|
|
||||||||
|
First published online September 15, 2006; 10.1104/pp.106.087130 Plant Physiology 142:1193-1201 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Carotenoid Cleavage Dioxygenase (CmCCD4a) Contributes to White Color Formation in Chrysanthemum Petals1,[OA]National Institute of Floricultural Science, Fujimoto 2-1, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 3058519, Japan
The white petals of chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum morifolium Ramat.) are believed to contain a factor that inhibits the accumulation of carotenoids. To find this factor, we performed polymerase chain reaction-Select subtraction screening and obtained a clone expressed differentially in white and yellow petals. The deduced amino acid sequence of the protein (designated CmCCD4a) encoded by the clone was highly homologous to the sequence of carotenoid cleavage dioxygenase. All the white-flowered chrysanthemum cultivars tested showed high levels of CmCCD4a transcript in their petals, whereas most of the yellow-flowered cultivars showed extremely low levels. Expression of CmCCD4a was strictly limited to flower petals and was not detected in other organs, such as the root, stem, or leaf. White petals turned yellow after the RNAi construct of CmCCD4a was introduced. These results indicate that in white petals of chrysanthemums, carotenoids are synthesized but are subsequently degraded into colorless compounds, which results in the white color.
Carotenoids are 40-carbon isoprenoids with polyene chains that may contain up to 15 conjugated double bonds. More than 700 naturally occurring carotenoids have been identified (Britton et al., 2004
The chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum morifolium Ramat.), which has been bred for more than 2,000 years, is one of the most important ornamental flowers in the world. The petal color of yellow-flowered cultivars originates mainly from carotenoids. Understanding the mechanism that controls carotenoid accumulation in petals will not only contribute greatly to the breeding of chrysanthemums and other flowering plants but also provide important information about the molecular evolutionary mechanisms responsible for different petal colors. Cultivated chrysanthemums are thought to have originated from hybrids between white- and yellow-flowered wild species. On the basis of an experiment in which white- and yellow-flowered chrysanthemums were crossed, Hattori (1991) To find a factor that controls carotenoid content in chrysanthemum petals, we performed PCR-Select subtraction screening to search for cDNAs that were differentially expressed in white and yellow petals. In this study, we show that a gene encoding a carotenoid cleavage dioxygenase (CCD; designated as CmCCD4a) is expressed specifically in white petals and that this enzyme contributes to the formation of white color in chrysanthemum petals.
Cloning of CmCCD4a by PCR-Select Subtraction Screening We performed subtraction of messages expressed in the white petals of chrysanthemum cv Paragon from those in the yellow petals of cv Yellow Paragon, a bud sport arising from Paragon. We then screened for cDNAs that were differentially expressed in the white and yellow petals and obtained 31 cDNA clones whose expression was higher in Paragon, and 71 clones whose expression was higher in Yellow Paragon. On the basis of signal-to-noise ratios, we selected 15 clones for further analysis. Quantitative real-time reverse transcription (RT)-PCR analysis showed that only one of the clones was expressed specifically in the petals of white cultivars. We obtained full-length cDNA of the clone by the RACE method, and we determined its nucleotide sequence. The nucleotide sequence of the clone contained an open reading frame of 1,797 bp, predicting a 599-amino acid polypeptide, and had an estimated molecular mass of 67 kD. Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequence of the protein encoded by the clone with available databases revealed the sequence to be highly homologous with that of CCD (Fig. 1A ). The protein showed the highest homology with AtCCD4, a CCD homolog found in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; Fig. 1B); we therefore designated the clone as CmCCD4a. The amino acid sequence of CmCCD4a showed 61% homology with the sequence of AtCCD4, and 51% homology with that of OsCCD4a from rice (Oryza sativa).
Cloning of CCD and NCED Homologs and Expression in Petals Homologs of CCD and NCED (9-cis-epoxycarotenoid dioxygenase) were screened from cDNAs of petals and leaves of chrysanthemums using degenerate primers of CCD and NCED, respectively. In addition to CmCCD4a, we obtained one CCD homolog and two NCED homologs from leaf cDNA. The amino acid sequence of the protein encoded by the CCD homolog showed the highest homology to AtCCD4, and the proteins encoded by the NCED homologs showed the highest homology to AtNCED3 among the Arabidopsis CCD family. Therefore, we designated these proteins as CmCCD4b, CmNCED3a, and CmNCED3b, respectively (Fig. 1B). We performed genomic PCR using degenerate primers to search for additional homologs, but we did not find any. On the basis of sequence comparison of these homologs, we designed primers specific to each homolog for genomic PCR and real-time RT-PCR analyses. Figure 2A shows the levels of transcripts of CCD and NCED homologs in the white and yellow petals of various chrysanthemum cultivars. All the white petals tested showed high levels of expression of CmCCD4a, whereas transcripts in the yellow petals were not detected, except in Yellow Paragon, which had approximately half the amount of CmCCD4a transcripts as Paragon. The levels of CmCCD4b, CmNCED3a, and CmNCED3b transcripts in petals were extremely low compared to the level of CmCCD4a transcripts. In addition, there was no significant difference between the expression levels of these homologs in white and yellow petals.
Genomic PCR analysis showed that the bands that corresponded to CmCCD4a were not amplified in yellow-flowered cultivars with extremely low expression of CmCCD4a (Fig. 2A). In contrast, the bands corresponding to CmCCD4b, CmNCED3a, and CmNCED3b were amplified in all the cultivars we tested. Genomic CmCCD4a has two BamHI sites: one at 464 bp and another at 1,565 bp from the start codon; BamHI digestion produced a 2.0-kb fragment. In Southern-blot analysis probed with the CCD fragment, the band corresponding to CmCCD4a was not detected in these cultivars (Fig. 2B). The band at 7 kb existed in all the cultivars tested. Because the CmCCD4b gene existed in all the cultivars, the band may correspond to CmCCD4b. The band pattern of Paragon coincided with that of Yellow Paragon, a bud sport of Paragon. On the other hand, Florida Marble, a bud sport of White Marble, had three bands in common with White Marble but lacked a band corresponding to CmCCD4a. When the same filter was reprobed with the NCED fragment, all cultivars showed two to three bands of different sizes. Different band patterns were observed in membranes hybridized with CCD and NCED probes, which indicates that these probes are not cross hybridized.
Figure 3 shows the organ-specific expression pattern of CCD and NCED homologs. Expression of CmCCD4a was strictly limited to flower petals and was not detected in other organs, such as the root, stem, or leaf. The chrysanthemum flower is often dimorphic: in the center of the capitulum is the small disc floret; in the marginal ray floret, the corolla is conspicuous as a long petal. White-flowered cultivars usually have yellow disc florets. The level of CmCCD4a transcripts in the yellow disc floret of Paragon was extremely low compared with the level in the white petals of the ray floret. Yellow disc florets of the other white-flowered cultivars, such as Sei-Marine, Fiducia, and White Marble, also showed extremely low levels of CmCCD4a transcripts (data not shown). The abundance of transcripts of CmCCD4b, CmNCED3a, and CmNCED3b showed different organ specificity from that of CmCCD4a. These transcripts were extremely low in petals, disc florets, and roots. The levels of CmCCD4b and CmNCED3a transcripts were high in leaves. The expression of CmCCD4b was extremely high in stems; this high level of expression may have been caused partly by the normalization against actin levels, if stem tissue had a substantially lower level of actin transcripts than other tissues. Expression of CmNCED3b was low in all the tissues we tested.
White petals of Paragon contained 47 µg/g fresh weight of carotenoids at the very early stage of flower development (Fig. 4 ). Carotenoid content decreased as the petals matured, and carotenoids were not detected in the fully opened petals. In contrast, the level of CmCCD4a transcripts increased drastically during the course of petal development.
Suppression of CmCCD4a Expression by RNAi
To determine the role of CmCCD4a gene products in the formation of petal color, we produced transgenic chrysanthemum plants with reduced expression of CmCCD4a. We introduced the RNAi construct of CmCCD4a under the control of the tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) elongation factor 1
CmCCD4a in Wild Chrysanthemum Species Genomic PCR analysis was also performed in white- and yellow-flowered wild species of chrysanthemum (Fig. 6 ). The bands that corresponded to CmCCD4a were observed in all the white-flowered species but not in the yellow-flowered species. In contrast, the bands that corresponded to CmCCD4b were observed in both white- and yellow-flowered species.
Light Microscope Observation of Transverse Sections of Petals Among yellow-flowered cultivars, only Yellow Paragon expressed CmCCD4a in petals. It is possible that petals of Yellow Paragon are periclinal chimera, and either the L1 or the L2 layer may behave genetically in a manner identical to that of the white progenitor Paragon. Periclinal structures were determined by microscope examination of transverse sections of petals (Fig. 7 ). In the sections of Yellow Paragon, yellow pigmentation was localized in the adaxial epidermis (L1 layer), and the underlying mesophyll (L2 layer) appeared to be white. In contrast, both the L1 and L2 layers were yellow in petals of Super Yellow.
By means of PCR-Select subtraction screening, we obtained a clone that encoded a CCD and was differentially expressed in white and yellow petals of chrysanthemums. Several types of CCDs were recently reported in various plant species. Arabidopsis contains nine homologs of the CCD family (Tan et al., 2003 -ionone, pseudoionone, and geranylacetone (Simkin et al., 2004a -carotene into 13-apo- -carotenone (C18), a signaling molecule that is necessary for the regulation of lateral branching (Schwartz et al., 2004
Quantitative real-time RT-PCR analysis showed a clear relationship between CmCCD4a mRNA abundance and carotenoid content in various chrysanthemum tissues: when the level of CmCCD4a transcripts was high, the carotenoid content was low. Kishimoto and Ohmiya (2006)
We therefore performed an RNAi experiment to see whether the suppression of CmCCD4a expression affected the petal color of chrysanthemums. In RNAi lines of white-flowered cultivars, in which CmCCD4a expression was reduced to 2% to 4%, petal color became yellow. This result clearly indicates that CmCCD4a contributed to the white color formation in chrysanthemum petals by cleaving carotenoids into colorless compounds. During petal development of yellow-flowered chrysanthemum cultivars, carotenoid concentration increases approximately 10-fold, owing to the accumulation of lutein and its derivatives (Kishimoto and Ohmiya, 2006
We obtained one CCD homolog (CmCCD4b) and two NCED homologs (CmNCED3a and CmNCED3b). The expression of these homologs in petals was lower than the expression of CmCCD4a. In addition, significant differences between the expression levels of these homologs in white and yellow petals were not observed. We therefore assumed that among the currently available CCD and NCED homologs of chrysanthemums, only CmCCD4a was involved in white color formation in petals. Expression of CmCCD4a was detected only in white petals, which indicates that the function of CmCCD4a was limited to white color formation in petals. Kishimoto and Ohmiya (2006)
Some CCDs are present in flowers and contribute to the formation of aroma and pigment compounds. Simkin et al. (2004b)
Sporting, a well-known phenomenon in chrysanthemums, is a process by which new cultivars arise vegetatively from the parental cultivar. Generally, variants that arise from radiation breeding or bud sports are involved in genomic deletions. Dowrick and Bayoumi (1966)
Most yellow-flowered cultivars do not have the CmCCD4a gene in their genome. Among the yellow-flowered cultivars we tested, only Yellow Paragon, a bud sport that arose from Paragon, had the CmCCD4a gene, and this gene was expressed in the petals. Cultivars that arise as sports are frequently periclinal chimera and have cell layers that are genetically different. Langton (1980) Cultivated chrysanthemums are thought to originate from hybrids of white- and yellow-flowered wild species, although their exact origin is uncertain. Genomic PCR analysis showed that yellow-flowered wild species of chrysanthemum did not have the CmCCD4a gene, whereas all white-flowered wild species that we tested did have the CmCCD4a gene in their genome. We believe that the CmCCD4a gene is a dominant factor that determines the petal coloryellow or whiteof chrysanthemums. Our findings thus shed light on the molecular evolutionary mechanisms resulting in different petal colors. It is of particular interest to determine whether the mechanism of white color formation found in chrysanthemum petals is applicable to other plant species.
Plant Material Plant tissues were obtained from chrysanthemums (Chrysanthemum morifolium Ramat.) grown in greenhouses at the National Institute of Floricultural Science (Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan). Petal development was divided into four stages on the basis of petal length: very early (23 mm), early (810 mm), middle (1518 mm), and late (3035 mm). RNAs and carotenoids were extracted from petals in all four stages.
Total RNA was extracted from petals of Paragon (a white-flowered cultivar) and Yellow Paragon (a yellow-flowered sport that arose from Paragon) by means of a cetyltrimethylammonium bromide method (Chang et al., 1993
Multiple alignments of amino acid sequences were produced with a Web-based version of ClustalW (http://crick.genes.nig.ac.jp/homology/clustalw-e.shtml). The phylogenic tree was calculated using the neighbor-joining method and bootstrap analysis (1,000 replicates) using PHYLIP via the same Web site and visualized with Treeviewer version 1.6.6 (http://taxonomy.zoology.gla.ac.uk/rod/rod.html).
cDNAs were synthesized using the Superscript first-strand synthesis system (Invitrogen) from poly(A)+ RNA treated with DNase I. Levels of CmCCD4a transcripts were analyzed by real-time RT-PCR with the QuantiTect SYBR Green PCR kit (QIAGEN). Reactions were carried out using a LightCycler system (Roche Diagnostics). A chrysanthemum actin cDNA (GenBank accession no. AB205087) was identified by RT-PCR and used as a constitutive control. Primer sequences for chrysanthemum actin were as follows: forward, 5'-ACATGCTATCTTGCGTTTGG-3'; reverse, 5'-CTCTCACAATTTCCCGTTCA-3'. A plasmid containing CmCCD4a was used in a standard curve assay, and levels of CmCCD4a transcripts are given as copy number per 50 ng of total RNA. Degenerate primers corresponding to the conserved regions of either NCED or CCD were designed to isolate their homologs from chrysanthemums: NCED forward, 5'-TTYGAYGGNGAYGGNATGGTNCAY-3'; NCED reverse, 5'-YTCCCANGCRTTCCANARRTGRAA-3'; CCD forward, 5'-TAYCAYYMRTTYGAYGGNGAYGGNATG-3'; CCD reverse, 5'-TANCGNGGNAARNACNCCNAAYCT-3'. We screened cDNAs of petals and leaves of chrysanthemums and obtained one CCD homolog (designated as CmCCD4b) and two NCED homologs (designated as CmNCED3a and CmNCED3b) from leaf cDNAs. Full-length cDNAs for these homologs were obtained by RACE. By avoiding homologous parts among these homologs, we designed specific primers for real-time RT-PCR and genomic PCR analyses for each homolog as follows: CmCCD4a forward, 5'-CCATCCCATTTCAACATCAACCA-3'; CmCCD4a reverse, 5'-ATTAGCTTTTTCAGCCATTTTCTTT-3'; CmCCD4b forward, 5'-CACCAACCAACTCTTACTCTTC-3'; CmCCD4b reverse, 5'-ATGTTTTTTCACTTGTTCATCAC-3'; CmNCED3a forward, 5'-TCTACCTAGAGACAATGCTAGTGA-3'; CmNCED3a reverse, 5'-CCTCGATGGTAACATAACTGTC-3'; CmNCED3b forward, 5'-GCATTCGATCACAAGTTTTC-3'; CmNCED3b reverse, 5'-TTTTCATTATCTTTTATTCGGTC-3'.
Total genomic DNA was isolated from approximately 1 g of chrysanthemum leaves by a cetyltrimethylammonium bromide method as described by Doyle and Dickson (1987)
A 442-bp sense fragment of CmCCD4a containing BamHI and SacI sites was amplified by PCR using primers 5'-GGAGTCGGGGATCCAATGCCTAAA-3' and 5'-TATCTCATAAATGAGCTCTCTAGTAGGAG-3'. A 293-bp antisense fragment of CmCCD4a containing BamHI and SalI sites was amplified by PCR using primers 5'-GGAACCCAAGGATCCATATGCGGAC-3' and 5'-CATAAATGATGTGTCGACTAGGAGTCGT-3'. A 150-bp fragment from the 5' end of the sense fragment was used as a linker between sense and antisense orientations. The sense construct was prepared by excising the
Chrysanthemum cultivar Sei-Marine was transformed as described by Aida et al. (2005)
Tissues (0.5 g) were ground in acetone, then were partitioned between diethyl ether and aqueous NaCl. Carotenoid content was determined by measuring the A445 of the diethyl ether layer and is expressed as microgram of lutein equivalent per gram fresh weight of the tissue.
Petals were cut into 5 x 5 mm pieces and embedded in 4% agarose. Thin sections (thickness, 100 µm) were cut with a Micro Slicer DTK-1000 (D.S.K.). Sections were examined using a VH-Z75 microscope (Keyence). The GenBank accession numbers for the cDNAs mentioned in this article are as follows: CmCCD4a, AB247158; CmCCD4b, AB247160; CmNCED3a, AB247159; and CmNCED3b, AB247161.
We thank S. Sugaya, University of Tsukuba, for providing degenerate primers for NCED amplification; M. Shibata, National Institute of Floricultural Science, for helpful discussions; and M. Mori, National Institute of Floricultural Science, for technical assistance. Received July 31, 2006; accepted August 29, 2006; published September 15, 2006.
1 This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid (Development of innovative crops through the molecular analysis of useful genes) from the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries of 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: Akemi Ohmiya (ohmiya{at}affrc.go.jp).
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.087130 * Corresponding author; e-mail ohmiya{at}affrc.go.jp; fax 81298386841.
Aida R, Nagaya S, Yoshida K, Kishimoto S, Shibata M, Ohmiya A (2005) Efficient transgene expression in Chrysanthemum morifolium Ramat., with the promoter of a gene for tobacco elongation factor 1 protein. JARQ 39: 269274Bouvier F, Suire C, Mutterer J, Camara B (2003) Oxidative remodeling of chromoplast carotenoids: identification of the carotenoid dioxygenase CsCCD and CsZCD genes involved in crocus secondary metabolite biogenesis. Plant Cell 15: 4762 Britton G, Liaaen-Jensen S, Pfander H, editors (2004) Carotenoids Handbook. Birkhauser, Basel Chang S, Puryear J, Cairney J (1993) A simple and efficient method for isolation of RNA from pine trees. Plant Mol Biol Rep 11: 113116[CrossRef] Dowrick GD, Bayoumi A (1966) The induction of mutations in chrysanthemum using X- and gamma radiation. Euphytica 15: 204210 Doyle JJ, Dickson EE (1987) Preservation of plant samples for DNA restriction endonuclease analysis. Taxon 36: 715722[CrossRef][Web of Science] Hattori K (1991) Inheritance of carotenoid pigmentation in flower color of chrysanthemum. Jpn J Breed 41: 19 Kishimoto S, Ohmiya A (2006) Regulation of carotenoid biosynthesis in petals and leaves of chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum morifolium Ramat.). Physiol Plant (in press) Langton FA (1980) Chimerical structure and carotenoid inheritance in Chrysanthemum morifolium (Ramat.). Euphytica 29: 807812[CrossRef] Murashige T, Skoog F (1962) A revised medium for rapid growth and bioassays with tobacco tissue cultures. Physiol Plant 15: 473497[CrossRef] Schwartz SH, Qin X, Loewen M (2004) The biochemical characterization of two carotenoid cleavage enzymes from Arabidopsis indicates that a carotenoid-derived compound inhibits lateral branching. J Biol Chem 279: 4694046945 Schwartz SH, Qin X, Zeevaart JAD (2001) Characterization of a novel carotenoid cleavage dioxygenase from plants. J Biol Chem 276: 2520825211 Schwartz SH, Tan BC, Gage DA, Zeevaart JAD, McCarty DR (1997) Specific oxidative cleavage of carotenoids by VP14 of maize. Science 276: 18721874 Simkin AJ, Schwartz SH, Auldridge M, Taylor MG, Klee HJ (2004a) The tomato carotenoid cleavage dioxygenase 1 genes contribute to the formation of the flavor volatiles Simkin AJ, Underwood BA, Auldridge M, Loucas HM, Shibuya K, Schmelz E, Clark DG, Klee HJ (2004b) Circadian regulation of the PhCCD1 carotenoid cleavage dioxygenase controls emission of B-ionone, a fragrance volatile of petunia flowers. Plant Physiol 136: 35043514 Tan BC, Joseph LM, Deng WT, Liu L, Li QB, Cline K, McCarty DR (2003) Molecular characterization of the Arabidopsis 9-cis epoxycarotenoid dioxygenase gene family. Plant J 35: 4456[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Tan BC, Schwartz SH, Zeevaart JAD, McCarty DR (1997) Genetic control of abscisic acid biosynthesis in maize. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 94: 1223512240 Vaknin H, Bar-Akiva A, Ovadia R, Nissim-Levi A, Forer I, Weiss D, Oren-Shamir M (2005) Active anthocyanin degradation in Brunfelsia calycina (yesterday-today-tomorrow) flowers. Planta 222: 1926[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Wasscher J (1956) The importance of sports in some florist's flowers. Euphytica 5: 163170 This article has been cited by other articles:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| ASPB Publications | PLANT PHYSIOLOGY® | THE PLANT CELL | |
|---|---|---|---|