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First published online February 3, 2006; 10.1104/pp.105.073213 Plant Physiology 141:721-730 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists Dimethylallyl Diphosphate and Geranyl Diphosphate Pools of Plant Species Characterized by Different Isoprenoid Emissions1Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Istituto di Biologia Agroambientale e Forestale, 00016 Monterotondo Scalo, Rome, Italy
Dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMADP) and geranyl diphosphate (GDP) are the last precursors of isoprene and monoterpenes emitted by leaves, respectively. DMADP and GDP pools were measured in leaves of plants emitting isoprene (Populus alba), monoterpenes (Quercus ilex and Mentha piperita), or nonemitting isoprenoids (Prunus persica). Detectable pools were found in all plant species, but P. persica showed the lowest pool size, which indicates a limitation of the whole pathway leading to isoprenoid biosynthesis in nonemitting species. The pools of DMADP and GDP of nonemitting, isoprene-emitting, and monoterpene-emitting species were partially labeled (generally 40%60% of total carbon-incorporated 13C) within the same time by which volatile isoprenoids are fully labeled (15 min). This indicates the coexistence of two pools for both precursors, the rapidly labeled pool presumably occurring in chloroplasts and thereby synthesized by the methylerythritol phosphate pathway and the nonlabeled pool presumably located in the cytosol and synthesized by the mevalonic pathway. In M. piperita storing monoterpenes in specialized leaf structures, the GDP pool remained totally unlabeled, indicating either that monoterpenes are totally formed by the mevalonic pathway or that labeling occurs slowly in comparison to the large pool of stored monoterpenes in this plant. The pools of DMADP and GDP increased during the season (from May to July) but decreased when the leaf was darkened or exposed to very high temperature. In the dark, the pool of DMADP of the isoprene-emitting species decreased faster than the pool of GDP. However, after 6 h of darkness, both pools were depleted to about 10% of the pool size in illuminated leaves. This indicates that both the chloroplastic and the cytosolic pools of precursors are depleted in the dark. When comparing measurements over the season and at different temperatures, an inverse correlation was observed between isoprene emission by P. alba and the DMADP pool size and between monoterpene emission by Q. ilex and the GDP pool size. This suggests that the pool size does not limit the emission of isoprenoids. Rather, it indicates that the flux of volatile isoprenoids effectively controls the size of their pools of precursors.
A wide array of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) is emitted into the atmosphere by the leaves of many plant species. Among the biogenic VOCs studied to date, isoprene and monoterpenes are quantitatively the most important (Guenther et al., 1995
The biosynthesis of isoprene and monoterpenes has been clarified only recently. The emission of isoprene is light dependent (Loreto and Sharkey, 1990
The mevalonate and the MEP pathways generate the same precursors. Isoprene derives from the five-carbon precursor dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMADP), which may be formed in the cytosol by the mevalonic pathway and in the chloroplasts by the MEP pathway. DMADP may also condense with its isomer, isopentenyl diphosphate (IDP), generating geranyl diphosphate (GDP), the precursor of monoterpenes. Further condensation with IDP units generates the wide family of compounds characterizing sesquiterpenes and nonvolatile isoprenoids such as carotenoids. Previously, we have determined the size of chloroplastic and cytosolic pools of DMADP. We have shown that in isoprene-emitting leaves the pool of DMADP is incompletely labeled when isoprene labeling is complete (Loreto et al., 2004
To our knowledge, nothing is also known about the partitioning of the GDP pool between the chloroplasts and the cytosol. As in the case of isoprene, monoterpenes are now believed to be formed by the MEP pathway in chloroplasts, but, contrary to isoprene, several species store large amounts of monoterpenes outside chloroplasts. The possibility therefore exists that monoterpene biosynthesis occurs in both compartments from GDP available in situ or translocated from its place of biosynthesis. Labeling of monoterpenes stored in specialized structures is very slow compared to labeling of chloroplastic monoterpenes (Schurmann et al., 1993 A series of experiments involving the determination and labeling of DMADP and GDP pools was therefore carried out to answer to the following specific questions. (1) What is the size of chloroplastic and cytosolic DMADP pools of nonisoprenoid emitters and monoterpene emitters, as compared to isoprene emitters? (2) Are there chloroplastic and cytosolic pools of GDP, and what are their sizes? (3) Are these pools different during the season? (4) How do the DMADP and GDP pools respond to environmental factors, and are these responses consistent with the light and temperature dependence of isoprene and monoterpene emission? (5) Is there any relationship between the GDP pools and the presence of stored monoterpenes? (6) Is there any general relationship between the pool size of DMADP and GDP and the emission of isoprene and monoterpenes?
The proton transfer reaction (PTR)-mass spectrometry (MS) technique was successfully used to detect pools of isoprenoid precursors upon acid hydrolysis, as shown by the excellent correlation of the instrumental reading with different concentrations of DMADP and GDP (Fig. 1 ). The yield of DMADP and GDP was not influenced by leaf characteristics. Experiments mixing an aliquot of standards to extracts of Quercus ilex and Populus alba leaves with different specific leaf weight yielded DMADP and GDP amounts fitting the relationship obtained in the absence of leaf material (Fig. 1).
The total (chloroplastic and cytosolic) DMADP pool of nonemitting Prunus persica leaves was low in comparison to that measured in isoprene-emitting leaves of P. alba, in the species that emits monoterpenes without storing them (Q. ilex), and in the monoterpene producer that stores terpenes (Mentha piperita; Fig. 2A ). The GDP pool was larger (up to 10 times in isoprene- and monoterpene-emitting leaves) than the DMADP pool in all species (Fig. 2B). As for DMADP, the nonemitter P. persica was characterized by the smallest pool of GDP.
The pools were sampled in May, when leaves start to emit isoprenoids, and again in July, when isoprenoid emission is at the seasonal peak (Ciccioli et al., 2003
The DMADP and GDP pools were incompletely labeled by 13C in nonemitting and isoprenoid-emitting leaves. About 40% of unlabeled DMADP was found in P. persica, P. alba, and Q. ilex leaves (Table I ). The amount of unlabeled GDP was comparable to the unlabeled fraction of DMADP in P. alba and Q. ilex, and slightly higher in P. persica. The labeling patterns of the DMADP and GDP pools of nonemitting leaves and isoprenoid-emitting leaves with no storage organs for monoterpenes were compared with those of M. piperita, a monoterpene-emitting plant storing monoterpenes in glands. In M. piperita, the DMADP pool was again about 50% unlabeled, but the GDP pool was completely unlabeled (Table I).
When leaves of the isoprene-emitting species P. alba were darkened, both the DMADP and the GDP pools were depleted (Fig. 4, A and B ). However, the DMADP pool was already halved after 2 h of darkness (Fig. 4A), while at the same sampling time the GDP pool was comparable to that of illuminated leaves (Fig. 4B).
When leaves were exposed to very high temperature, the pool of DMADP decreased in nonemitting and isoprene-emitting leaves, but in the monoterpene emitter Q. ilex the DMADP pool increased in comparison to that measured at 30°C (Fig. 5A ). Similarly, the GDP pool decreased at high temperature in the nonemitter P. persica and, although not significantly, in the isoprene emitter P. alba. The GDP pool also decreased in the monoterpene emitter Q. ilex exposed to high temperature (Fig. 5B).
The emission of isoprenoids was compared to the total pool size of the precursor in the two sampling dates and at the two different temperatures (Fig. 6 ). An inverse relationship was found between the emission of isoprene and the DMADP pool in P. alba (Fig. 6A) and between monoterpene emission and the GDP pool in Q. ilex (Fig. 6B).
There are detectable pools of DMADP and GDP in the leaves of all examined plants. The DMADP pool detected in May was generally low but comparable with the pool previously detected with a similar method on young leaves (Loreto et al., 2004 In all plant species, the pool sizes of DMADP and GDP increased significantly during the season, indicating a strong environmental, and perhaps developmental, control on DMADP and GDP formation. However, as discussed below, the increase in the pool sizes of precursors does not seem to support a larger emission of the volatile products.
Under conditions generating high rates of isoprenoid emission (30°C and exposure to high light intensity), we have detected a 50% to 60% incorporation of 13C in the pools of both DMADP and GDP in isoprene-emitting species. Because DMADP incomplete labeling occurs when isoprene emission labeling is quasicomplete and does not proceed further (Delwiche and Sharkey, 1993
Again, a similar degree of labeling was found in the nonemitting species as in the isoprenoid-emitting species. This points out that chloroplastic pools of DMADP and GDP are also present in nonemitters and that the emission trait and amount are not controlled by the substrate availability in these species, whereas it may be restricted by the low presence or catalytic properties of the enzymes driving isoprene and monoterpene formation from the immediate precursors (see Lehning et al., 1999
The pool of DMADP was partially labeled in the monoterpene emitters Q. ilex and M. piperita, indicating a ubiquitous and constant distribution of the chloroplast versus cytosolic pool of DMADP in leaves. However, the GDP pool of M. piperita remained completely unlabeled, whereas in Q. ilex the labeling was partial, as for isoprene-emitting and nonemitting leaves. It is now believed that volatile isoprenoids (isoprene and monoterpenes) are made by the same MEP pathway in chloroplasts (Lichtenthaler, 1999
Our experiment might suggest that the pool of GDP supplying stored monoterpenes is predominantly cytosolic in M. piperita leaves. Perhaps GDP is made in the cytosol and then transported to the chloroplast, where monoterpene synthesis is carried out. However, in snapdragon (Antirrhinum majus) flowers, it has been shown that the cross-talk between pathways of isoprenoid biosynthesis is unidirectional from plastids to cytosol (Dudareva et al., 2005
The MEP pathway generating volatile isoprenoids is light regulated (Loreto and Sharkey, 1990
Temperature is the other relevant factor affecting isoprene and monoterpene emission (Loreto and Sharkey, 1990 In conclusion, our experiments provided the following answers to the questions we have asked in the introduction. (1) All plant species do have pools of DMADP and GDP even if they do not emit isoprenoids. (2) These pools of precursors may be roughly equally distributed in the cytosol and in the chloroplasts, indicating that the chloroplastic biosynthesis of isoprenoids is also active in nonisoprenoid-emitting species. (3) The pools of DMADP and GDP increase during the vegetative season (at least from early summer to full summer). (4) The pools decrease at increasing temperatures and in the dark. (5) Pool sizes are not related to the presence of stored monoterpenes. (6) Pool sizes are inversely related to the emissions of isoprene (DMADP) and monoterpenes (GDP), indicating that emission fluxes strongly control the pool sizes of the immediate precursors of the emitted compounds.
Plant Materials, Protocols, and Statistics Plants of a tree species that does not emit isoprene or monoterpenes (Prunus persica), a tree emitting isoprene (Populus alba), a monoterpene-emitting tree that does not store monoterpenes in specialized structures (Quercus ilex), and a perennial herb storing monoterpenes in glands (Mentha piperita) were grown in 50-L pots under optimal water and nutrient conditions. Plants were grown in the experimental field of our Institute, near Rome. Experiments were carried out on leaves of 3-year-old (tree species) and 1-year-old plants of Mentha. Two samplings were carried out: in May, only on fully expanded leaves, and in July, on mature leaves. The selected samples were exposed to the south and unshaded by other leaves of the same plants or by neighboring trees. Plants sampled in May were grown at average day temperature of 20°C with peaks of 30°C during that month, while July samples endured a 2-month growth under hot summer conditions, with a mean day temperature of 27°C and maximal temperatures often exceeding 35°C. Experiments were carried out during the morning hours (9 AM12 PM) and were repeated on at least four different leaves of different plants. Data are presented as means ± SE. Statistical significance of mean differences was assessed, when needed, by Tukey's honestly significant difference (HSD) mean-separation test, and the statistically significant differences are shown with P = 0.05 (**) or P = 0.10 (*).
A variable area of single leaves was clamped in a 0.5-L gas-exchange plastic cuvette entirely coated with Teflon, as previously explained (Loreto et al., 1996a
To label isoprenoids, the 12CO2 source was replaced instantaneously with a 13CO2 source as described by Loreto et al. (1996b)
When physiological parameters were steady, leaf discs (4 cm2) were instantaneously freeze clamped in two metal drums prechilled in liquid nitrogen. Ultrafast freeze clamping is needed when measuring metabolites turning over very rapidly (Loreto and Sharkey, 1993
In independent measurements, we determined the specific leaf weight of these samples, which was variable between species but constant during the season. In P. alba and Q. ilex, a specific leaf weight of 32 ± 2 and 44 ± 5 mg (dry weight) cm2 was measured, respectively, and these values were used to express measurements of emission rates on a mass basis when comparing emissions and pool sizes (Fig. 6). The leaf disc was then rapidly pulverized in a chilled mortar and the powder was treated as described by Loreto et al. (2004)
Also, the amount of GDP was derived by measuring the evolution of a volatile compound formed by acid hydrolysis. The blend of volatile compounds generated after hydrolyzing an internal standard of GDP included linalool and several furans. Furan yield can be reduced by decreasing the acidity of the solution, and this is the reason why the acidity used in this experiment was lower than previously adopted (Loreto et al., 2004
Care was taken to maintain the acidity of the solution high enough to avoid reduction of isoprene yield (Brüggeman and Schnitzler, 2002
The labeled amount of DMADP and GDP was detected by freeze clamping the leaves after 13CO2 labeling for 15 min, as explained above. In these leaves, we detected by PTR-MS the m/z shift from unlabeled (m/z 69 for DMADP and m/z 97 for GDP) to partial or fully labeled DMADP (m/z 7074) or GDP (m/z 98104), following the procedure outlined by Loreto et al. (2004)
We thank Paolo Ciccioli and Enzo Brancaleoni for useful discussions on the chemistry of DMADP and GDP labeling and determination. Received October 22, 2005; returned for revision January 20, 2006; accepted January 24, 2006.
1 This work was supported by the European Commission (contract MCRTNCT-2003504720; "ISONET") and by the European Science Foundation scientific program VOCBAS. 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: Francesco Loreto (francesco.loreto{at}ibaf.cnr.it). Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.105.073213. * Corresponding author; e-mail francesco.loreto{at}ibaf.cnr.it; fax 39069064492.
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