then the temperature was increased at 30°C min1 to 280°C. Quantification was based on flame ionization detector peak areas and the internal standard. Multilevel external standards for every lipid constituent were used to develop specific correction factors as in Jenks et al. (1995
Stomatal density, epidermal pavement-cell density, and stomatal index for both the adaxial and abaxial surfaces were determined using light microscopy modified from Gray et al. (2000)
Thermal asymmetric interlaced PCR was performed according to Liu et al. (1995)
5' RACE using the SMART RACE cDNA amplification kit (BD Biosciences Clontech) was performed as described by the manufacturer. The gene-specific primers used for RACE were designed from the At3g27670 putative mRNA sequence. The gene-specific primers for RST1 and rst1-1 5' RACE were EX3R (5'-GACAAGGGACGTTAGTTCGAG-3') and 5' RACE (5'-ACAGCTAGCAACAGCGGGACACTCA-3'). The cDNA sequence between the 5' RACE and 3' EST was obtained by PCR amplification from the RACE first-strand cDNA using primers designed from the 5' RACE and the EST clone fragment sequences. The first round PCR used primer EX3F (5'-CGCACTGATGTCTTCTCCTTC-3') and EX17R (5'-ACTCTTTCACCGAACCCATCT-3'). The second round PCR used primer 3' RACE (5'-CACACCTTCCACGTCTTCCTTCCTCA-3') and EX17R. The PCR fragments were cloned into the pGEM-T easy vector (Promega).
RT-PCR was performed using the SuperScript One-Step RT-PCR with Platinum Taq kit as described by the manufacturer (Invitrogen). Two pairs of primers were used for RT-PCR. The first pair was designed from the first and second exons to flank the rst1-1 T-DNA left border insertion site (RST1F, 5'-TCTCTCCAGCCAAAGCGA-3'; RST1R, 5'-CAACGATGAAGACGAATCTG-3'). The second pair was designed to flank the rst1-2 T-DNA left border insertion site (RST2F, 5'-AAATGCGGAAATTCTGAATGCT-3'; RST2R, 5'-AATGCCTCCTCGTATTGAAAATG-3'). RT-PCR of a 517-bp Arabidopsis
Genomic DNA was isolated from rosette leaves based on Dellaporta et al. (1983) Total RNA was isolated from various tissues using the RNeasy Plant Mini kit (Qiagen) as described by the manufacturer. The RNA gel blot was performed according to standard methods. The 1,778-bp 5' RACE product was used as probe, with probe labeling and hybridization the same as in the DNA blot.
Multiple sequence alignment was performed with ClustalW using default parameters through BCM Search Launcher (http://searchlauncher.bcm.tmc.edu/multi-align/multi-align.html). The box shading was created by BOXSHADE 3.21 (http://www.ch.embnet.org/software/BOX_form.html). The rooted phylogenetic tree was constructed using ClustalW (Thompson et al., 1994 Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession number AY307371.
We thank the SALK Institute Genomic Analysis Laboratory for providing the sequence-indexed Arabidopsis T-DNA insertion mutants (SALK 070359 and 129280). We would also like to thank Debra Sherman of the Purdue University Electron Microscopy Center and Dr. Karl Wood of the Purdue University Mass Spectrometry Center for their assistance. Received June 7, 2005; returned for revision August 11, 2005; accepted August 14, 2005.
1 This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture National Research Initiative (grant no. 97353015291). This is publication number 17199 of the Purdue University Office of Agricultural Research. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.105.066753. * Corresponding author; e-mail jenksm{at}purdue.edu; fax 7654940391.
Baud S, Bellec Y, Miquel M, Bellini C, Caboche M, Lepiniec L, Faure JD, Rochat C (2004) gurke and pasticcino3 mutants affected in embryo development are impaired in acetyl-CoA carboxylase. EMBO Rep 5: 515520[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Baud S, Guyon V, Kronenberger J, Wuilleme S, Miquel M, Caboche M, Lepiniec L, Rochat C (2003) Multifunctional acetyl-CoA carboxylase 1 is essential for very long chain fatty acid elongation and embryo development in Arabidopsis. Plant J 33: 7586[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Berleth T, Chatfield S (2002) Embryogenesis: pattern formation from a single cell. In C Somerville, E Meyerowitz, eds, The Arabidopsis Book. American Society of Plant Biologists, Rockville, MD, doi/10.1199/tab.0051, http://www.aspb.org/publications/arabidopsis/ Bird SM, Gray JE (2003) Signals from the cuticle affect epidermal cell differentiation. New Phytol 157: 923[CrossRef]
Borisjuk L, Wang TL, Rolletschek H, Wobus U, Weber H (2002) A pea seed mutant affected in the differentiation of the embryonic epidermis is impaired in embryo growth and seed maturation. Development 129: 15951607 Bowman JL (1994) Arabidopsis: An Atlas of Morphology and Development. Springer-Verlag, New York Chaudhury AM, Koltunow A, Payne T, Luo M, Tucker MR, Dennis ES, Peacock WJ (2001) Control of early seed development. Annu Rev Cell Dev Biol 17: 677699[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Chen X, Goodwin M, Boroff VL, Liu X, Jenks MA (2003) Cloning and characterization of Arabidopsis WAX2 involved in cuticle membrane synthesis. Plant Cell 15: 11701185
Chen X, Yuan H, Chen R, Zhu L, Du B, Weng Q, He G (2002) Isolation and characterization of triacontanol-regulated genes in rice (Oryza sativa L.): possible role of triacontanol as a plant growth stimulator. Plant Cell Physiol 43: 869876 Dellaporta SL, Wood VP, Hicks JB (1983) A plant DNA mini-preparation: version II. Plant Mol Biol Rep 1: 1921
Fiebig A, Mayfield JA, Miley NL, Chau S, Fischer RL, Preuss D (2000) Alterations in CER6, a gene identical to CUT1, differentially affect long-chain lipid content on the surface of pollen and stems. Plant Cell 12: 20012008
Gehring M, Choi Y, Fisher RL (2004) Imprinting and seed development. Plant Cell (Suppl) 16: S203S213 Gray JE, Holroyd GH, van der Lee FM, Bahrami AR, Sijmons PC, Woodward FI, Schuch W, Hetherington AM (2000) The HIC signaling pathway links CO2 perception to stomatal development. Nature 408: 713716[CrossRef][Medline]
Grossniklaus U, Vielle-Calzada J, Hoeppner M, Gagliano WB (1998) Maternal control of embryogenesis by MEDEA, a polycomb group gene in Arabidopsis. Science 280: 446450 He X, Zhang B, Tan H (2003) Overexpression of a sterol C-24 (28) reductase increases ergosterol production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biotechnol Lett 25: 773778[Medline]
He YW, Loh CS (2002) Induction of early bolting in Arabidopsis thaliana by triacontanol, cerium and lanthanum is correlated with increased endogenous concentration of isopentenyl adenosine (iPAdos). J Exp Bot 53: 505512
Helliwell C, Chin-Atkins AN, Wilson I, Chapple R, Dennis ES, Chaudhury A (2001) The Arabidopsis AMP1 gene encodes a putative glutamate carboxypeptidase. Plant Cell 13: 112 Jenks MA, Eigenbrode S, Lemeiux B (2002) Cuticular waxes of Arabidopsis. In C Somerville, E Meyerowitz, eds, The Arabidopsis Book. American Society of Plant Biologists, Rockville, MD, doi/10.1199/tab.0016, http://www.aspb.org/publications/arabidopsis/ Jenks MA, Joly RJ, Peters PJ, Rich PJ, Axtell JD, Ashworth EA (1994) Chemically-induced cuticle mutation affecting epidermal conductance to water vapor and disease susceptibility in Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench. Plant Physiol 105: 12391245[Abstract] Jenks MA, Rashotte AM, Tuttle HA, Feldmann KA (1996) Mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana altered in epicuticular wax and leaf morphology. Plant Physiol 110: 377385[Abstract] Jenks MA, Rich PJ, Peters PJ, Axtell JD, Ashworth EN (1992) Epicuticular wax morphology of bloomless (bm) mutants in Sorghum bicolor. Int J Plant Sci 153: 311319[CrossRef] Jenks MA, Rich PJ, Rhodes D, Ashworth EA, Axtell JD, Ding CK (2000) Chemical composition of leaf sheath cuticular waxes on bloomless and sparse-bloom mutants of Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench. Phytochemistry 54: 577584[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Jenks MA, Tuttle HA, Eigenbrode SD, Feldmann KA (1995) Leaf epicuticular waxes of the eceriferum mutants in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol 108: 369377[Abstract]
Kiyosue T, Ohad N, Yadegari R, Hannon M, Dinneny J, Wells D, Katz A, Margossian L, Harada JJ, Goldberg RB, et al (1999) Control of fertilization-independent endosperm development by the MEDEA polycomb gene in Arabidopsis. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 96: 41864191
Kohler C, Hennig L, Spillane C, Pien S, Gruissem W, Grossniklaus U (2003) The polycomb-group protein MEDEA regulates seed development by controlling expression of the MADS-box gene PHERES1. Genes Dev 17: 15401553 Kolattukudy PE (1996) Biosynthetic pathways of cutin and waxes, their sensitivity to environmental stresses. In G Kersteins, ed, Plant Cuticles, An Integrated Functional Approach. BIOS Scientific Publishers, Oxford, pp 83108 Liu YG, Mitsukawa N, Oosumi T, Whittier RF (1995) Efficient isolation and mapping of Arabidopsis thaliana T-DNA insert junctions by thermal asymmetric interlaced PCR. Plant J 8: 457463[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Lohe AR, Chaudhury A (2002) Genetic and epigenetic processes in seed development. Curr Opin Plant Biol 5: 1925[Medline] Lotan T, Ohto M, Yee KM, West MAL, Lom R, Kwong RW, Yamagishi K, Fischer RL, Goldberg RB, Harada JJ (1998) Arabidopsis LEAFY COTYLEDON1 is sufficient to induce embryo development in vegetative cells. Cell 93: 11951205[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Meijer HJG, Munnik T (2003) Phospholipid-based signaling in plants. Annu Rev Plant Biol 54: 265306[CrossRef][Medline] Millar AA, Wrische M, Kunst J (1998) Accumulation of very-long-chain fatty acids in membrane glycerolipids is associated with dramatic alteration in plant morphology. Plant Cell 11: 18891902
Pruitt RE, Lemieux B, Yen G, Davis RW (2000) FIDDLEHEAD, a gene required to suppress epidermal cell interactions in Arabidopsis, encodes a putative lipid biosynthetic enzyme. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 97: 13111316 Rashotte AM, Jenks MA, Ross AS, Feldmann KA (2004) Novel eceriferum mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana. Planta 219: 513[Medline] Ray A, Lang JD, Golden T, Ray S (1996) SHORT INTEGUMENT (SIN1), a gene required for ovule development in Arabidopsis, also controls flowering time. Development 122: 26312638[Abstract] Rich PJ (1994) Quantitative and qualitative characterization of epicuticular wax from chemically induced bloomless and sparse bloom mutants of Sorghum bicolor. PhD thesis. Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN Schauer SE, Jacobsen SE, Meinke DW, Ray A (2002) DICER-LIKE1: blind men and elephants in Arabidopsis development. Trends Plant Sci 7: 487491[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Sperling L, Heinz E (2003) Plant sphingolipids: structural diversity, biosynthesis, first genes and functions. Biochim Biophys Acta 1632: 115[Medline]
Thompson JD, Higgins DG, Gibson TJ (1994) CLUSTAL W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice. Nucleic Acids Res 22: 46734680 Todd J, Post-Beittenmiller D, Jaworski JG (1999) KCS1 encodes a fatty acid elongase 3-ketoacyl-CoA synthase affecting wax biosynthesis in Arabidopsis thaliana. Plant J 17: 119130[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Turner JG, Ellis C, Devoto A (2002) The jasmonate signal pathway. Plant Cell (Suppl) 14: S153S164
Tzafrir I, Dickerman A, Brazhnik O, Nguyen Q, McElver J, Frye C, Patton D, Meinke D (2003) The Arabidopsis SeedGenes Project. Nucleic Acids Res 31: 9093 Weber H (2002) Fatty acid-derived signals in plants. Trends Plant Sci 7: 217223[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Weigel D, Ahn JH, Blazquez MA, Borevitz JO, Christensen SK, Fankhauser C, Ferrandiz C, Kardailsky I, Malancharuvil EJ, Neff MM, et al (2000) Activation tagging in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol 122: 10031013 Xiao F, Goodwin SM, Xiao Y, Sun Z, Baker D, Tang X, Jenks MA, Zhou JM (2004) Arabidopsis CYP86A2 negatively regulates Pseudomonas syringae type III genes and is required for cuticle development. EMBO J 23: 29032913[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Yephremov A, Wisman E, Huijser P, Huijser C, Wellesen K, Saedler H (1999) Characterization of the FIDDLEHEAD gene of Arabidopsis reveals a link between adhesion response and cell differentiation in the epidermis. Plant Cell 11: 21872201 Zeiger E, Stebbins GL (1972) Developmental genetics in barley: a mutant for stomatal development. Am J Bot 59: 143148[CrossRef]
Zilberman D, Cao XF, Jacobsen SE (2003) ARGONAUTE4 control of locus-specific siRNA accumulation and DNA and histone methylation. Science 299: 716719 This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||