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First published online April 28, 2006; 10.1104/pp.106.081208 Plant Physiology 141:412-422 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Combined Transcript and Metabolite Profiling of Arabidopsis Leaves Reveals Fundamental Effects of the Thiol-Disulfide Status on Plant Metabolism1,[W],[OA]Max-Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology, 14476 Golm-Potsdam, Germany
In this study, we used gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis in combination with flux analysis and the Affymetrix ATH1 GeneChip to survey the metabolome and transcriptome of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) leaves in response to manipulation of the thiol-disulfide status. Feeding low concentrations of the sulfhydryl reagent dithiothreitol for 1 h at the end of the dark period led to posttranslational redox activation of ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase and major alterations in leaf carbon partitioning, including an increased flux into major respiratory pathways, starch, cell wall, and amino acid synthesis, and a reduced flux to sucrose. This was accompanied by a decrease in the levels of hexose phosphates, while metabolites in the second half of the tricarboxylic acid cycle and various amino acids increased, indicating a stimulation of anaplerotic fluxes reliant on -ketoglutarate. There was also an increase in shikimate as a precursor of secondary plant products and marked changes in the levels of the minor sugars involved in ascorbate synthesis and cell wall metabolism. Transcript profiling revealed a relatively small number of changes in the levels of transcripts coding for components of redox regulation, transport processes, and cell wall, protein, and amino acid metabolism, while there were no major alterations in transcript levels coding for enzymes involved in central metabolic pathways. These results provide a global picture of the effect of redox and reveal the utility of transcript and metabolite profiling as systemic strategies to uncover the occurrence of redox modulation in vivo.
The cellular redox state is determined by several redox-active species. In addition to being constituents of cellular metabolism per se, redox agents actively participate in metabolic regulation (Bowsher et al., 1992
The thioredoxin system was discovered over 20 years ago (Buchanan, 1980
While the role of redox signals in photosynthesis is relatively well characterized, there is little information about their role in the regulation of other metabolic processes. It was shown recently that thioredoxin regulates ADPGlc pyrophosphorylase (AGPase), a key enzyme of starch biosynthesis (Tiessen et al., 2002
The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) genome contains a small family of thioredoxins, including 19 different isoforms grouped into six subfamilies (Lemaire et al., 2004
A large number of novel potential thioredoxin targets have been identified using two in vitro strategies: (1) studies of enzymes and proteins after adding dithiothreitol (DTT), a nonphysiological substrate for thioredoxins (Schürmann and Jacquot, 2000 In the following experiments we use flux analysis and metabolite and transcript profiling to survey the response of Arabidopsis leaves to incubation with the reductant DTT. This strategy allowed us to identify sites in the metabolic network that are subject to dithiol regulation in vivo. The results are discussed in the context of in vitro findings and previous models for thioredoxin mediated regulation of metabolism.
Feeding Dilute DTT Leads to Posttranslational Redox Activation of AGPase and Other Enzymes in Arabidopsis Leaves
DTT is a sulfhydryl reagent that serves as a nonphysiological redox donor and substrate for thioredoxins (Buchanan et al., 1979
Four chloroplast enzymes that are known to be thioredoxin targets were investigated: Glc6PDH, FBPase, NADP-MDH (Scheibe, 1990
To investigate whether DTT treatment affected the in vivo thiol status of mitochondrial proteins, we analyzed the dimerization state of the mitochondrial alternative oxidase (AOX). This protein is activated by reduction of an intermolecular disulfide bond formed between the Cys-126 residues of the AOX homodimer (Umbach and Siedow, 1993
To investigate the effect on carbon fluxes, leaf discs were incubated for 1 h with carrier-free high specific activity 14C-Glc in the presence or absence of 5 mM DTT. DTT treatment resulted in a small inhibition of 14C-Glc uptake (Fig. 2A
), which resembles the results obtained with potato tuber tissue (Tiessen et al., 2002
Changes in Metabolite Profiles in Arabidopsis Leaves in Response to Short-Term DTT Treatment
For a more comprehensive analysis, metabolite and transcript profiles were investigated in leaf discs incubated in the presence and absence of DTT in parallel to the incubations described above. After sampling and extraction, metabolite contents were determined and expressed as described in Roessner et al. (2001a
Changes in Transcript Profile in Arabidopsis Leaves in Response to Short-Term DTT Treatment
To investigate changes in the transcriptome of Arabidopsis leaves, Affymetrix ATH1 GeneChip analyses were performed on control and DTT-treated samples. Feeding of 5 mM DTT for 1 h led to a relatively small number of changes in transcript levels. Out of the 11,998 genes called present by the software, 15 were up-regulated and 29 were down-regulated >2-fold in both biological replicas (see Supplemental Table II). Using the MapMan software (Thimm et al., 2004
In Supplemental Figure 2 changes in transcripts were pasted in a metabolism overview scheme using the MapMan software. For this analysis, a highly sensitive visualization scale was chosen at which a log2[ratio] of plus or minus 1 was assigned the strongest color intensity. This allows visualization of general trends of changes in transcript levels rather than the identification of significantly different changes of individual transcripts. The data again clearly document a preferential decrease in transcripts involved in cell wall degradation and reorganization in response to DTT feeding, while transcripts involved in cell wall synthesis preferentially increased. There were hardly any changes in transcripts of central metabolic pathways such as the TCA cycle or photosynthesis. Further analysis also reveals a general decrease in transcripts coding for different subcategories of transport proteins, with the exception of uridine-sugar transporters that showed a preferential increase (Supplemental Fig. 3). Table II provides an overview of the changes in normalized expression values of genes that encode for proteins involved in redox regulation. There was a preferential increase in transcripts coding for protein disulfide isomerases, thioredoxin family proteins, and glutaredoxin family proteins, while transcripts involved in ROS detoxification (peroxidases, etc.) remained largely unchanged (data not shown). MapMan files for all experiments are available in Supplemental Table III. In Supplemental Table II, individual transcripts are listed showing >2-fold changes (log2[ratio] > 1 or < 1) in both biological replicas. The list includes several transporters and enzymes of amino acid metabolism as well as genes associated with protein folding, disulfide-bond formation, cell wall metabolism, and signaling components.
The lack of substantial changes in transcript levels of genes encoding for enzymes involved in central metabolic pathways indicates that the changes in fluxes and metabolite levels in these pathways that were obtained following short-term incubation in DTT (see Fig. 2) were most likely due to translational or posttranslational effects of the treatment.
DTT Treatment Leads to in Vivo Modification of the Thiol-Disulfide Activation of Known Thioredoxin Targets
Thioredoxin plays a key role in the light regulation of photosynthesis and has recently been implicated in the sugar-dependent regulation of starch synthesis (see introduction). In vitro studies have identified approximately 180 putative thioredoxin targets, indicating that there is a wider role for thioredoxin in the regulation of further pathways and of events in additional metabolic compartments as well as the chloroplast (Buchanan and Balmer, 2005 The experimental approach was validated by investigating the impact of the DTT treatment on a set of known target enzymes and other metabolic parameters that provide information about the thiol-disulfide status and, more generally, the redox status. Three known chloroplastic targets for DTT and thioredoxin (AGPase, FBPase, and Glc6PDH) showed the expected responses; DTT treatment led to increased monomerization of AGPase in nonreductive SDS-PAGE, increased activity of FBPase, and decreased activity of G6PDH. The DTT treatment also led to an increase in the monomer/dimer ratio of mitochondrial AOX.
DTT treatment did not significantly increase NADP-MDH activity. This is a known target for thioredoxin m, but activation requires a high NADPH/NADP ratio. Activation of NADP-MDH is an indicator for the NADPH/NADP ratio in the chloroplast stroma (Scheibe, 1990 These results provide evidence that DTT treatment led to changes in the thiol status of several known thioredoxin targets in the chloroplast stroma and the mitochondria, while the reduction state of the NAD(P) system was not substantially changed in the discs. However, we cannot rigorously exclude the possibility that some of the changes in the DTT treatment may be due to changes of the ascorbate or glutathione couples.
A short-term increase in the thiol-disulfide status leads to major alterations in the metabolite profiles and increased flux of carbon into starch, cell wall, the major respiratory pathways, and amino acid synthesis. There are no substantial changes in the levels of major sugars such as Suc, Glc, and Fru (Figs. 2 and 3). This provides evidence that the thiol-disulfide status affects several important metabolic pathways both within and external to the plastid, via a mechanism that is independent of the sugar status.
The stimulation of starch synthesis was accompanied by posttranslational redox activation of AGPase and occurred in the presence of decreased hexose-phosphate and unchanged 3-phosphoglycerate levels. This resembles the response in potato tuber discs (Tiessen et al., 2002
DTT treatment led to a decrease in the levels of organic acids involved in the first part of the TCA cycle (aconitate, isocitrate, and
DTT treatment led to an increased flux of carbon into amino acids and proteins (Fig. 2) and increased levels of many amino acids (Fig. 3), indicating redox activation of enzymes incorporating carbon skeletons into amino acid in leaves. In plants,
Our results identify further redox-regulated steps in the pathways of amino acid synthesis. DTT treatment led to a decrease in Asp, while amino acids deriving from Asp such as Ile and Asn were increased, indicating that one or more enzymes involved in the conversion of Asp to Ile or Asn may be stimulated by increased redox state. A similar situation holds for enzymes involved in the metabolism of pyruvate to Ala, Leu, and Val in the metabolism of Glu to Arg and Pro, conversion of Ser to Cys, and the conversion of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to shikimate and Tyr. The decrease in PEP and increase of shikimate and Tyr is consistent with previous in vitro studies showing that 3-deoxy-d-arabino-heptulosonate 7-P synthase, the first enzyme of the shikimate pathway, is activated by thioredoxin f (Entus et al., 2002
Thus, our results combined with published in vitro studies indicate that thioredoxin-dependent regulation may play a major role in the orchestration of amino acid synthesis. Final evidence will require the demonstration that the dithiol-sulfide status of these enzymes changes in vivo in response to physiological treatments like illumination or sugar accumulation, and that mutants lacking thioredoxins or thioredoxin reductase are defective in this response and the accompanying changes of fluxes and metabolites. Probably, the dithiol and further redox couples interact to coordinate N-assimilation, anaplerotic production of carbon skeletons, and amino acid synthesis. While there is no evidence that nitrate reduction is regulated via reversible disulfide-bond formation, it does depend on the NAD(P)H/NAD(P) ratio; nitrate reductase uses NADH as reductant and nitrite reductase requires reduced ferreredoxin, which in the dark is formed from NADPH. In tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) mutants lacking functional mitochondrial electron transport complex I, an increased reduction state of NAD(P)H leads to a stimulation of nitrate assimilation and an increase of amino acids at the expense of
DTT treatment stimulated the flux of carbon into proteins (Fig. 2). This might be due to increased availability of amino acids. Alternatively, DTT might lead to redox activation of translation, protein assembly, and folding. The synthesis, assembly, and transport of proteins are stimulated by DTT and inhibited by SH oxidants (von Stedingk et al., 1997
DTT treatment stimulated flux to cell wall components, especially cellulose (Fig. 2). Cellulose synthase has been reported to be subject to posttranslational redox regulation, leading to changes in the activation/oligomerization state of the enzyme (Kurek et al., 2002
DTT treatment did not lead to significant changes in overall transcript levels for genes assigned to central metabolic pathways such as the TCA cycle, starch metabolism, pentose-phosphate pathway, and Calvin cycle. These results indicate that short-term redox regulation of these pathways occurs mainly at the posttranslational rather than the transcriptional level, which is consistent with previous studies showing that these pathways are regulated by the thioredoxin system (Buchanan, 1980
Statistical treatment uncovered significant changes of overall transcript levels for some specific segments of metabolism (Table I). This included a preferential increase of transcripts for genes encoding enzymes in amino acid metabolism, a decrease for enzymes involved in cell wall metabolism, an increase for cell wall synthesis, and a decrease for transport proteins (Supplemental Fig. 3) with the exception of ER sugar-nucleotide transporters, which increased. The reason for the negative effect of redox on transcripts involved in transport is unclear but may contribute to the inhibition of sugar uptake (see Fig. 2). The increase in transcripts of ER sugar-nucleotide transporters may provide a strategy to stimulate precursor supply to allow increased cell wall synthesis. There was a significant increase of the transcript levels for genes involved in redox regulation and disulfide-bond formation (Table I), including genes that encode thioredoxin and glutaredoxin family proteins (Table II), but not genes involved in oxidative stress (peroxidase, etc.) or general stress responses. DTT also affected transcripts involved in the synthesis, assembly, and transport of proteins, as seen by von Stedingk et al. (1997)
The response to DTT treatment contrasts to that seen by Ball et al. (2004)
There is a surprising similarity between the stimulating effect of DTT on biosynthetic fluxes documented in this study (Fig. 2) and previously published results on the effect of sugars (Geiger et al., 1998 In conclusion, this paper complements recent proteomic studies by providing a comprehensive overview of global changes in fluxes, metabolites, and transcripts in response to thiol-disulfide manipulation of leaf tissue. Results show that major biosynthetic processes in plants are redox modulated in vivo and allow various redox-regulated sites to be identified in vivo that have previously been found in proteomic studies to interact with thioredoxins. The large alterations in metabolites and fluxes in central metabolic pathways were accompanied by a relatively small number of changes in transcript levels, suggesting that regulation occurred preferentially at the posttranslational level.
Plant Material Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) var. ecotype Columbia-0 (wild type) was grown in a short-day phytotron (with an 8-h light/16-h dark cycle; 180 µE, 20°C/16°C, and 60%/75% humidity). Leaves were harvested in the chamber at the end of the dark period and used immediately for incubation experiments or quenched in liquid nitrogen and stored at 80°C until use. Only source leaves that were not shaded by other leaves were collected.
Leaf discs were floated for on 2 mM MES, pH 6.5, and various concentrations of DTT. The experiment was carried out in a growth cabinet in identical conditions to the growth phytotron, except the light was switched off. After 1 h, the leaf discs were immersed shortly in water to remove external DTT and then frozen in liquid nitrogen.
Frozen leaf material was homogenized and extracted in trichloroacetic acid as in Hendriks et al. (2003)
Leaf discs were incubated in the dark for 1 h at 20°C (humidity of 60%) in medium containing 2 mM MES-KOH (pH 6.5) and 0.66 mM or 0.33 mM [U-14C]Glc (specific activity, 111 kBq/mmol; Amersham-Buchler) without (control) or together with 5 mM DTT in petri dishes (5-mL volume). After incubation, leaf discs were immersed shortly in water to wash them from incubation medium and frozen in liquid nitrogen. Frozen material was extracted in two subsequent steps with 80% (v/v) ethanol (250 µL per 10 mg FW and 150 µL per 10 mg FW), mixed for 20 min at 80°C, centrifuged at 14,000 rpm for 5 min, the pellet reextracted in with 50% (v/v) ethanol (250 µL per 10 mg FW), the supernatants combined and transferred into a small tube, dried under an air stream at 45°C, and taken up in 1 mL water (soluble fraction). The soluble fraction was separated into sugars, anionic, and cationic fractions by ion exchange and thin-layer chromatography (Geigenberger et al., 1997
Metabolites were determined in derivatized methanol extracts by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis as in Roessner et al. (2001a)
Total RNA was isolated from frozen material using Trizol Reagent (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's protocol. Synthesis of cDNA, cRNA labeling, and hybridization on the Arabidopsis GeneChip ATH1 was performed at the Deutsches Ressourcenzentrum für Genomforschung (Berlin) using Affymetrix recommended protocols. Two independent biological replicate hybridizations were performed for all samples. Probe signal intensities were processed with the Affymetrix MicroArray Suite software package (MAS 5.0) and the resulting CEL files imported in the Bioconductor software package in R (Gentleman et al., 2004 Raw data of the transcript profiles can be found in the Gene Expression Omnibus (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/geo/) with the accession code GSE4021.
We thank Thomas Elthon for kindly providing the AOX antibody. We are grateful to Janneke Hendriks and Axel Tiessen for valuable discussions, to Oliver Bläsing and Matthew Hannah for their help with microarray analysis software, and to Justyna Michalska for help with AOX analysis. Received March 30, 2006; returned for revision April 6, 2006; accepted April 6, 2006.
1 This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, with the grants Ge 878/14 (to P.G.), SFB 429 TPB7 (to P.G. and A.K.), and SFB 429 TPA11 (to P.G., J.T.v.D., and A.R.F.). 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: Peter Geigenberger (geigenberger{at}mpimp-golm.mpg.de).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.081208. * Corresponding author; e-mail geigenberger{at}mpimp-golm.mpg.de; fax 493315678408.
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