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First published online June 15, 2006; 10.1104/pp.106.077388 Plant Physiology 141:1363-1375 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists Characterization of the Class IV Homeodomain-Leucine Zipper Gene Family in Arabidopsis1,[W]Division of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 0600810, Japan (M.N., H.K., M.A., K.T.Y.); Department of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo 1130033, Japan (N.Y., Y.K.); and Division of Bioscience, Graduate School of Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University, Okayama 7008530, Japan (T.T.)
The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) genome contains 16 genes belonging to the class IV homeodomain-Leucine zipper gene family. These include GLABRA2, ANTHOCYANINLESS2, FWA, ARABIDOPSIS THALIANA MERISTEM LAYER1 (ATML1), and PROTODERMAL FACTOR2 (PDF2). Our previous study revealed that atml1 pdf2 double mutants have severe defects in the shoot epidermal cell differentiation. Here, we have characterized additional members of this gene family, which we designated HOMEODOMAIN GLABROUS1 (HDG1) through HDG12. Analyses of transgenic Arabidopsis plants carrying the gene-specific promoter fused to the bacterial -glucuronidase reporter gene revealed that some of the promoters have high activities in the epidermal layer of the shoot apical meristem and developing shoot organs, while others are temporarily active during reproductive organ development. Expression profiles of highly conserved paralogous gene pairs within the family were found to be not necessarily overlapping. Analyses of T-DNA insertion mutants of these HDG genes revealed that all mutants except hdg11 alleles exhibit no abnormal phenotypes. hdg11 mutants show excess branching of the trichome. This phenotype is enhanced in hdg11 hdg12 double mutants. Double mutants were constructed for other paralogous gene pairs and genes within the same subfamily. However, novel phenotypes were observed only for hdg3 atml1 and hdg3 pdf2 mutants that both exhibited defects in cotyledon development. These observations suggest that some of the class IV homeodomain-Leucine zipper members act redundantly with other members of the family during various aspects of cell differentiation. DNA-binding sites were determined for two of the family members using polymerase chain reaction-assisted DNA selection from random oligonucleotides with their recombinant proteins. The binding sites were found to be similar to those previously identified for ATML1 and PDF2, which correspond to the pseudopalindromic sequence 5'-GCATTAAATGC-3' as the preferential binding site.
Homeodomain-Leu zipper (HD-ZIP) proteins, which are characterized by a HD followed by a ZIP motif (Ruberti et al., 1991
The class IV HD-ZIP family is also known as HD-GL2 after the first identified gene GLABRA2 (GL2). Analyses of gl2 mutants revealed that the GL2 gene is necessary for both root hairless cell specification and the local outgrowth of the trichome in shoot epidermal cells (Hülskamp et al., 1994
To better understand the importance of the HD-ZIP IV family in plant development, we conducted a comprehensive study of this family in Arabidopsis. Here, we report the results of reverse transcription (RT)-PCR analyses, promoter-
The Arabidopsis HD-ZIP IV Family Comprises 16 Genes
In accordance with the previous designation (Tavares et al., 2000
Figure 1A shows a phylogenetic relationship between all of the members of the Arabidopsis HD-ZIP III and HD-ZIP IV proteins, which was deduced by using the neighbor-joining method (Saitou and Nei, 1987
Both the HD-ZIP III and HD-ZIP IV families of proteins are characterized by an amino-terminal HD-ZIP region followed by a region similar to the mammalian StAR-related lipid-transfer (START) domain (Ponting and Aravind, 1999
According to previous reports (Sessions et al., 1999
HDG7 and 9 Bind to L1 Box-Like Sequences
Previous studies have shown that recombinant ATML1 and PDF2 proteins bind to the L1 box 5'-TAAATG(C/T) A-3' (Abe et al., 2001
Expression Profiles of the Arabidopsis HD-ZIP IV Genes
To compare the expression patterns of all 16 HD-ZIP IV genes, we performed RT-PCR with gene-specific primers (Fig. 4
). Each of the primers in these amplifications was designed to distinguish cDNA from genomic DNA by spanning introns (Supplemental Table I). HDG1, HDG2, HDG11, and HDG12 were expressed in all of the organs analyzed, whereas HDG3 was expressed only in siliques and seedlings. HDG5 showed expression in all but the root tissue. HDG4, HDG8, HDG9, and HDG10 transcripts were detectable after flower organ development. While FWA/HDG6 has been shown to be expressed exclusively in the endosperm (Kinoshita et al., 2004
Promoter-GUS Expression Patterns of the 11 HDG Genes Spatial and temporal expression patterns of the novel 11 HDG genes were further examined by generating the promoter-GUS fusion for each of the genes. Histochemical GUS staining patterns were analyzed in at least four independent transgenic lines for each construct. However, attempts to detect GUS signals in plants with HDG3 and HDG4 fusions were unsuccessful.
GUS staining patterns observed in vegetative shoots are shown in Figure 5
. The HDG1 promoter drove GUS expression only in trichomes forming at the base of young leaves (Fig. 5A). As is the case with the GL2 promoter (Hung et al., 1998
In the root tissue, the HDG1 promoter drove weak GUS expression in two endodermal cell lines around emergent lateral roots (Fig. 6A ). HDG2-GUS expression was observed in primary root tips (Fig. 6B). HDG7-GUS expression was observed in lateral root primordia (Fig. 6, C and D) and persisted at lateral root tips (Fig. 6E). Both HDG11 and HDG12 promoters drove GUS expression only in lateral root tips (Fig. 6, F and G). Plants harboring HDG5, HDG8, HDG9, and HDG10 fusions showed no GUS activity in roots (data not shown).
During flower development, HDG1-GUS expression was detectable exclusively in the epidermal layer of the stamen filament (Fig. 7, A and B ). Both HDG2 and HDG5 promoters drove GUS expression in apical inflorescence meristems and early flower primordia, with the highest signal in the L1, and later in the carpel epidermis and ovule primordia (Fig. 7, CI). HDG5-GUS expression was also detected in the epidermis of the stamen filament (Fig. 7G) and remarkably in stomatal guard cells of the carpel (Fig. 7J). In plants with HDG9 and HDG10 fusions, GUS expression was detectable exclusively in anthers, with higher activity evident in the tapetum and pollen grains (Fig. 7, KN). Plants harboring HDG11 and HDG12 fusions showed GUS expression predominantly in the L1 of apical inflorescence meristems and early flower primordia, and later in the carpel epidermis and ovule primordia, patterns similar to those of HDG2 and HDG5 fusions (Fig. 7, OU). GUS signals were also detectable in the stigma papillae of both HDG11-GUS and HDG12-GUS plants, the petal epidermis of HDG11-GUS plants, and the epidermis of the stamen filament of HDG12-GUS plants (Fig. 7, PR, and T). The GUS signal in ovule primordia in plants with HDG2, HDG5, HDG11, and HDG12 fusions was later confined to the nucellus (Fig. 7, R and U; data not shown).
During embryo sac formation, HDG2-GUS expression was restricted sharply to the chalazal end (Fig. 8, A and B ). The GUS signal then extended through the endosperm (Fig. 8, C and D) and was additionally detected in the seed coat and throughout the arising embryo (Fig. 8, E and F). HDG5-GUS plants showed similar patterns of GUS expression to those of HDG2-GUS plants, except for the seed coat (Fig. 8, GI). In plants harboring the HDG7 fusion, weak GUS signal was initially detectable in the apical region of the heart-stage embryo (Fig. 8J) and was localized to epidermal boundaries of two cotyledons (Fig. 8, K and L). HDG8-GUS expression was limited to the endosperm and the whole embryo at early stages (Fig. 8, M and N), whereas HDG9-GUS expression was acutely limited to the chalazal end of the embryo sac (Fig. 8O). In plants with HDG11 and HDG12 fusions, GUS activity was detectable throughout the embryo but not in the endosperm (Fig. 8, PS). In summary, the observed GUS patterns are in agreement with the results of RT-PCR experiments.
Phenotypes of T-DNA Insertion Mutants of the Arabidopsis HD-ZIP IV Genes
For functional analysis of the HD-ZIP IV family, T-DNA insertion mutants of all HDG genes, except for HDG7, were obtained from the SALK Institute, Syngenta or University of Wisconsin T-DNA insertion collections (Fig. 2; see "Materials and Methods"). The hdg7-1 allele was isolated by screening a pool of T-DNA insertion lines, which had been generated as described previously (Nakazawa et al., 2001
We also constructed double mutants of other paralogous gene pairs, HDG1-ANL2, HDG2-HDG3, HDG4-HDG5, FWA/HDG6-HDG7, and HDG8-HDG9, but none of the hdg2-3 hdg3-1, hdg4-1 hdg5-1, fwa-t1 hdg7-1, hdg8-1 hdg9-1, or hdg8-1 hdg9-2 mutants displayed an abnormal phenotype (Fig. 10A ; data not shown). hdg1-2 anl2-t1 showed no additional phenotypes to those reported for anl2 (Kubo et al., 1999
Expression Regulation
Our results of the GUS expression patterns in transgenic Arabidopsis plants revealed that the promoters of HDG1, HDG2, HDG5, HDG7, HDG11, and HDG12 preferentially direct expression in the epidermal layer of shoot organs. Because HDG2 and HDG5 have an L1 box motif within the 0.2-kb upstream region of the 5' end of their full-length transcripts (data not shown), these two genes might be regulated via a feedback and/or hierarchical control through the binding of their own and/or other HD-ZIP IV proteins to the L1 box, as previously suggested for ATML1 and PDF2 (Abe et al., 2003
Expression profiles of HDG1, HDG2, HDG5, HDG11, and HDG12 reporter constructs in trichomes are reminiscent of GL2 expression (Szymanski et al., 1998
It is noteworthy that HDG2, HDG5, and HDG9 gene promoters drove GUS expression in the chalazal end of the embryo sac, probably representing three antipodal cells. In contrast to two synergid cells, which are adjacent to the egg cell and function in attracting a pollen tube during double fertilization (Higashiyama et al., 2001
After fertilization, HDG2, HDG5, and HDG8 promoters resulted in GUS expression in the endosperm. We note, in terms of L1 cell specification, that the endosperm is the environment that is first encountered by an embryo and could provide the external signal required for the establishment of the embryonic protoderm. The maize CRINKLY4 (CR4) gene, which encodes a receptor kinase, affects cell differentiation in the aleurone of the endosperm and in the leaf epidermis (Becraft et al., 1996
Some of the known HD-ZIP IV genes in gymnosperms and angiosperms contain a highly conserved 17-nucleotide-long motif, (U/A) GGUU CGGG(U/A) AUUGA CU, within their 3'-untranslated region (Ingouff et al., 2003
Most of the homozygous T-DNA insertion mutants that we examined in this study display a phenotype that is indistinguishable from wild type during growth under normal conditions. We confirmed by RT-PCR experiments that each of the homozygous alleles except for hdg2-1 and hdg12-1 do not express full-length transcripts from the gene carrying the T-DNA insertion (Supplemental Fig. 2). It is possible, however, that the mutations used in this study do not necessarily represent null alleles. To examine whether another possibility would be that there is functional redundancy between duplicated genes, we constructed double mutants of the putative paralogous gene pairs. However, we observed no effects of the double mutant combinations of hdg1 anl2, hdg2 hdg3, hdg4 hdg5, fwa/hdg6 hdg7, and hdg8 hdg9 upon the morphological phenotype. Even hdg2-3 hdg3-1, which carries an insertion within each of the HDG2 and HDG3 HD-coding sequences (Fig. 2), and therefore most likely represents a double complete loss-of-function mutant, displayed no visible phenotype. Furthermore, expression analyses by RT-PCR and promoter-GUS fusions revealed both overlapping and distinct expression patterns of these paralogous genes. Whereas HDG3 expression was detected only in siliques and germinating seedlings, HDG2 was expressed in all of the organs examined and showed a unique promoter-GUS expression pattern in stomatal meristemoids and during ovule development, similar to nonparalogous HDG5 (Figs. 5 and 8). Endosperm-specific expression of FWA/HDG6 (Kinoshita et al., 2004
HDG11 is one of the HD-ZIP IV family members for which single mutants display an abnormal phenotype. The excess branching phenotype of the trichome in hdg11-1 is enhanced by hdg12-2, suggesting that both HDG11 and HDG12 act in repressing the outgrowth of trichomes. The lack of a trichome phenotype in hdg12 mutants, however, suggests a subsidiary function for HDG12 in this process or possibly an epistatic relationship between HDG11 and HDG12 during branch repression. Because of the gl2 phenotype observed in gl2 hdg11 and gl2 hdg12 double mutants, GL2 appears to be epistatic to HDG11 and HDG12. According to genetic mapping data (Perazza et al., 1999 The cotyledon phenotypes observed in pdf2 hdg3 and atml1 hdg3 are consistent with the HDG3 expression limited to germinating seedlings and siliques containing developing embryos and suggest that, in combination with PDF2 and ATML1, HDG3 likely acts in epidermal cell differentiation in cotyledon development. The apparent difference of the phenotype between pdf2 hdg3 and atml1 hdg3 might imply functional differences between PDF2 and ATML1, which have not yet been noted. To further address the function of each gene, however, it will be necessary to construct multiple mutant combinations, based on the similarity of expression patterns of the members, and this is currently under way in our laboratory.
The results of HD binding site selection experiments using HDG7, HDG9, ATML1, and PDF2 recombinant proteins revealed a 5'-GCATTAAATGC-3' consensus sequence (Fig. 3). This sequence is overlapping with the L1 box sequence 5'-TAAATG(C/T)A-3' (Abe et al., 2001
It should be emphasized that the DNA-binding activity of the HD-ZIP IV proteins can be altered by physiological conditions. These proteins contain two conserved Cyss within a loop that truncates a ZIP-like dimerization motif. Redox conditions have been shown to cause a significant increase in DNA binding by monomer formation of the sunflower HAHR1 (Tron et al., 2002
In this study we set about providing a comprehensive characterization of the HD-ZIP IV family in Arabidopsis. The multiplicity of the members and the lack of abnormal phenotypes for the mutants examined, except for hdg11 alleles, suggest functional redundancy among the members. This could be further assessed by constructing multiple mutants and/or by making transgenic plants with chimeric HDG fusions with either the herpes simplex virus VP16 activation domain (Ohashi et al., 2003
Plant Material and Growth Conditions
The wild-type Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants used in this study were of the Columbia-0 ecotype. T-DNA insertion alleles hdg1-1 (SALK_006757), hdg1-2 (SALK_062171), hdg2-2 (SALK_27828), hdg2-3 (SALK_138646), hdg3-1 (SALK_033462), hdg5-1 (SALK_032993), hdg9-2 (SALK_079210), hdg10-1 (SALK_116071), hdg11-2 (SALK_044434), hdg12-2 (SALK_127261), fwa-t1 (SALK_064256), gl2-t1 (SALK_030214), and anl2-t1 (SALK_000196) were derived from the Salk Institute Genomic Analysis Laboratory T-DNA insertion lines (http://signal.salk.edu). hdg4-1 (WiscDsLox382F6) was derived from the knockout facility at the University of Wisconsin (Sussman et al., 2000 Plants were grown on rock-wool bricks supplemented with vermiculite in growth chambers or in petri dishes, with medium containing 0.8% agar, 3% Suc, and Murashige and Skoog salts (pH 5.7; Wako). The cultures were incubated at 22°C under continuous light after surface sterilization of seeds.
The genotype of each T-DNA insertion allele was determined by PCR of genomic DNA with the gene-specific primers shown in Supplemental Table I and Abe et al. (2003)
Total RNA was extracted from frozen tissues by the SDS-phenol method, precipitated with 2 M LiCl, and treated with RNase-free DNaseI (Takara). First-strand cDNA synthesis was carried out using 1 µg of total RNA with an oligo dT primer according to the protocols of the RNA PCR kit (Takara). Primers used in the amplifications and the sizes of RT-PCR products are shown in Supplemental Table I and Abe et al. (2003)
For the MBP-HDG7 fusion constructs, the full-length HDG7 cDNA sequence was amplified by RT-PCR with the primers H7F (5'-GAATT CAGAG GGAAA ATGAA TGGCG-3') and H7R (5'-ACTAG TCCTA CAACT TTAGC TAAGC-3'). The underlined sequences indicate the addition of restriction sites to the primer sequence. The amplified PCR products were digested with EcoRI and SpeI, and subcloned into the pMAL-c2 vector (New England Biolabs). For the MBP-HDG9 fusion construct, the full-length HDG9 cDNA sequence was amplified by RT-PCR with HDG9-2F and HDG9-1R primers (Supplemental Table I). The amplified PCR products were then cloned into the pGEM-T Easy vector and subcloned into pMAL-c2 using EcoRI and SpeI restriction sites. The MBP-ATML1 and MBP-PDF2 constructs have been previously described (Abe et al., 2003
The MBP fusion constructs were introduced into the Escherichia coli strain BL-21 and the transformed bacteria were cultured at 30°C in Luria-Bertani medium, containing 0.2% Glc and 50 µg mL1 ampicillin, until they reached OD600 values of about 0.5. Isopropylthio-
The selection of binding sequences for the MBP fusion proteins was performed according to the method of Pierrou et al. (1995)
The PCR primers used to clone promoter fragments of each gene were shown in Supplemental Table II. All of the PCR fragments were cloned into the pGEM-T Easy Vector (Promega) and subsequently inserted in front of the GUS gene in the binary vector pBI101.2 (CLONTECH) by using the restriction sites within the primers. The lengths of the promoter fragments for HDG1-HDG12 are 1.35, 2.47, 2.25, 2.57, 2.01, 2.26, 1.54, 2.67, 2.27, 2.61, and 1.93 kb, respectively.
The T-DNA constructs were introduced into wild-type plants via Agrobacterium-mediated transformation as described previously (Clough and Bent, 1998
Tissues were prefixed in ice-cold 90% (v/v) acetone for 20 min, rinsed twice with a 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) containing 0.05% Triton X-100, 2 mM K3Fe(CN)6, and 2 mM K4Fe(CN)6, infiltrated with a staining solution (1 mM 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl- Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under the accession numbers provided in Table I.
We thank Mitsuyasu Hasebe for his comments on the manuscript. We are also grateful to the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center and Syngenta Biotechnology for providing T-DNA insertion lines. Received January 21, 2006; returned for revision June 4, 2006; accepted June 6, 2006.
1 This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Priority Areas (15031201, 17027021 to T.T.) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology of Japan.
2 Present address: Department of Integrated Genetics, National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Shizuoka 4118540, Japan.
3 Present address: Department of Botany, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto 6068502, Japan. 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: Taku Takahashi (perfect{at}cc.okayama-u.ac.jp).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.077388. * Corresponding author; e-mail perfect{at}cc.okayama-u.ac.jp; fax 81862517876.
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