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First published online March 2, 2007; 10.1104/pp.106.092155 Plant Physiology 144:82-93 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Participation of Endomembrane Cation/H+ Exchanger AtCHX20 in Osmoregulation of Guard Cells1,[W],[OA]Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 207425815 (S.P., S.C., J.M.K., X.L., H.S.); and Department Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 55108 (J.M.W.)
Guard cell movement is induced by environmental and hormonal signals that cause changes in turgor through changes in uptake or release of solutes and water. Several transporters mediating these fluxes at the plasma membrane have been characterized; however, less is known about transport at endomembranes. CHX20, a member of a poorly understood cation/H+ exchanger gene family in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), is preferentially and highly expressed in guard cells as shown by promoter:: -glucuronidase activity and by whole-genome microarray. Interestingly, three independent homozygous mutants carrying T-DNA insertions in CHX20 showed 35% reduction in light-induced stomatal opening compared to wild-type plants. To test the biochemical function of CHX20, cDNA was expressed in a yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) mutant that lacks Na+(K+)/H+ antiporters ( nhx1 nha1 kha1) and plasma membrane Na+ pumps ( ena1-4). Curiously, CHX20 did not enhance tolerance of mutants to moderate Na+ or high K+ stress. Instead, it restored growth of the mutant on medium with low K+ at slightly alkaline pH, but had no effect on growth at acidic pH. Green fluorescent protein-tagged CHX20 expressed in mesophyll protoplasts was localized mainly to membranes of the endosomal system. Furthermore, light-induced stomatal opening of the Arabidopsis mutants was insensitive to external pH and was impaired at high KCl. The results are consistent with the idea that, in exchanging K+ for H+, CHX20 maintains K+ homeostasis and influences pH under certain conditions. Together, these results provide genetic and biochemical evidence that one CHX protein plays a critical role in osmoregulation through K+ fluxes and possibly pH modulation of an active endomembrane system in guard cells.
One of the most fascinating processes in most land plants is the ability to regulate gas exchange and transpiration by the opening and closing of the stomatal aperture. The movement of a pair of special epidermal cells, the guard cells, controls the size of the stomatal aperture and so determines the extent of water loss via transpiration and of CO2 uptake into the leaf for photosynthetic carbon fixation. At the beginning of the day, light stimulates the opening of the stomatal aperture of most plants by increasing solute concentration and decreasing water potential, thus attracting water into the guard cells (for review, see Assmann, 1993
Although our knowledge of cellular signaling and osmoregulation in guard cells has advanced significantly in the last decade, the osmotic changes driving guard cell movement have focused mainly on the roles of plasma membrane (PM)-associated transporters and signaling elements regulating the transporters (Blatt, 2000
Less well understood are the changes of intracellular compartments during guard cell movement. As guard cells increase in volume, the size of vacuoles increases considerably (Louget et al., 1990
Here, we provide genetic evidence for the role of a novel endomembrane transporter in guard cell movement. Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) CHX20 belongs to a large family of 28 cation/proton exchangers whose functions are largely unknown (Sze et al., 2004
AtCHX20 cDNA Isolation and Predicted Protein To obtain CHX20 (At3g53720) cDNA, total RNA was extracted from rosette leaves of 3-week-old Arabidopsis plants and first-strand cDNA was used to amplify the coding sequence. The primers at the start and end of the open reading frame (ORF; X20Cf and X20Cr; Supplemental Table S1) were designed based on the genomic sequence. A 2.5-kb fragment was amplified and its sequence (AY926476) matched the coding sequence that is formed from five exons (Fig. 1A ).
The predicted CHX20 protein of 842 residues has two domains: (1) a hydrophobic domain (434 residues) with 10 to 12 transmembrane spans at the amino half; and (2) a large hydrophilic domain of 403 residues at the carboxylic end (Fig. 1B). The hydrophobic domain shows extensive similarity (56.5% similarity, 33.6% identity; E value of 1e-54) to the transmembrane domain of yeast ScKHA1 protein, although the long carboxylic tail of the two proteins did not align (10.6% identity; no E value; Supplemental Fig. S1). These results suggest that the transport activities of AtCHX20 and yeast ScKHA1 are similar.
To test the transport function of CHX20, the coding sequence was cloned in pYES-DEST52 yeast expression vector under the Gal promoter. Yeast mutants with disrupted kha1 gene alone exhibited no obvious phenotype (Maresova and Sychrova, 2005
Intriguingly, AtCHX20 enhanced KTA40-2 yeast mutant growth on slightly basic medium with no added K+. At an external pH of 4.5 to 7.0, mutants grew relatively well with no added K+. In fact, at acidic pH between 4.5 and 6.5, mutants grew consistently better than yeast transformants carrying CHX20. Curiously, growth of mutants carrying the vector alone was retarded at pHext 7.5, whereas transformants harboring CHX20 continued to grow as well as at pH 4.5 (Fig. 2B). Thus, strains carrying CHX20 had an advantage when the external pH was 7.5, suggesting that CHX20 conferred an ability to sustain growth at slightly basic pH. We tested the effect of external K+ concentration on yeast growth at pH 7.5. Transformants harboring CHX20 consistently grew better than KTA40-2 mutants as long as the K+ level was kept low, from approximately 0.4 to 3 mM (Fig. 2C). When no exogenous K+ was added, the agar medium contained about 0.4 mM K+. Increasing external KCl concentration beyond 25 mM decreased the beneficial effect of CHX20. Because K+ is required to sustain growth of all cells, the enhanced growth of transformants at low K+ levels would suggest that CHX20 has a role in acquiring K+ when the external pH is slightly alkaline or in maintaining suitable cellular homeostasis for growth. This idea is supported by nearly similar growth exhibited by yeast mutants carrying either vector alone or CHX20 when K+ is raised to 50 mM.
Yeast KHA1 was shown before to confer tolerance to hygromycin (Maresova and Sychrova, 2005
AtCHX20 Is Preferentially Expressed in Guard Cells
Analyses of a guard cell transcriptome (Leonhardt et al., 2004
To verify the microarray results, CHX20 promoter-driven GUS activity was determined. Arabidopsis (Columbia [Col]) plants were transformed with a construct containing a 2-kb region upstream of the CHX20 ORF transcriptionally fused to the GUS reporter gene. T2 seeds were collected from six independent transgenic lines and all six lines of CHX20::GUS analyzed gave similar expression patterns. Striking GUS activity was observed in guard cells located in expanded cotyledons and in hypocotyls of 1-week-old seedlings (Fig. 4B, a). Three-week-old rosette leaves (Fig. 4B, d and e) and cauline leaves also showed very high GUS staining in guard cells. However, GUS staining was not detected in leaf pavement epidermal cells or in mesophyll cells. Interestingly, GUS activity was also detected in guard cells of floral organs, including the sepal, anther (Fig. 4B, b and c), and carpel (data not shown). GUS activity was not detected in the differentiated cells of roots, although CHX20 expression was only observed in the root cap of 1-week-old seedlings (Fig. 4B, f), consistent with the microarray results of root cap cells (P. Benfey, personal communication). Thus, analyses of both CHX20 promoter-GUS expression and guard cell-specific transcriptome data clearly indicate selective expression of CHX20 in guard cells.
When transiently expressed in Arabidopsis mesophyll protoplasts, CHX20-GFP was visualized at the periphery of the nucleus and in the cytosol (Fig. 5A, f
), suggesting that it is localized at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) or in endomembranes. The CHX20-GFP signal was compared with those from a soluble GFP, GFP tagged to an ER retention sequence (GFP-HDEL), or to markers such as sialyltransferase (ST)-GFP for trans-Golgi, GFP-CPK9 for PM, and GFP-
Stably transformed plants expressing cauliflower mosaic virus 35S-driven CHX20-GFP also showed perinuclear fluorescent signals in guard cells (Fig. 5C), whereas soluble free GFP appeared inside the nucleus. Strong fluorescent signals were also detected inside the cytoplasm of cells expressing CHX20-GFP relative to that expressing the free GFP control. Together, the results suggest that CHX20 is localized to a subpopulation of endomembranes, although the protein does not appear to be a fixed resident of either the ER, Golgi, vacuole, or PM. We postulated that CHX20 is associated with vesicles/membranes that traffic among various subcellular membranes (Jurgens, 2004
To test this idea, we examined the distribution of an endosome marker, Ara6-GFP (Ueda et al., 2001
To determine the in planta function of CHX20, we obtained three independent T-DNA insertional lines of Arabidopsis chx20. Two lines, chx20-1 and chx20-3, were identified in the SIGnAL database (Alonso et al., 2003
Impaired Stomatal Opening in chx20 Mutants The highly specific expression of CHX20 in guard cells (Fig. 4) suggested that CHX20 plays a role in guard cell signaling and/or development. Because we did not notice any developmental defects in the chx20 knockout mutants, we tested whether the chx20 null mutants had any altered stomatal movement. We first compared light-induced stomatal opening in mutants and wild-type plants. Excised leaves of chx20-1, chx20-3, and chx20-4 mutants were first exposed to white light for 3 h in a solution containing 5 mM KCl and 10 mM MES at pH 6.15. In all three mutants, the stomata failed to open as widely as wild-type plants. The ratio of light-induced stomatal opening per guard cell length in wild-type plants and in mutants ranged from 0.072 to 0.076 and 0.042 to 0.047, respectively. Thus, stomatal opening was reduced by approximately 35% in chx20 mutants (Fig. 7A ). We reduced the external KCl concentration in the opening solution to 0.1 and 1.0 mM. The aperture size was reduced slightly in wild-type and mutant leaves exposed to 0.1 mM K+ (Fig. 7B), implying that guard cell movement is limited at low K+ concentration. However, chx20 mutants still showed approximately 35% reduction in light-induced stomatal opening regardless of the external K+ concentration, indicating that the defect is not due to limited K+ level alone.
Using isolated epidermis, we found that light-induced stomatal opening was maximal at pH 6.1 and 7. At basic pH 7.5 and 8.0, light-induced opening was decreased in wild-type plants (Fig. 7C) consistent with inactivation by basic pH of inward-rectifying K+ channels and activation of outward-rectifying K+ channels in Vicia fava guard cells (Ilan et al., 1994 To test whether stomatal closure was affected, isolated epidermis of wild-type and chx20 mutant leaves were first exposed to white light for 3 h to induce stomatal opening and then incubated in 1 µM ABA to induce closure. The decrease in stomatal aperture was measured at 30-min intervals for 3 h. Although the aperture size of wild-type plants was larger than that of mutants before ABA addition, the percentage of closure of wild type was higher than that of mutants at all times (Fig. 8 ). These results indicate that chx20 mutants were responsive to ABA; however, mutants were delayed in stomatal closure compared to wild-type plants (Fig. 8). Results would suggest that CHX20 might also participate in events leading to stomatal closure.
Here we have discovered a new transporter that participates in guard cell movement. Nearly nothing is known about the roles of cation/proton antiporter (CPA) genes in guard cells, although several members of the superfamily, including NHX1, are expressed there. The AtCHX family was uncovered recently as a novel subfamily (Mäser et al., 2001
Curiously, instead of conferring tolerance to moderate Na+ stress or high K+, CHX20 consistently caused mutant KTA40-2 (
Instead, CHX20 function appears to be important particularly when K+ is depleted and when the external pH is slightly alkaline. This is shown by improved growth of KTA40-2 expressing CHX20 at pH 7.5 and when [K+]ext was low (between 0.4 and 3 mM). Yeast growth and budding depends on the continuous uptake and accumulation of osmotic solutes, like K+, especially when the external medium is depleted of this cation (Rodriguez-Navarro, 2000
How are endomembrane compartments acidified when yeast is exposed to a basic medium? An important clue is provided by yeast vma (vacuolar membrane H+-ATPase) mutants that cannot survive at pH 7.5, whereas wild-type yeast can. However, vma mutants grow at pH 5.5 (Nelson and Nelson, 1990
What is the role of an endomembrane K+/H+ antiporter when external K+ is low? We propose a model where CHX helps distribute cellular K+ when the external pH is alkaline. It is well known that when medium K+ is low or nearly depleted (<0.1 mM), energy-dependent K+ uptake is needed to maintain [K+]cyt at millimolar levels (Rodriguez-Navarro, 2000
To offset alkalization of the cytosol in yeast grown at pH 7.5, we suggest that antiporters, like CHX20, neutralize cytosolic pH by mediating K+ exchange for H+ release from acidified compartments. The ability of CHX20-expressing KTA40-2 mutants to grow at pH 7.5 suggests that CHX20 is active at basic pH. Fungi and plant V-ATPases show optimal activity in vitro at slightly alkaline pH (7.08.0) when PM H+-ATPase is less active (Sze, 1985 The lack of a growth phenotype in yeast expressing CHX20 at pH 7.5 when K+ext is replete suggests that other mechanisms take over to modulate K+ and pH homeostasis when K+ext is high (2550 mM). Conceivably, high external K+ could depolarize the cell membrane potential, increase K+ influx into the cytosol and intracellular compartments, or both. With sufficient K+ in the cell and intracellular compartments to support growth, the role of CHX20 may be shielded by other activities. Together, these results point to a role of CHX20 either in acquiring K+ for cells under certain conditions or setting a suitable cellular pH homeostasis or both.
Our genetic studies demonstrate that CHX20 participates in guard cell movement, although its role in mediating stomatal opening may involve multiple tasks. Based on functional studies of yeast, it is reasonable to conclude that one role of CHX20 is to load guard cells with K+. Stomatal aperture from chx20 mutants failed to fully open after light induction. If CHX20 has a major role in K+ loading, then the defect in opening might be minimized when K+ext is not limiting. However, chx20 mutants were impaired in stomatal opening whether the K+ext was at 0.1 or 10 mM, when K+ entry and content in cells in theory are not limited. These results suggest that CHX20 fills other roles. We tested whether CHX20 activity might be revealed at a different pH from that seen in KTA40-2 yeast. Stomatal opening was maximal at pH 6.0 to 7.0 and reduced at pH 7.5 to 8.0 in wild-type leaves, consistent with activation and deactivation by acidic pH of inward and outward K+ channels, respectively, seen before (Ilan et al., 1994
Considering the large number of CPAs in plants (Mäser et al., 2001
Confocal laser-scanning microscopy of guard cell vacuoles loaded with acridine orange revealed striking changes in the size and shape of vacuolar compartments during guard cell movement. Small vacuoles in cells surrounding closed stomata fuse with one another to form large vacuoles as stomata open (Gao et al., 2005
One model is that endomembrane-associated CHX20 exchanges K+ for H+ and accomplishes one or more purposes, including (1) bringing in external K+ indirectly by accumulating K+ in small intracellular compartments; (2) regulating pH in the cytosol as well as in the compartment lumen; and (3) perhaps participating in some way to facilitate membrane dynamics, including vesicle budding, trafficking, and fusion events required to bring about turgor and volume changes during guard cell movement (MacRobbie, 1999
This study provides genetic evidence for a role of an endomembrane CHX in osmoregulation and in guard cell movement and working ideas to further test CHX cellular function. As the only AtCHX expressed in guard cells, CHX20 is an attractive model to understand the function and regulation of other CHX proteins (Sze et al., 2004
Plant Materials and Growth Conditions
All experiments were conducted with Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) ecotype Col-0. Wild-type, mutant, and transgenic plants were grown under the same conditions. Plants were grown in Miracle-Gro potting soil (Scotts). Seeds in soil were stratified at 4°C for 3 d and then plants were grown in controlled-environment chambers at 20°C under illumination of 150 µE m2 s1 with a 16-h photoperiod. Two weeks after germination, plants were given Miracle-Gro plant food at 20-d intervals. To test for promoter::GUS expression, transgenic seeds were grown under light (150 µE m2 s1) at 20°C on plates containing 0.5x Murashige and Skoog (1962)
Promoter::GUS
AtCHX20 cDNA
To make a CHX20-GFP fusion construct, the CHX20 coding sequence from pECHX20 was recombined to the binary vector pK7FWG2 (Karimi et al., 2002
The binary vectors with CHX20 promoter::GUS or pDCHX20-GFP were introduced stably into Arabidopsis using Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated floral dip (Clough and Bent, 1998
GFP
GUS Staining
The ATH1 23K GeneChip experiment was performed with guard cell and mesophyll cell RNA extracted from wild-type plants using methods described for the 8K chip (Leonhardt et al., 2004
Yeast Strains
Determination of Growth For some experiments, 3-d yeast cells were cultured in liquid YNB medium containing 0.67% YNB without amino acids, 2% Glc, 0.01% adenine, 0.01% Trp, and 10 mM MES adjusted to pH 5.5 with Arg base and grown for 18 h at 30°C. One-milliliter cultures were diluted to 6 mL with YNB medium without Glc and then starved for 18 h at 30°C. Starved cells were washed with 6 mL water, pelleted, and suspended in water. Cell density was normalized to OD600 of 0.2 and subjected to 10-fold serial dilution. Five-microliter aliquots were spotted on modified YNB plates at pH 7.5 or 5.5. The YNB medium also contained 2% agar, 0.02% bromocresol purple (catalog no. 860891; Sigma), and 20 mM MES adjusted to either pH 5.5 or 7.5 with Arg base. Hygromycin B, when added, was 150 µg/mL (catalog no. H7772; Sigma). Plates were incubated at 30°C for 2 to 4 d.
T-DNA insertional mutants of chx20 (Alonso et al., 2003 To detect CHX20 transcript, total RNA isolated from chx20-1, chx20-3, and chx20-4 mutant and wild-type plants was reverse transcribed. Primer sets (Supplemental Table S1) F1 (from 15 to 30 bp) and R1 (1,3001,252 bp); F2 (1,2521,300 bp) and reverse primer R2 (3'-untranslated region); and F3 (1,5061,541 bp) and R2 are expected to amplify products of 1,230, 1,413, and 1,158 bp in wild-type plants, respectively.
To test light-induced stomatal opening (Kwak et al., 2001 Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession number AY926476 (AGI no. At3g53720).
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank H. Sychrova (Institute of Physiology, Prague) for providing yeast strains KTA40-2 and LMB01. Strain AXT3 was a gift from J.M. Pardo (Instituto de Recursos Naturales y Agrobiologia). F. Cellier and Genoplante provided mutant chx20-4. We gratefully acknowledge J.I. Schroeder and N. Leonhardt for making the guard cell transcriptome available, and J.Y. Lee (University of Delaware), Inhwan Hwang (Pohang University), N. Federoff (Penn State University), and T. Ueda (RIKEN) for GFP-tagged markers (see Supplemental Table S2). H.S. thanks J. Sheen (Harvard Medical School) for introducing the protoplast model and R. Rao (Johns Hopkins University) and Kendal Hirschi (Baylor College of Medicine) for suggestions.
1 This work was supported in part by a National Science Foundation (NSF) Arabidopsis 2010 grant (no. IBN0209788 to H.S. and no. 0209792 to J.M.W.), a Department of Energy grant (no. DEFG0295ER20200 to H.S.), and by an NSF grant (no. MCB0614203 to J.M.K.). 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: Heven Sze (hsze{at}umd.edu).
[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.106.092155 * Corresponding author; e-mail hsze{at}umd.edu; fax 3013149081.
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