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First published online December 8, 2006; 10.1104/pp.106.092700 Plant Physiology 143:1013-1023 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Abscisic Acid Antagonizes Ethylene-Induced Hyponastic Growth in Arabidopsis1,[OA]Plant Ecophysiology, Institute of Environmental Biology, Utrecht University, 3584 CA, Utrecht, The Netherlands
Ethylene induces enhanced differential growth in petioles of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), resulting in an upward movement of the leaf blades (hyponastic growth). The amplitude of this effect differs between accessions, with Columbia-0 (Col-0) showing a large response, while in Landsberg erecta (Ler), hyponastic growth is minimal. Abscisic acid (ABA) was found to act as an inhibitory factor of this response in both accessions, but the relationship between ethylene and ABA differed between the two; the ability of ABA to inhibit ethylene-induced hyponasty was significantly more pronounced in Col-0. Mutations in ABI1 or ABI3 induced a strong ethylene-regulated hyponastic growth in the less responsive accession Ler, while the response was abolished in the ABA-hypersensitive era1 in Col-0. Modifications in ABA levels altered petiole angles in the absence of applied ethylene, indicating that ABA influences petiole angles also independently from ethylene. A model is proposed whereby the negative effect of ABA on hyponastic growth is overcome by ethylene in Col-0 but not in Ler. However, when ABA signaling is artificially released in Ler, this regulatory mechanism is bypassed, resulting in a strong hyponastic response in this accession.
Abscisic acid (ABA) influences many aspects of plant growth and development, ranging from seed desiccation to acclimation to environmental stresses (Zeevaart and Creelman, 1988
ABA is known to interact with ethylene in many aspects of growth. Enhanced levels of ethylene are known to reduce the endogenous ABA concentration in rehydrated Xanthium leaves (Zeevaart, 1983
Apart from reciprocal effects on synthesis, interactions between ethylene and ABA signaling pathways have also been shown. Two independent studies showed era3, originally identified as ABA hypersensitive, to be allelic to ein2 (Beaudoin et al., 2000
Hyponastic (upward) and epinastic (downward) leaf growth are a common phenomenon observed in many plant species and consist of relatively faster cellular expansion on, respectively, the abaxial or adaxial side of the plant organ (Kang, 1979 The use of ethylene-induced hyponastic growth as a model system differs from traditionally used screens such as germination and hypocotyl length, in that it studies adult vegetative tissue instead of seeds or seedlings. Apart from this, the model system quantifies alterations in growth that occur in the span of hours rather than days. Using time-lapse photography, control and ethylene-treated plants are repetitively monitored for changes in petiole angles, resulting in detailed kinetics of the growth response. This enables the recognition of mutations that only result in a transient phenotype that would no longer be noticeable after prolonged treatment. In this study, we focus on the role of ABA in the regulation of initial petiole angles and ethylene-induced hyponastic growth in Arabidopsis and whether the observed difference in hyponastic response between accessions could be explained by a different relationship between ethylene and ABA. A collection of mutants with impaired ability to synthesize or perceive ABA was screened for alterations in the kinetics of ethylene-induced hyponastic growth, and the results were compared to pharmacological studies in which ethylene-exposed wild-type plants were treated with ABA or fluridone, an inhibitor of ABA biosynthesis. Furthermore, the effect of applied ethylene on the concentration of endogenous ABA, as well as on the transcript levels of ABA biosynthesis and ABA response genes, was determined.
Initial Petiole Angles and Ethylene-Induced Hyponastic Growth
Figure 1
shows petiole angles of Arabidopsis accessions Col-0 and Ler treated with air or 5 µL L1 ethylene. When grown in air, Ler plants showed a significantly higher initial petiole angle above the horizontal (21° ± 1°) compared to Col-0 (8° ± 0.3°). Both accessions reacted with an increase in petiole angle within 2 h after the start of ethylene treatment. In absolute numbers, this increase was significantly stronger in Col-0 (13° ± 1° after 8 h) compared to Ler (5° ± 2° after 8 h). As air-grown plants also show alterations in the petiole angle during the treatment period, part of the growth response observed in ethylene-treated plants is not related to ethylene. To be able to visualize the effect of ethylene on hyponasty more clearly, air-grown and ethylene-treated plants were paired, and the difference in petiole angle was calculated by subtracting the values of an air-grown plant from those of an ethylene-treated plant for each time point, giving a differential change in petiole angle during the course of the experiment (Cox et al., 2004
ABA Depresses Petiole Angles and Ethylene-Induced Hyponastic Growth in Mutant Analyses
To determine whether ABA concentration or ABA signaling is involved in ethylene-induced hyponastic growth, a selection of mutants impaired in ABA biosynthesis or ABA signal transduction was analyzed. Although some of these mutations influence stomatal conductances (e.g. ABI1 and ABI2; Allen et al., 1999 In the absence of ethylene, an altered initial petiole angle could already be observed in a number of mutant lines compared to the respective wild types (Fig. 2 ). The ABA biosynthesis mutants aba1-1 (Ler background) as well as aba2-1 and aba3-1 (Col-0 background) all displayed a significantly higher petiole angle than those of the respective wild types (P < 0.01), suggesting that ABA negatively influences initial petiolar angles. In correspondence with this, a decreased petiole angle was observed in the ABA-hypersensitive era1-2 (P < 0.05), and two ABA-insensitive mutants (abi1-1 and abi3-1) showed increased angles. However, not all ABA-insensitive mutants shared this phenotype, as no angle increase was present for abi2-1 (Ler) or for abi4-1 (Col-0).
To establish a relationship between ethylene and ABA signaling, the mutants described above were treated with 5 µL L1 ethylene. In general, this revealed an antagonistic relationship between ABA and ethylene. But again, this trend was not without exceptions. For example, the biosynthesis mutants aba2-1 and aba3-1 from Col-0 showed a significantly enhanced ethylene-induced hyponasty compared to wild-type plants (Fig. 3 , A and B ). In contrast, no increase was observed in a comparable biosynthesis mutant from Ler (aba1-1; Fig 4A ). ABA hypersensitivity (as observed in era1-2) resulted in the complete inhibition of ethylene-induced hyponastic growth (Fig. 3D). This was not a result of reduced ethylene sensitivity, as this mutant responded normally to ethylene in a triple-response assay (data not shown). In correlation with this, a strong enhancement of hyponastic growth was observed in the ABA-insensitive abi1-1 (17° ± 3°) and abi3-1 mutants (20° ± 2°; Fig. 4, C and D). Interestingly, the two ABA-insensitive mutants that did not show increased petiole angles, abi4-1 and abi2-1, also showed smaller enhancements of ethylene-induced growth (Figs. 3C and 4B). Taken together, these experiments suggest an inhibitory effect of ABA on initial petiole angles and ethylene-induced hyponastic growth and draw attention to the existence of an interaction between ABA and ethylene signaling that determines the extent of hyponastic growth. To support the observations made in Col-0 and Ler, ABA response mutants from two other accessions, C24 and Wassilewskija (Ws), were also analyzed (Fig. 5 ). The abi5 mutant responded to ethylene in a manner similar to ABA-insensitive mutants in Col-0 (maximal increase of 16° ± 3° in Ws versus 24° ± 2° in abi5). However, this mutation did not affect the initial petiole angles (20° ± 3° in wild type versus 24° ± 3° in abi5). In contrast, a reduction of initial angles was observed in C24-abi4-3 (33° ± 4° for wild type versus 21° ± 3° for abi4-3; P < 0.05). The growth response for abi4-3 was strikingly similar to that observed for abi4-1; both mutations resulted in a strong enhancement of the initial growth but not in a very high increase in maximal angle. Also, both mutant lines showed a relatively strong collapse of the petiole angles after prolonged (12 h) treatment with ethylene.
ABA Inhibits Initial Petiole Angle and Ethylene-Induced Hyponastic Growth in Pharmacological Experiments To confirm the observations from ABA mutants, wild-type plants from both accessions were treated with either ABA or fluridone, an inhibitor of its biosynthesis. Again, a negative relationship between ABA and initial petiole angles was observed. The application of 20 µM ABA for a period of 8 h resulted in decreased petiole angles in both accessions (P < 0.05; Fig. 6 ), while plants treated with fluridone acquired a significantly more upright initial petiole (P < 0.05).
Again, plants treated with ABA or fluridone were subsequently exposed to ethylene (5 µL L 1), and the effect of ethylene on hyponastic growth was calculated as in Figure 1C. In Col-0, treatment with ABA resulted in the complete inhibition of ethylene-induced hyponastic growth for at least 14 h of treatment (Fig. 7 ), while treatment with fluridone resulted in enhanced hyponastic growth. Although the fluridone-treated plants reacted slower to ethylene than untreated plants, the maximal increase in petiole angle was found to be significantly larger (23° ± 0.6° versus 18° ± 1°; P < 0.05). Ler did not respond similarly to Col-0; the same application of ABA to Ler plants did not inhibit the small ethylene-induced hyponastic response (8° ± 2° versus 5° ± 1°). Treatment of Ler plants with fluridone also did not induce an enhancement of ethylene-induced hyponastic growth. In fact, fluridone treatment in Ler seemed to hinder rather than enhance hyponasty, as the fluridone-treated plants showed an increased lag time for hyponastic growth to start and also an increase in the time point at which the maximum angle was reached. So, although ABA and ethylene seem to interact in both accessions, ethylene-induced hyponasty in Col-0 seems more affected by ABA levels than in Ler.
Analysis of ABA Concentrations and Expression of ABA Biosynthesis and Response Genes The observed ability of ABA to influence initial petiole angles and the antagonistic relationship between ABA and ethylene in this tissue indicates that ethylene might act via an alteration of ABA signaling or ABA biosynthesis. To investigate these possibilities, the effect of ethylene on endogenous levels of ABA was determined in ethylene-treated plants. Additionally, expression levels of ABA biosynthesis and ABA response genes were analyzed with microarray experiments using petioles of Col-0 plants treated with air or ethylene. Ethylene treatment did not inhibit ABA levels in petioles of either Col-0 or Ler. ABA levels remained unchanged in Col-0 (Fig. 8A ), while a slight (9%) increase in ABA level was observed in air-grown Ler after 6 h of treatment.
Affymetrix microarray experiments were carried out for RNA derived from petioles of Col-0 plants treated with air or with 3 h of ethylene. This single time point was chosen because it marks the onset of ethylene-induced growth in Col-0. This experiment, using three biological replicates, revealed the up-regulation of 1,059 genes and down-regulation of 1,201 genes (out of 22,746 probe sets; described fully by Millenaar et al., 2006
We investigated whether ABA influenced ethylene-induced hyponastic growth in Arabidopsis petioles and whether the different responses of Col-0 and Ler could be contributed to a different interaction between the two hormones. The general picture shows an antagonistic relationship between ethylene and ABA signaling in the process of ethylene-induced petiole hyponasty. This relationship contrasts with findings from root elongation essays, where ethylene seems to enhance sensitivity to ABA (Beaudoin et al., 2000
The potential for ABA to affect ethylene-induced hyponastic growth differed between accessions. In Col-0, a reduction of the endogenous ABA concentration, either genetically or pharmacologically, enhanced the hyponastic response. Also, hyponasty was strongly reduced in plants treated with, or hypersensitive for, ABA. In contrast, ethylene-induced hyponasty in Ler showed a different picture. Although treatment of fluridone or ABA to Ler did alter initial petiole angles, no effect was observed on ethylene-induced growth. Nearly identical results were observed for the aba1-1 mutant. The lack of enhanced hyponastic growth in this mutant was in stark contrast to the strong responses of aba2-1 and aba3-1 (Col-0). Yet, the aba1-1, aba2-1, and aba3-1 mutations were shown to result in similar reductions in endogenous ABA levels in shoots (Rock and Zeevaart, 1991
As a reduction in endogenous ABA is able to increase petiole angles in both accessions and enhances ethylene-induced growth (although only for Col-0), it could be hypothesized that ethylene induces these increased angles by lowering ABA biosynthesis or inhibiting its signaling pathway. Such a regulatory mechanism has been found in the semiaquatic R. palustris. In this species, ABA is a strong inhibitor of ethylene-induced hyponastic growth (Cox et al., 2004
Of the 10 mutants present in this screen, the most striking results were obtained from abi1-1 and abi3-1. The strongly enhanced hyponastic growth in these lines contrasted to findings from other Ler mutants that displayed an ABA-insensitive phenotype. Furthermore, abi1-1 and abi3-1 show that ethylene is not incapable of inducing a strong growth response in Ler. However, it seems only able to do so when an inhibitory mechanism is artificially removed. Thus, the difference in hyponastic growth response between Col-0 and Ler seems to lie in the ability of ethylene to lift an inhibitory signal that seems related to ABA and mediated by ABI1 and ABI3.
The impact of abi3-1 on the response was highly surprising, as, originally, ABI3 was thought to be exclusively expressed in seeds and not in vegetative tissue (Giraudat et al., 1992
Although the abi1-1 mutation causes ABA insensitivity, loss-of-function mutations in this gene were found to induce hypersensitivity to ABA (Gosti et al., 1999
In contrast to abi1-1, no increase in either initial angles or ethylene-induced growth was observed for abi2-1. These contrasting responses were unexpected, as ABI1 and ABI2 are closely homologous proteins (protein phosphatase 2Cs) with overlapping functionality in ABA signaling (Koornneef et al., 1984
Furthermore, other functional differences between the two proteins have been reported. For example, ABA-induced ADH expression was found to depend much more on a functional ABI2 gene compared to a functional ABI1 gene (de Bruxelles et al., 1996
A proposed signaling pathway is presented in Figure 9 , which includes the regulatory components described here, but undoubtedly omitting a number of other involved components. In general, it shows a positive regulatory effect of ethylene on petiole angles, while ABA acts as a negative regulator. ABA influences petiole angles in the absence of applied ethylene, implying that the two hormones act (at least partially) independent of each other. However, as a mutation in ABA signaling (at least in Col-0) affects ethylene-induced growth, some interaction between the two hormones also seems to be present. Thus, the action of ABA is divided in an ethylene-independent and -dependent response.
Ethylene-Independent Responses The ethylene-independent effect of ABA on petiole angles is observed to a similar extent in both Col-0 as Ler. Pharmacological experiments (Fig. 6), as well as the initial angles observed in ABA biosynthesis mutants (Fig. 2) of both accessions, show that ABA is a negative regulator of petiole angles in Arabidopsis. This pathway seems mediated by ABI1, ABI3, ABI5, and ERA1. In contrast, ABI2 does not seem to be involved here, while ABI4 may actually be a negative regulator, considering the reduced initial angles observed in abi4-3 (Ws background; Fig. 5).
Ethylene-Dependent Responses
So how are these signaling pathways different in Ler and Col-0? ABA influences initial angles the same in Col-0 and Ler. Thus, differences in regulation must be found in the ethylene-dependent pathway (indicated by a circle in Fig. 9). The data from abi1-1 and abi3-1 show that ethylene is capable of inducing a strong hyponastic response. However, a reduction in ABA biosynthesis (genetically or pharmaceutically) is unable to induce this same phenotype. In other words, ethylene-induced growth in Ler seems insensitive to ABA but not to its downstream signaling pathway, pointing to some sort of disconnection in Ler between ABA and downstream components. Interestingly, a similar conclusion was drawn when hyponastic growth induced by low light was compared to this ethylene-induced response. Millenaar et al. (2005) So, in summary, it seems the response pathways in Col-0 and Ler are in fact more similar than they are contrasting. Both accessions are, in principle, capable of equally strong differential growth upon two seemingly unrelated external stimuli. However, it seems there is a distinct mutation in Ler that specifically prevents hyponastic growth upon exposure to ethylene but not low light. This mutation induces an insensitivity to ethylene to the capacity of ABA to modify the ethylene-induced response but not to ABA itself. This, and the ability of some (but not all) ABA signaling components to rescue this phenotype, suggests that the mutation could be a point of cross talk between the two hormone signaling pathways. The exact identity of this component is currently under investigation in our laboratory.
Plant Material and Growth Conditions
Four Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) accessions were used (with Nottingham Arabidopsis Stock Centre accession nos.): Col-0 (N1092); Ler (N20); C24 (N906); and Ws-2 (N1602). Plants were grown according to Millenaar et al. (2005)
To measure changes in petiole angle, time-lapse photography was used according to Millenaar et al. (2005)
Digital photographs (1,280 x 1,000 pixels) of the same plant were taken every 10 min. The angle of the petiole was then determined with a KS400 (version 3.0) software package (Carl Zeiss Vision). Petiole angles were measured as the angle between the applied ink mark and a fixed basal point of the petiole (that was determined using 10 random photographs), compared to the horizontal. For all replicate plants, the change in petiole angle compared to t = 0 h was calculated for every time point. Because a number of the hormone mutants as well as wild types showed a change in petiole angle in air, we corrected for this according to Cox et al. (2004)
Treatment with 5 µL L1 ethylene in a flow-through system took place as described by Millenaar et al. (2005)
Per sample, 20 mg of freeze-dried petiole tissue was homogenized in liquid nitrogen and extracted in 5 mL 80% (v/v) methanol containing 20 mg L1 butylated hydroxytoluene in the presence of 6 ng deuterated ABA and 50 kBq 3H-ABA (Sigma-Aldrich). Extractions were then performed according to Benschop et al. (2005)
Microarray hybridization and GeneChip data analysis were performed as described in Millenaar et al. (2006)
Plants were treated for up to 6 h with air or 5 µL L1 ethylene, as described above. After treatment, petioles were harvested and immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen. For one RNA sample, eight petioles of two plants were pooled and ground in liquid nitrogen. Total RNA was isolated from Arabidopsis petioles using RNeasy Plant Mini kit (Qiagen). Genomic DNA was removed using the DNA-Free kit (Ambion). cDNA was synthesized using 1 µg total RNA with Superscript III RNase H- Reverse Transcriptase (Invitrogen) using random hexamer primers. Real-time RT-PCR reactions were performed on MyiQ Single-Color Real-Time PCR Detection system and software using iQ SYBR Green Supermix fluorescein (Bio-Rad Laboratories).
Real-time PCR was conducted (12.5 µL SYBR Green Supermix fluorescein, 100 pmol of each primer, and 1 µL cDNA in 25 µL total volume) for 40 cycles with the following temperatures: 30 s at 95°C denaturation, 30 s at 60°C annealing, and 60 s at 72°C extension. For ABI1 (Col-0, At4g26080.1; Ler, ATL8c21825, which are 100% homologous in the analyzed domain), the following primers have been used: 5'-TGAAGAAGCGTGTGAGATGG-3' and 5'-CTGTATCGCCAGCTTTGACA-3', which gave a single product of 160 bp in both accessions on cDNA. PCR efficiencies were comparable as determined by the LinRegPCR software package (Ramakers et al., 2003
We thank Professor M.B. Jackson, Professor C.M.J. Pieterse, and Dr. M. Proveniers for critical reading of this manuscript. The abi4-3 mutant and the corresponding C24 wild type were a kind gift of Professor S. Smeekens (Utrecht University, The Netherlands). Other mutants were obtained from the Nottingham Arabidopsis Stock Centre (Nottingham, UK) or from the laboratory of Professor M. Koornneef (Wageningen University and Research Center, The Netherlands). We thank M. Terlou (Utrecht University) for developing the image analysis macro in KS400 for analysis of the photographs. Received November 6, 2006; accepted December 3, 2006; published December 8, 2006.
1 This work was supported by the Dutch Science Foundation (PIONIER grant no. 80084470).
2 These authors contributed equally to the paper.
3 Present address: Department of Physiological Chemistry, University Medical Center Utrecht, Universiteitsweg 100, 3584 CG Utrecht, The Netherlands. 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: Anton J.M. Peeters (a.j.m.peeters{at}bio.uu.nl).
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.092700 * Corresponding author; e-mail a.j.m.peeters{at}bio.uu.nl; fax 31302518366.
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