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Plant Physiology 141:3-14 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists LucTrap Vectors Are Tools to Generate Luciferase Fusions for the Quantification of Transcript and Protein Abundance in Vivo1Centre for Plant Molecular Biology, Developmental Genetics, 72076 Tuebingen, Germany (L.I.A.C.-V., C.K., H.L., C.S.); GABI-Kat, Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research, 50829 Cologne, Germany (M.R., B.W.); and Institute for Genome Research, Centre for Biotechnology, Bielefeld University, 33615 Bielefeld, Germany (M.R., B.W.)
Proper plant growth and development strongly rely on the plant's ability to respond dynamically to signals and cues from the intra- and extracellular environment. Whereas many of these responses require specific changes at the level of gene expression, in recent years it has become increasingly clear that many plant responses are at least in part also controlled at the level of protein turnover. It is a challenge for signal transduction research to understand how distinct incoming signals are integrated to generate specific changes at the transcript or protein level. The activity of luciferase (LUC) reporters can be detected in nondestructive qualitative and quantitative assays in vivo. Therefore,z LUC reporters are particularly well suited for the detection of changes at the transcript and protein level. To the best of our knowledge, the number of plant transformation vectors for LUC fusions is very limited. In this article, we describe the LucTrap plant transformation vectors that allow generation of targeted and random transcriptional and translational fusions with the modified firefly LUC reporter LUC+. We demonstrate that LucTrap-based fusions can be used to monitor rapid changes in gene expression and protein abundance in vivo.
Plants are sessile organisms that need to respond quickly to signals and cues from their intra- and extracellular environment. Many of these responses require the transcription of specific subsets of downstream genes (Schwechheimer and Bevan, 1998
Gene expression can be monitored at the level of the individual gene by northern blotting or reverse transcription (RT)-PCR, or at the genomic level using microarrays (Hennig et al., 2003
Because each reporter has specific advantages and disadvantages, the goal of the specific experiment generally determines the choice of the reporter. Transcriptional and translational fusions of a promoter or gene of interest to the GUS reporter allow assay of gene expression in a quantitative and qualitative manner (Jefferson, 1987
In contrast, LUCs can be detected and quantified in vivo in a highly sensitive manner using photomultipliers or highly sensitive cameras. The reaction with the LUC substrates luciferin, ATP, and oxygen causes the release of a photon at 592 nm in 90% of the catalytic cycles (DeLuca and McElroy, 1986 To the best of our knowledge, the number of plant transformation vectors for LUC fusions is very limited. In this article, we report on the LucTrap vectors and describe their use for the analysis of plant response mechanisms that lead to changes in transcript and protein abundance. The LucTrap and LucTrap-3(GW) vectors are designed for the cloning of transcriptional and translational LUC fusions. Using selected examples, we demonstrate that these vectors serve to monitor and quantify positive and negative changes in gene expression as well as changes in protein abundance in planta. We also describe and characterize a collection of 700 Arabidopsis lines that we generated with the gene trap vector LucTrap-2, and we demonstrate that these lines can serve to uncover novel regulatory mechanisms that, in our specific case, are controlled by unstable regulators.
The LucTrap Vector for in Vivo Gene Expression Analyses
To obtain a LUC reporter vector suitable for transcriptional and translational fusions, we constructed the LucTrap vector, which is a derivative of the previously described plant transformation vector pGREEN0029-II (Fig. 1A
; Hellens et al., 1999
The LucTrap-3(GW) Vector for Gateway-Compatible LUC Fusions To generate a vector that is compatible with the increasingly popular Gateway cloning technology, we inserted the Gateway cassette (rfB) upstream of the LUC+ open reading frame of LucTrap to obtain LucTrap-3(GW) (Fig. 2 ). We subsequently tested LucTrap-3(GW) with five different entry clones and achieved full cloning efficiency in all cases, suggesting that LucTrap-3(GW) is a fully functional Gateway vector (data not shown).
Next, we examined whether translational fusions obtained with LucTrap-3(GW) can be used to determine protein abundance in vivo. To this end, we generated transgenic Arabidopsis lines that carry the construct REPRESSOR-OF-ga1-3 (RGA):RGA:LUC. RGA:RGA:LUC lines express a fusion protein of Arabidopsis RGA with LUC+ under the control of a 2-kb RGA promoter fragment. RGA is a predominantly nuclear-localized downstream regulator of the gibberellic acid (GA3) signaling pathway and it is known to be degraded by the 26S proteasome in response to GA3 (Silverstone et al., 2001
RGA protein abundance has so far almost exclusively been studied using transgenic Arabidopsis lines that contain RGA:GFP:RGA (Silverstone et al., 2001
Promoter, enhancer, or gene traps are genomic tools to generate untargeted reporter gene fusions (Evans et al., 1997
We generated LucTrap-1 as a vector for promoter and gene trapping in plants. LucTrap-1 contains a modified intron of the Arabidopsis G-protein
Characterization of a LucTrap-2 Collection To test the performance of LucTrap-2, we generated and analyzed a collection of 700 transgenic Arabidopsis lines carrying LucTrap-2. The segregation of the kanamycin resistance trait in the T2 progeny of these lines indicated that the vast majority of lines have single locus insertions. We then tested 5-d-old light-grown seedlings for LUC+ expression. In this analysis, we found 90 lines (12.8%) to express LUC+ at levels that are at least 2-fold above the levels detected in nontransgenic control plants (Fig. 5A ). This group included 46 lines (6.6%) that express LUC+ at levels at least 10 times above that detected in nontransgenic seedlings (Fig. 5, A and B). This shows that the LUC+ gene of LucTrap-2 is functional in Arabidopsis in the context of genomic insertions.
We then adopted previously established strategies for the amplification and identification of LucTrap-2 flanking sequence tags (FSTs; Table I ; Devon et al., 1995
We were successful in identifying FSTs from 49 lines and we analyzed these using BLASTN searches (Table II ). Based on the position and orientation of the LucTrap-2 T-DNA, we predict that 27 of the 49 lines will give rise to productive fusions between the trapped gene and LUC+ (Table II). Indeed, the lines predicted to produce LUC+ fusions include 12 lines that we had identified as LUC-expressing lines, suggesting that the trapped genes are expressed during the seedling stage. We also found that the genes that are trapped in 10 of the remaining 14 lines had been reported to be expressed only at low levels during the seedling stage, a finding that may explain the absence of LUC activity in our assays (Zimmermann et al., 2005
Our FST analysis also identified 22 LucTrap-2 lines that we do not predict to give rise to productive LUC+ fusions (Table II). Nevertheless, two lines (LT178 and LT414) display very strong LUC activity, whereas the remaining eight lines have comparatively low LUC levels. This may indicate that the expression of LUC+ can also be driven from cryptic promoters and cryptic open reading frames, which we would expect to provide the ATG start codon that had been deleted from the LUC+ gene in LucTrap-2. Alternatively, it may be envisioned that these lines have a duplicated T-DNA insertion in the respective locus so that the right border of the second insertion is oriented such that productive LUC+ fusions can be formed. Such more complex T-DNA insertion events have frequently been reported for T-DNA insertions (De Neve et al., 1997
In recent years, it has become increasingly clear that many signaling events are controlled by unstable regulators that are degraded by the ubiquitin-proteasome system (Schwechheimer and Calderon-Villalobos, 2004
To examine whether the LucTrap-2 collection contains auxin-induced genes, we examined the effect of auxin on LUC gene expression in all 700 LucTrap-2 lines. In this analysis, we identified three LucTrap-2 lines, namely, LT028, LT032, and LT095, whose LUC expression was activated in response to 2,4D (Fig. 6, BD). We then went on to study the effect of MG132 application on auxin-induced gene expression in these lines. In agreement with a model where MG132 causes the stabilization of transcriptional repressors such as the AUX/IAAs, we found that auxin-induced gene expression is impaired in LT028 and LT095 following MG132 application (Fig. 6, BC). In contrast, our studies indicate that auxin-induced gene expression in LT032 may be governed by a different mechanism. Whereas MG132 alone does not have an effect on the expression of LUC+ in LT028 or LT095, MG132 is sufficient to induce LUC+ expression in the absence of auxin in LT032 (Fig. 6D). Furthermore, MG132 superinduces the expression of LUC+ in LT032 when applied together with auxin (Fig. 6D). Such a result cannot be explained by the activity of unstable transcriptional repressors, but rather points to the activity of an unstable transcriptional activator that is stabilized in response to auxin. Such an unstable activator could be stabilized independently by auxin and by inhibition of proteasomal activity and, in combination, these treatments may then lead to the observed superinduction.
In all four cases examined, auxin-induced LUC+ expression was followed by negative feedback regulation (Fig. 6, AD). Such a negative feedback mechanism may be due to the activity of de novo synthesized AUX/IAA repressors whose transcription is known to be promoted by auxin (Abel et al., 1994
Dynamic Detection of Transcript and Protein Abundance Using the LucTrap Vectors
In this article, we introduce the LucTrap vectors that make use of the modified firefly LUC+ as a reporter for regulated gene expression and protein abundance. Using transgenic Arabidopsis lines that express a promoter fragment of the auxin-inducible GH3-2 gene, we demonstrate that LucTrap is well suited to follow gene expression patterns in a dynamic and time-resolved manner (Fig. 1). Furthermore, we show that a protein fusion between the unstable GA pathway regulator RGA and LUC+ expressed from LucTrap-3(GW) responds to changes in GA levels and that these changes can be quantified in transgenic lines expressing the fusion protein (Fig. 3; Dill et al., 2001 In comparison to other reporter proteins, such as GFP and GUS, LUC reporters including LUC+ offer the important advantage that they can report on changes in reporter abundance in a time-resolved manner. A number of specific features of LUC contribute to this important advantage. First, LUC reactions are not toxic to the organism under investigation. Furthermore, none of our experiments suggest that the amount of luciferin, its penetration into the plant tissue, and its distribution within the plant are rate-limiting steps in in vivo experiments. For example, in our experiments, we have been able to measure LUC activities as early as 2 min after luciferin application to the plant. Since LUCs including LUC+ are inactivated after the first LUC reaction has taken place, LUC activity measurements report on the current synthesis of LUC rather than on its accumulation over time. Several of our experiments clearly demonstrate that LUC measurements allow the detection of positive and negative changes in LUC synthesis rates at minute intervals when luciferin is continuously supplied. In contrast, the detection of protein degradation events, as exemplified in our case with the RGA:LUC fusion protein, requires measurements of absolute LUC activities and therefore single-point LUC activity measurements (e.g. a comparison of untreated and treated samples). In the same context, we would like to point out that these measurements can be made in a high-throughput manner with seedlings grown in microtiter plates with extremely short measurement times (<1 s). Whereas the dynamic nature of LUC expression and the ease of its quantification in a high-throughput manner are certainly great advantages of the LUC reporters, LUCs cannot be used to detect changes in the subcellular localization of a LUC fusion protein. Therefore, whereas LUCs may be optimally suited to detect changes in gene expression rates or protein abundance, they may only allow understanding of some aspects of gene expression or protein behavior.
The analysis of the Arabidopsis genome sequence allows the prediction that plant growth and development is regulated to a large extent at the level of protein degradation (Schwechheimer and Calderon-Villalobos, 2004 Interestingly, we also discovered one LucTrap-2 line, LT032, where the inhibition of proteasomal activity by MG132 was sufficient to induce gene expression and where MG132 treatment resulted in a superinduction of auxin-induced gene expression (Fig. 6D). The induction kinetics of the single and the combined treatments strongly suggest that the induction is direct and that both substances act on the same protein. Such induction kinetics cannot be explained through the activity of an unstable repressor, but may best be explained through the activity of an unstable activator that is stabilized by MG132 and stabilized or activated by auxin. As far as we are aware, such a regulatory mechanism for auxin-induced gene expression has not been described as yet and LT032 may now be used for genetic screens that aim at isolation of the factors that control gene expression in LT032.
In this article, we introduce the four LucTrap plant transformation vectors. We provide evidence that transcriptional and translational LUC fusions expressed from the LucTrap vectors allow the monitoring of changes in gene expression and protein abundance in vivo. We also demonstrate that LUC measurements can be used to quantify changes in transcript and fusion protein abundance in response to proteasomal inhibition. The Arabidopsis genome encodes for hundreds of proteins with clear homology to known components of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (Bachmair et al., 2001
Biological Material
Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) ecotype Columbia was used for all plant transformations described in this study. Arabidopsis transformation was performed using the floral-dip method (Desfeux et al., 2000
To generate LucTrap-1, the intron sequence of the G LucTrap-2 (GenBank accession no. AY944582) is derived from LucTrap-1 and was obtained by religation of the Nco1-digested and S1 nuclease-treated LucTrap-1 vector. The presence of the desired 4-bp deletion, including the ATG start codon of LUC+, was confirmed by DNA sequencing. LucTrap (GenBank accession no. DQ073044) is derived from LucTrap-1 and was obtained by insertion of the phosphorylated and annealed oligonucleotides LucTrap multiple cloning sites (MCS)-FW, 5'-CCTGGATCCTGCAGAGCTCACTAGTC-3' and LucTrap MCS-RV, 5'-CATGGACTAGTGAGCTCTGCAGGATCCAGG-3' into the Stu1/Nco1-digested LucTrap-1 vector.
LucTrap-3(GW) (GenBank accession no. AY968054) was obtained by insertion of a modified rfB Gateway selection cassette (Invitrogen) into LucTrap-1. To this end, the Gateway rfB cassette was PCR amplified using the primers attR1-StuI, 5'-AGGCCTATCAACAAGTTTGTACAAAAAAG-3' and attR2-NcoI, 5'-CCATGGCAACCACTTTGTACAAGA-3', cloned into pCR-TOPO (Invitrogen), sequence verified, and subsequently subcloned as a Stu1/Nco1 fragment into LucTrap-1. LucTrap-3(GW) confers resistance to kanamycin in Escherichia coli, and therefore LucTrap-3(GW) works best in combination with the Gentamycin-resistant donor vector pDONR207 (Invitrogen). Because all LucTrap vectors are based on the previously published pGreen0029-II vector, plant transformation requires the presence of the helper plasmid pSOUP (Hellens et al., 1999
To generate GH3-2:LucTrap, an 800-bp GH3-2 (At4g37390) fragment was PCR amplified from Arabidopsis genomic DNA using the primers GH3-1, 5'-CCATGGTTGTTTTTTTTTCTAAAAGAAAAAGTG-3' and GH3-2, 5'-AGATCTGTCGACATGCTATAGATTGATATAAGAAAAAAG-3'. The resulting PCR fragment was cloned into pGEM-T (Promega), sequence verified, and subcloned as a NcoI/StuI fragment into LucTrap-1. Twenty independent transgenic lines that harbor GH3-2:LucTrap were generated and analyzed. For RGA:RGA:LUC, a 3,600-bp genomic fragment that comprises the RGA (At2g01570) open reading frame and a 2,000-bp promoter fragment were amplified from genomic DNA of Arabidopsis ecotype Columbia with the primers RGA-FW, 5'-AGGCCTTTTATGTTTTCGATGGCTGAGCTTC-3' and RGA-RV, 5'-CCATGGGCGCCGCCGTCGAGAGTTTCCAAGCGGA-3'. The resulting fragment was inserted into pENTR/D-TOPO (Invitrogen), sequence verified, and subcloned into LucTrap-3(GW). Ten transgenic lines that harbor RGA:RGA:LUC were generated and analyzed.
LUC activity was measured using 5-d-old seedlings that had been grown on moist filter paper in 96-well microtiter plates in continuous light (Thermo LabSystems). Seedlings were assayed in a Berthold Mithras LB940 luminometer in the presence of 80 µL Murashige and Skoog medium (Duchefa), supplemented with 5 mM D-luciferin (PJK), 2,4D, or GA3 (Duchefa) or the inhibitors PAC (Duchefa) and MG132 (Sigma-Aldrich) as indicated. For gene expression experiments, seedlings were incubated with luciferin and LUC activity was measured at regular intervals over the course of the experiments. Changes in LUC+ fusion protein levels were quantified in single-point measurements from samples that had been subjected to the respective treatments for 12 h. The result of one typical experiment is shown in each case.
Transgenic seedlings expressing RGA:GFP:RGA were treated for 12 h with GA3, PAC (Duchefa), and MG132 (Sigma-Aldrich) as indicated and then imaged using a Leica TCS SP2 confocal microscope. Representative images are shown in each case.
For the determination of flanking sequences from LucTrap-2 transgenic lines, previously established procedures were adapted (Devon et al., 1995
Auxin-induced GH3-2 (At4g37390) gene expression was examined by semiquantitative RT-PCR. Total RNA was prepared using the RNeasy kit (Qiagen) from 5-d-old seedlings that had been treated with 5 µM 2,4D. One microgram of total RNA was used in combination with the oligo(dT) adaptor primer 5'-GACTCGAGTCGACATCGA(17xT)-3' for RT as previously described and GH3-2 transcription was examined by PCR (28 cycles) using the GH3-2 gene-specific primers GH3-2-FW, 5'-GTTTCAGCGACGACTTCTGAGAAAGATGT-3', and GH3-2-RV, 5'-TCTTCGCTCATAAGAGCATTGCT-3' (Frohman et al., 1988 Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession numbers AY944581, AY944582, AY968054, and DQ073044.
The authors wish to thank Esther M.N. Dohmann and Dr. Melina Zourelidou for comments on the manuscript; Wolfdieter Braun for his contributions during the initial stages of this project; Tai-ping Sun for providing the RGA:GFP:RGA lines; and the Nottingham Arabidopsis Stock Centre for the CD126 gene trap construct. Received January 30, 2006; returned for revision March 15, 2006; accepted March 15, 2006.
1 This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant nos. SCHW751/41 and SCHW751/42) as part of the Arabidopsis Functional Genomics Network Schwerpunktprogramm. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Claus Schwechheimer (claus.schwechheimer{at}zmbp.uni-tuebingen.de). www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.078097. * Corresponding author; e-mail claus.schwechheimer{at}zmbp.uni-tuebingen.de; fax 497071295135.
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