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First published online January 12, 2007; 10.1104/pp.106.093435 Plant Physiology 143:1173-1188 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
The Arabidopsis Aleurone Layer Responds to Nitric Oxide, Gibberellin, and Abscisic Acid and Is Sufficient and Necessary for Seed Dormancy1,[C],[W],[OA]United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Department of Horticulture, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706 (P.C.B.); Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720 (P.C.B., I.G.L.L., R.L.J.); Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824 (I.G.L.L.); Department of Plant Sciences, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, California 91768 (N.A., D.W.S.); and College of Life Sciences, Korea University, Seoul, Korea 136152 (Y.-Y.C.)
Seed dormancy is a common phase of the plant life cycle, and several parts of the seed can contribute to dormancy. Whole seeds, seeds lacking the testa, embryos, and isolated aleurone layers of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) were used in experiments designed to identify components of the Arabidopsis seed that contribute to seed dormancy and to learn more about how dormancy and germination are regulated in this species. The aleurone layer was found to be the primary determinant of seed dormancy. Embryos from dormant seeds, however, had a lesser growth potential than those from nondormant seeds. Arabidopsis aleurone cells were examined by light and electron microscopy, and cell ultrastructure was similar to that of cereal aleurone cells. Arabidopsis aleurone cells responded to nitric oxide (NO), gibberellin (GA), and abscisic acid, with NO being upstream of GA in a signaling pathway that leads to vacuolation of protein storage vacuoles and abscisic acid inhibiting vacuolation. Molecular changes that occurred in embryos and aleurone layers prior to germination were measured, and these data show that both the aleurone layer and the embryo expressed the NO-associated gene AtNOS1, but only the embryo expressed genes for the GA biosynthetic enzyme GA3 oxidase.
The seeds of most angiosperms are dormant at maturity, and dormancy must be lost before germination can occur (Bewley, 1997
Dormancy is genetically determined, and seeds with some genotypes are dormant after months or years of dry storage, whereas seeds with other genotypes lose dormancy within weeks (Koornneef et al., 2000
The molecular and biochemical parameters that underlie seed dormancy remain unknown despite a century of research in this area. Genetic evidence indicates strongly that abscisic acid (ABA) is central to the establishment and maintenance of seed dormancy (Hilhorst and Karssen, 1992
Arabidopsis has been the subject of research on dormancy and germination for several decades. Arabidopsis ecotypes vary widely in their depth of dormancy (Clerkx et al., 2004
The seed coats of Arabidopsis consist of the dead testa and a layer of living aleurone cells. The development and structure of the testa has been described in detail (Windsor et al., 2000 Here we report on experiments designed to examine the contribution of the Arabidopsis embryo, aleurone layer, and testa to seed dormancy and to determine where in the seed NO is perceived. The data indicate that under conditions of high water potential, the aleurone layer is the most important determinant of seed dormancy. The data also show clearly that the aleurone layer is responsive to NO, as well as to GA and ABA, in ways that are consistent with the physiology of dormancy and germination in this species.
Arabidopsis Seeds Remain Dormant When the Testa Is Removed
Mature Arabidopsis seeds contain an embryo enveloped in an aleurone layer that is in turn surrounded by the testa. Previous work has shown convincingly that pigments in the testa contribute significantly to seed dormancy (Debeaujon et al., 2000
We tested whether testa-less seeds responded to NO by exposing them to gaseous NO, as described previously (Libourel et al., 2006
Embryos Removed from Dormant Arabidopsis Seeds Are Not Dormant To differentiate between components of seed dormancy that originate in the embryo and those that originate in the aleurone layer, the responses of isolated embryos and isolated seed coats were studied. Seed coats consisted of the living aleurone layer and the dead, adhering testa, and throughout this article we refer to these as Arabidopsis aleurone layers. This terminology is consistent with that used for cereal aleurone layers, which are the aleurone layer with adhering testa and pericarp. Figure 3 shows photographs of embryos that were removed from several ecotypes of Arabidopsis seeds within hours of imbibition and then incubated on agarose. The Col seeds used for this experiment were fully after ripened and showed no dormancy. The C24, Cvi, and Kas2 ecotype seeds were dormant and had final germination percentages of less than 5%. Regardless of the dormancy status of the seed, however, none of these seeds had true embryo dormancy. All isolated embryos grew and greened within 3 to 4 d of removal from the seed coats. Indeed, under the conditions of our experiment, embryos from highly dormant Cvi and Kas2 ecotypes grew more vigorously than embryos from nondormant Col seeds (Fig. 3).
We compared the ability of embryos from dormant and nondormant C24 seeds to grow on agarose containing mannitol or polyethylene glycol (PEG) at concentrations up to 500 mOsmol. As expected, higher osmotic potentials slowed the rate of embryo growth, and this is shown in the photographs of embryos grown on mannitol in Figure 4A . Embryos from dormant seeds failed to grow at 400 mOsmol mannitol, while embryos from nondormant seeds were able to grow at 500 mOsmol mannitol (Fig. 4A). Embryo growth was quantified by measuring changes in surface area, and these data are plotted in Figure 4B for the embryo as a whole, and in Figure 4C for the cotyledons, hypocotyls, and roots individually. With increasing PEG or mannitol concentration, growth of dormant and nondormant embryos was slowed (Fig. 4B). Embryos from nondormant C24 seed had a greater capacity for growth at osmotic potentials above 200 mOsmol PEG than embryos from dormant seeds. At 200 mOsmol PEG, the embryos from nondormant seeds doubled in size over 2 d, while embryos from dormant seeds grew by less than 10%. Differences in growth rate on mannitol were largest at 300 mOsmol, where embryos from nondormant seeds grew twice as fast as embryos from dormant seeds. Differences in growth in response to 300 mOsmol mannitol and 300 mOsmol PEG were examined in more detail, as shown in Figure 4C. Differences in growth between embryos from dormant and nondormant seeds were particularly large for cotyledons and hypocotyls. These organs showed negligible growth in embryos from dormant seeds (<5%), but much more rapid growth was observed in embryos from nondormant seeds. The root, on the other hand, grew in embryos from dormant and nondormant seeds, but changes in root surface area in embryos from nondormant seeds were more than double those in dormant seeds.
The difference in the ability of embryos from dormant and nondormant seeds to grow on plates containing an osmoticum raised the question of whether dormancy-breaking treatments increase the growth potential of the embryo. To test this hypothesis, dormant seeds were exposed to KCN vapors or to NO for 2 d using the same conditions described for testa-less seeds. Embryos isolated from these seeds were placed on agarose containing an osmoticum (300 mOsmol mannitol). The data presented in Figure 5A show that treatment of intact seeds with KCN vapors in an enclosed chamber or NO gas in a flowing gas stream resulted in increases in the mean growth of embryos from dormant seeds, but the rate of growth was not statistically different from controls treated with water vapor or air, respectively. A subset of embryos treated with NO gas or KCN vapor grew at more rapid rates than controls, however, and this might suggest that some embryos commit to germination and increased growth potential more readily than others. Differences between the water and air controls were unexpected but may be the result of decreased temperatures or decreased accumulation of volatile compounds in the flowing air controls relative to the enclosed water controls.
We also tested the hypothesis that NO is required for embryo growth by treating embryos isolated from dormant seeds with the NO scavenger c-PTIO. No significant reduction in growth was observed when embryos were placed on agarose containing c-PTIO compared to controls on agarose alone (Fig. 5B). These data indicate that the initiation and continuation of embryo growth do not require NO, and they are consistent with our previous observations showing that c-PTIO does not inhibit germination of nondormant Arabidopsis seeds (Bethke et al., 2004b The data showing that c-PTIO did not inhibit the growth of embryos isolated from dormant seeds is inconsistent with previous data demonstrating that c-PTIO strengthened seed dormancy for Arabidopsis and raised the possibility that the primary NO-dependent step that contributes to the loss of seed dormancy in Arabidopsis takes place in the aleurone layer. To test this hypothesis, we undertook a detailed investigation of the Arabidopsis aleurone layer that allowed us to examine the responses of isolated aleurone layers to c-PTIO, as well as to the plant growth regulators GA and ABA.
As illustrated by the light, fluorescence, and electron micrographs in Figure 6
, the ultrastructure of mature Arabidopsis aleurone cells is very similar to that of the well-characterized cereal aleurone cell (Jones, 1969
Numerous protein storage vacuoles (PSVs; Fig. 6, A and I) and oleosomes (Fig. 6I) occupy most of the mature aleurone cell volume. Note that PSVs, but not oleosomes, can be resolved by light microscopy. In seeds imbibed for 1 h, the PSVs are approximately 2 to 4 µm in diameter, and the oleosomes are approximately 0.5 µm in diameter. The nucleus is approximately 4 µm in diameter and is centrally located in a mature aleurone cell (Fig. 6, B and I) but following imbibition is pushed to the periphery by the expanding vacuole (Fig. 6, G and H). The coalescence of smaller PSV into one large central vacuole is illustrated in Figure 6, I to K. A thick layer of mucilage (Fig. 6D) remains attached to the testa cells of the isolated aleurone layer (Fig. 6E). Like barley (Hordeum vulgare) aleurone cells (Swanson et al., 1998
Cereal aleurone cells have been characterized in depth at the molecular, biochemical, and ultrastructural levels, but little is known about structure, function, and regulation of mature Arabidopsis aleurone cells. To learn more about the potential role of the Arabidopsis aleurone layer in seed dormancy and germination, we looked for responses in Arabidopsis aleurone layers that were similar to those in cereal aleurone cells. For example, cereal aleurone cells secrete enzymes that digest their cells' walls. Fluorescence microscopy was used to observe changes in Arabidopsis aleurone cells following imbibition of nondormant seeds. These observations showed that cells near the radicle tip became less angular in seeds at or after the time of germination (compare root end to hypocotyl hook end in Fig. 6F), suggesting that thinning and weakening of the cell walls was occurring. After several days of imbibition, some cells near the radicle tip became almost completely spherical, and only a thin band of cell wall remained (Fig. 6, G and H).
Cereal aleurone cells also undergo a process of increasing vacuolation whereby smaller protein-filled PSVs coalesce to form a single large vacuole. This process of vacuolation has been used as a semiquantitative marker for GA-dependent events (Bush et al., 1986
The change in the number of PSVs per cell was very tightly correlated with the dormancy status of the seed. An example is seen in Figure 8 , where NaN3 was used to remove dormancy from mildly dormant C24 Arabidopsis seeds. These seeds gave final germination percentages of 12% when imbibed with water alone but over 95% when imbibed on 10 µM NaN3 for 4 d. There was essentially no reduction in the number of PSV per aleurone cell in layers dissected from dormant seeds imbibed in water (Fig. 8A). Seeds imbibed in water that germinated, however, had extensive vacuolation, and 96 h after imbibition, there was one large vacuole per cell. When dormant seeds were treated with 10 µM NaN3 to break dormancy, a reduction in the number of PSV per aleurone cell occurred prior to germination (Fig. 8B). Aleurone layers dissected from NaN3-treated seeds 72 h after imbibition had one large, central vacuole per cell.
Changes in PSV Occur after Aleurone Layers Are Isolated from the Seed and These Changes Are Ecotype Dependent When aleurone layers were removed from seeds that had been imbibed for 1 to 3 h and the isolated layers were incubated on agarose, the aleurone cells in them showed time-dependent changes in PSV size and number. This process, as seen in Figure 9 , was highly dependent on the ecotype used. The number of PSV declined in aleurone cells from Col seeds during the first 48 h after isolation with kinetics that were only a little slower than observed in aleurone cells of the intact seed (Fig. 9A). As in intact Col seeds, PSVs in cells closest to the root/hypocotyl vacuolated more rapidly than in cells adjacent to cotyledons. Cells in aleurone layers isolated from highly dormant Kas2 and Cvi ecotype seeds, however, showed a very different response. In this case, new PSV were formed, and the number of PSV per cell increased with time from approximately 25 in the mature seed to approximately 45 after 3 d of imbibition (Fig. 9A). The cells in aleurone layers from dormant C24 seeds showed yet another pattern of vacuolation (Fig. 9B). The number of PSV per cell increased for the first day but decreased thereafter, such that by day 4, there were approximately 10 vacuoles per cell.
Arabidopsis Aleurone Cells Are Extremely Sensitive to ABA It was hypothesized that cellular ABA content might affect the vacuolation response of cells in isolated aleurone layers and that this might account for some of the differences observed between the four ecotypes examined in Figure 9. To test this hypothesis, we determined if vacuolation could be prevented by incorporating ABA into the agarose substrate on which isolated aleurone layers were incubated. The result of this experiment is shown in Table I . ABA at concentrations of 1 nM or greater strongly inhibited the vacuolation of C24 aleurone cells. A time course for cells in aleurone layers isolated from dormant C24 Arabidopsis seeds and treated with 10 nM ABA is shown in Figure 9B. It is clear from these data that ABA treatment results in an increase in the number of PSV per cell after 4 d compared to the number per cell in freshly isolated layers or to the number per cell in isolated layers not treated with ABA.
c-PTIO Inhibits Aleurone Cell Vacuolation and GA Counteracts the Effect of c-PTIO We used the vacuolation of aleurone cells in isolated aleurone layers as an assay to see if this tissue was sensitive to the NO scavenger c-PTIO. For this analysis, we used the semiquantitative assay diagrammed in Figure 10A . Cells with different degrees of vacuolation were assigned to stages on a scale of 1 to 5, with stage 1 being many small vacuoles per cell and stage 5 being one large vacuole that nearly fills the cell. Because vacuolation in isolated layers is relatively uniform, layers were scored from 1 to 5 based on the stage of representative cells within them. Cells in control aleurone layers vacuolated such that 3 d after isolation, approximately 50% of the layers contained mostly stage 5 cells, with the remaining layers having cells distributed in stages 2 to 4 (Fig. 10B). Treatment with 50 µM c-PTIO, however, inhibited the vacuolation process, and 70% of the layers had cells that were predominantly in stage 1. We consistently observed some cells that vacuolated in the presence of 50 µM c-PTIO, however, and these tended to be on the root side of the seed (Fig. 10B; data not shown). Note that the C24 seeds used for this experiment were less dormant than those used for the experiment described in Figure 9. Coincubation of isolated aleurone layers with 10 µM gibberellic acid (GA3) reversed the effects of c-PTIO and resulted in a reduction in the number of PSVs per cell (Fig. 10B). These data suggest that both NO and GA promote the vacuolation of aleurone cells and that NO is upstream of GA in a signaling pathway that leads to vacuolation.
We investigated further the GA responsiveness of Arabidopsis aleurone cells to see if GA could stimulate vacuolation in cells that had not been treated with c-PTIO. The number of PSV per aleurone cell in aleurone layers isolated from nondormant Ler ecotype seeds declined slowly, as is seen in Figure 10C, and approximately 11 PSVs/cell were present after 4 d of incubation. The rate of vacuolation of these cells was stimulated by GA3, such that 4 d after incubation, GA-treated cells had an average of six PSVs/cell. The average number of PSVs per cell on day 4 was significantly less with GA treatment than in controls, as judged by a Student's t test (P < 0.05). As was the case in Figure 10B, vacuolation of Ler aleurone cells was inhibited by c-PTIO, and this could be prevented by treatment with GA (Fig. 10C).
Seeds of the Spy-1 mutant were used to determine if the SPY protein is a component of the GA signaling pathway leading to vacuolation of aleurone cells. The Arabidopsis SPY protein is an O-GlcNAc transferase, and Spy-1 mutant plants have phenotypes similar to wild-type plants that are treated with GA (Jacobsen and Olszewski, 1993
Seeds of Arabidopsis may be increasingly dormant as temperatures increase above 15°C (Baskin and Baskin, 1983
Changes in Gene Expression Associated with Dormancy and Germination in Arabidopsis Embryos and Aleurone Layers We used quantitative PCR (qPCR) to monitor changes in gene expression within embryos and aleurone layers isolated from Arabidopsis seeds treated with no additions, KCN vapors, c-PTIO, or KCN vapors and c-PTIO (Fig. 12 ). For these seeds, expected germination percentages were 0%, 90%, 0%, and 27%, respectively. Because the C24 ecotype seeds that we used for these experiments began to germinate 72 h after treatment with KCN vapors, we isolated embryos and aleurone layers from seeds 1, 24, and 48 h after imbibition.
To demonstrate that our embryo samples were not contaminated with pieces of the aleurone layer, we looked at the expression of an extensin-like gene, AtEPR1, which had been shown previously to be specifically expressed in the aleurone layer of Arabidopsis (Dubreucq et al., 2000
NO action is required for the loss of Arabidopsis seed dormancy triggered by CN, nitrate, or nitrite (Bethke et al., 2006b
Because isolated aleurone layers were responsive to GA (Figs. 10 and 11), and GA is associated with germination, we examined the expression of the GA3ox1 and GA3ox2 genes. These genes encode the final steps in the biosynthesis of active GA in Arabidopsis seeds (Yamaguchi et al., 2001
Although aleurone layers did not express either GA3 oxidase gene, this tissue showed strong stimulation of transcription for a putative GA-dependent Cys protease (Fig. 12B; Ogawa et al., 2003
Lipid metabolism is an important contributor to early seedling growth, and links have been made between the regulation of lipid metabolism and seed dormancy (Footitt et al., 2002
Gene expression was also quantified for the peroxiredoxin AtPer1 (Fig. 12H). Peroxiredoxins have been associated with seed dormancy or an inhibition of germination in several species, including Arabidopsis (Haslekas et al., 2003
Seed dormancy is a complex phenomenon that remains poorly understood despite a century of research. The data presented here further our understanding of seed dormancy and seed physiology. In particular, the data show that: (1) the Arabidopsis aleurone layer is sufficient and necessary for the sustained dormancy of imbibed seeds (Figs. 1 and 2); (2) the Arabidopsis aleurone layer perceives and responds to NO during the process of dormancy release (Figs. 1, 2, 10, and 11); (3) NO signaling is upstream of GA signaling in a control pathway that leads to the vacuolation of aleurone cells (Fig. 10); (4) imbibition of intact seeds or isolated aleurone layers results, initially, in the formation of additional PSV (Figs. 79
Dormancy is a state of an individual seed, and multiple components within each seed can contribute to seed dormancy. The data presented here, and prior work by others (Debeaujon and Koornneef, 2000
Accumulating evidence indicates that NO is a key player in reducing seed dormancy and promoting germination (Bethke et al., 2004b
ABA and GA are central to seed dormancy and germination. In a previous report, we showed that cyanide vapors reduced the sensitivity of Arabidopsis seeds to ABA (Bethke et al., 2006a
The vacuolation of aleurone cells is regulated by NO, GA, ABA, azide, and temperature (Figs. 911
A key role for the seed coats in regulating germination of a wide variety of other seeds has been reported (Kelly et al., 1992
Seed coats may also function as permeability barriers to exclude or contain substances. The testa may play a particularly important role as a barrier that prevents small molecules from entering or leaving Arabidopsis seeds. Previous work has shown that Arabidopsis seeds from mutants that do not accumulate proanthocyanidins in the testa are less dormant and less able to exclude tetrazolium salts than wild-type seeds (Debeaujon et al., 2000
An underappreciated function of the seed coats in seed dormancy may be to contain solutes within the apoplast of the seed. In this way, the osmotic potential of apoplastic water can be maintained following imbibition, and seeds whose embryos have insufficient growth potential can remain dormant. In this context, the biophysical properties of the embryo profoundly affect the dormancy status of the seed. The ability of intact seeds to germinate reflects, in part, the ability of the embryo to develop sufficient force to push through the seed coverings. The growth of isolated embryos is likely to reflect a similar capacity for the generation of turgor. We show that isolated embryos from the nondormant C24 ecotype of Arabidopsis have a higher growth potential than embryos from dormant seeds. Isolated embryos imbibed on media having a water potential close to zero grew readily, regardless of seed dormancy status or ecotype (Fig. 3). At lower water potentials, however, embryos from nondormant C24 Arabidopsis grew more rapidly than embryos from dormant seeds, and the water potential at which growth stopped was lower for embryos from nondormant seeds than for dormant seeds (Fig. 4). A reduced capacity for growth at low water potentials, therefore, may be one component of seed dormancy that resides in the Arabidopsis embryo. In their study of the growth biophysics of lettuce embryos, Nabors and Lang (1971)
We have used the process of vacuole expansion as an assay for responses associated with dormancy loss in Arabidopsis. Changes in PSVs have been reported in the aleurone or endosperm of cereals (Bethke et al., 1998
We used qPCR to identify molecular markers in the embryo or aleurone layers that are associated with a loss of dormancy and that change in abundance prior to germination. The genes selected for this analysis encode enzymes that are participants in hormone signaling or response pathways (AtNOS1, GA3ox1, GA3ox2, and AtCP1), lipid mobilization (ICL and MS), or other processes associated with germination or dormancy (AtEPR1 and AtPer1). The data in Figure 12 show clearly that there is strong up and down-regulation of gene expression in both the aleurone layer and embryo within 24 h of imbibition (Fig. 12). The effect of KCN on the expression of GA biosynthetic genes is especially noteworthy. KCN treatment caused a 15-fold increase in GA3ox1 and GA3ox2 expression relative to water treated controls at 48 h. KCN breaks dormancy in a wide range of seeds, and we speculate that it does so by increasing GA biosynthesis. This aspect of the action of KCN is being explored further. The GA biosynthetic genes were not expressed in the Arabidopsis aleurone layer, an observation consistent with reports by others (Yamaguchi et al., 2001 The regulation of AtNOS1 in the aleurone layer is intriguing in that expression was up-regulated in samples treated with c-PTIO for 48 h relative to controls and samples treated with KCN. This suggests that this NO-associated gene is under feedback regulation, and this hypothesis warrants further consideration. ICL and MS exhibited relatively small changes in mRNA abundance with treatment or time, except for ICL between 1 and 24 h where there was a moderate increase in the amount of ICL transcript. Of the other genes examined, AtEPR1 is notable for showing strong down-regulation between 1 and 24 h and for being specifically expressed in the aleurone layer. The data presented in Figures 6, 7, 10, and 11 and Table I illustrate the striking similarities between Arabidopsis and barley aleurone layers. The cells in these two tissues are remarkably similar at the level of ultrastructure. In both species, the mature aleurone cell is surrounded by a thick cell wall, contains large reserves of lipid in oleosomes, and has numerous PSVs (Fig. 6). Aleurone layers from Arabidopsis and barley both metabolize stored reserves to support growth of the embryo, and both undergo a process of vacuolation that results in a large vacuole occupying most of the volume of the cell. Both Arabidopsis and barley aleurone cells respond to GA and ABA, with GA promoting vacuolation and ABA inhibiting vacuolation. Neither the barley aleurone layer nor the Arabidopsis aleurone layer, however, expresses genes for the synthesis of active GAs. The aleurone layer of Arabidopsis also responds to NO as part of the dormancy loss process, but it is not known if cereal aleurone layers respond likewise. These similarities in structure and regulation suggest that there has been conservation of aleurone cell functions as Arabidopsis and the small grain cereals diverged. It is clear that cereal aleurone cells are specialized secretory cells that synthesize and secrete the hydrolytic enzymes that break down the massive reserves stored in the dead starchy endosperm. The data presented here are consistent with the hypothesis that Arabidopsis aleurone cells are also secretory cells and that they secrete cell wall degrading enzymes that hydrolyze aleurone cell walls and result in dormancy loss.
Plant Material Dormant and nondormant seeds of the C24 ecotype of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) were harvested from plants grown in a phytotron at Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization Canberra with 17°C temperatures and an 18-h-light (300 µmol m2 s1), 8-h-dark photoperiod. Dormant seeds were stored at 80°C after harvest, and nondormant seeds were generated by after ripening at room temperature (RT). Col seeds were obtained from plants grown under fluorescent lights at 21°C to 23°C with an 18-h-light (75 µmol m2 s1), 8-h-dark photoperiod, and seeds were after ripened at RT for over 6 months. Seeds of the Cvi and Kas2 ecotypes were harvested from greenhouse-grown plants and were stored at 80°C. Seeds of the Ler ecotype and of the Spy-1 mutant were either obtained from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center or were harvested from plants grown under fluorescent lights at 21°C to 23°C with an 18-h-light (75 µmol m2 s1), 8-h-dark photoperiod. Ler and Spy-1 seeds were after ripened at RT for at least 1 month.
The testa was removed from some seeds by imbibing them with distilled water on filter paper for 1 to 3 h and then gently tearing and peeling away the testa with a fine metal probe. For experiments with isolated embryos, the testa and endosperm of seeds imbibed for 1 to 3 h were ruptured with a fine probe or razor blade, and the embryo was gently pushed through the opening. For experiments with isolated aleurone layers, seeds were imbibed 1 to 3 h and bisected between the root/hypocotyl and cotyledons with a razor blade. The embryo halves were discarded, leaving two intact, half aleurone layers. For experiments using real-time reverse transcription qPCR, seeds were imbibed and treated for 1, 24, or 48 h and then individual seeds separated into the embryo and aleurone later by making a small incision through the testa and aleurone layer and gently pushing the intact embryo through the incision.
Unless indicated otherwise, seeds, seeds with the testa removed, embryos, and aleurone layers were incubated in 3.5-cm plastic petri dishes containing 3 mL of 0.6% or 1% agarose, with or without additions as described in the text, and dishes were sealed with Parafilm. Germination was scored as emergence of the radicle from the seed coats. Isolated embryos or isolated aleurone layers were placed directly on 0.6% or 1% agarose with additions as indicated in the text. Embryos were positioned laterally and photographed. The surface area of each embryo (maximum projection) or distinct region of the embryo was determined by tracing with a touchpad and computing the surface area using ImageJ version 1.36b (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij). Isolated aleurone layers were placed on agarose (0.6%) with the testa side down, taking care that the top of the layer was moistened with a drop of water. Seeds or embryos were exposed to vapors from KCN, as described in Bethke et al. (2006b)
Seed coats from Col Arabidopsis seeds imbibed for 1 and 24 h were fixed in 3% glutaraldehyde buffered with 0.1 M sodium cacodylate, pH 7.2, and post fixed with 1% osmium tetroxide and 1% uranyl acetate. Fixed tissue was dehydrated in a graded acetone series and embedded in Epon/Araldite. Sections were cut with a diamond knife, stained with uranyl acetate (1%), and observed in the electron microscope.
Embryos were observed and photographed with a Zeiss Lumar stereo microscope and Qimaging micropublisher 3.5 camera. Aleurone layers were observed with a Zeiss Axiophot and 20x plan-neofluor objective. Fluorescence images were captured with a Qimaging micropublisher 5.0 camera. Unless specified otherwise, aleurone cells were observed using fluorescence from endogenous pigments with excitation at 365 nm and emission at 420 nm. When cells were labeled with fluorescent probes, the final concentrations were: propidium iodide, 1 µg/mL; monochlorobimane, 100 µM; Congo red, 10 µg/mL; fluorescein diacetate, 10 µg/mL; and calcofluor white M2R, 0.1 mg/mL.
Samples for real-time reverse transcription qPCR consisted of 20 isolated embryos or 20 aleurone layers. To minimize the effect of nuclease activity, embryos or aleurone layers were added to extraction buffer as they were prepared. Total RNA was extracted and treated with DNase I using the Ambion RNAqueous-Micro kit following the manufacturer's directions. RNA was checked for quantity, purity, and intactness with an Agilent Bioanalyzer RNA 6000 Pico assay according to the manufacturer's instructions, and only samples containing nondegraded RNA were used for analysis. Yields of total RNA averaged 79 ng from 20 embryos and 15 ng from 20 aleurone layers. Three independently extracted total RNA samples from each treatment were converted to cDNA immediately after quantification by using the Invitrogen Superscript III first-strand synthesis system according to the manufacturer's instructions. Then 25 ng of total RNA from embryo samples and 8 ng of total RNA from aleurone layer samples were used as template for cDNA synthesis with oligo(dT)20 primers. Real-time qPCR reactions (20 µL) contained 2 µL template cDNA, 10 µM of each primer, 1x Takara SYBR Premix Ex Taq, 1x ROX II reference dye, and 5% dimethyl sulfoxide. Amplification was performed using a Stratagene Mx3000P qPCR system. Each cDNA sample was assayed in triplicate. Thermal cycle conditions were optimized for each primer pair such that amplification efficiencies were 0.903 or greater, as listed in Supplemental Table S1. The primer sequences used are listed in Supplemental Table S2. DART-PCR version 1.0 software (http://www.gene-quantification.de/DART_PCR_version_1.0.xls; Peirson et al., 2003
Unless stated otherwise, error bars in figures signify SE of the mean and statistical significance was determined using two-tailed Student's t tests assuming unequal variance. T tests were performed using Microsoft Excel.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
The authors express their appreciation to Elaheh Karbassi, Krystal Vasoya, Amanda Marciel, Andrew Tarquinio, and Thomas Myint for their assistance in carrying out some of the experiments described here. The electron microscopy work was done in the UC Berkeley Electron Microscope Lab, with the assistance of Kent McDonald and Reena Zalpuri. The fluorescence microscopy was done in the College of Natural Resources Biological Imaging Facility. Received November 21, 2006; accepted December 29, 2006; published January 12, 2007.
1 This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (to R.L.J.), by the California Agricultural Research Initiative (to D.W.S.), by the Plant Signal Network Research Center of the Ministry of Science and Technology, and by the Biogreen 21 program of Rural Development Administration Republic of Korea.
2 These authors contributed equally to the paper. 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: Russell L. Jones (rjones{at}nature.berkeley.edu).
[C] Some figures in this article are displayed in color online but in black and white in the print edition.
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.093435 * Corresponding author; e-mail pbethke{at}wisc.edu; fax 6082624743.
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