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First published online April 6, 2007; 10.1104/pp.107.100065 Plant Physiology 144:1039-1051 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Induction of Isoforms of Tetrapyrrole Biosynthetic Enzymes, AtHEMA2 and AtFC1, under Stress Conditions and Their Physiological Functions in Arabidopsis1,2,[W],[OA]Graduate School of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Yokohama 2268501, Japan (S.N., A.K., Y.S.-S., H.O., K.T.); Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 1538902, Japan (M.K., S.T., T.M.); and Environmental Biology Division, National Institute for Environmental Studies, Tsukuba 3058506, Japan (M.A.)
In the tetrapyrrole biosynthetic pathway, isoforms of glutamyl-tRNA reductase (HEMA2) and ferrochelatase1 (FC1) are mainly expressed in nonphotosynthetic tissues. Here, using promoter- -glucuronidase constructs, we showed that the expressions of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) HEMA2 (AtHEMA2) and FC1 (AtFC1) were induced in photosynthetic tissues by oxidative stresses such as wounding. Transcript levels and -glucronidase activity were rapidly induced within 30 min, specifically in the wound area in a jasmonate-independent manner. Transcriptome analysis of wound-specific early inducible genes showed that AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 were coinduced with hemoproteins outside plastids, which are related to defense responses. Ozone fumigation or reagents generating reactive oxygen species induced the expression of both genes in photosynthetic tissues, suggesting that reactive oxygen species is involved in the induction. Since cycloheximide or puromycin induced the expression of both genes, inhibition of cytosolic protein synthesis is involved in the induction of these genes in photosynthetic tissues. The physiological functions of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 were investigated using insertional knockout mutants of each gene. Heme contents of the roots of both mutants were about half of that of the respective wild types. In wild-type plants, heme contents were increased by ozone exposure. In both mutants, reduction of the ozone-induced increase in heme content was observed. These results suggest the existence of the tetrapyrrole biosynthetic pathway controlled by AtHEMA2 and AtFC1, which normally functions for heme biosynthesis in nonphotosynthetic tissues, but is induced in photosynthetic tissues under oxidative conditions to supply heme for defensive hemoproteins outside plastids.
Heme, an essential molecule with various biological functions, is widely distributed in all eukaryotic cells. In fact, heme is (1) a prosthetic group for photosynthetic and respiratory cytochromes involved in energy transduction, (2) oxidase, including catalase, peroxidase, and NADPH oxidase, involved in scavenging reactive oxygen species (ROS), (3) hemoglobin, including leghemoglobin, involved in oxygen homeostasis, and (4) cytochrome P450 involved in the biosynthesis of secondary metabolites.
In plants and many bacteria, all tetrapyrroles including heme and chlorophylls (Chls) originate from a common biosynthetic pathway (Beale, 1999
Meanwhile, the branch point of the biosynthesis pathway of heme and Chls is protoporphyrin IX, a closed macrocycle without chelated ions. Ferrochelatase (protoheme ferrolyase, EC 4.99.1.1) is the terminal enzyme of heme biosynthesis, and catalyzes the insertion of ferrous ion into protoporphyrin IX. This enzyme is important for regulation of the branch point, and may also play a role in the coordination of heme and apoprotein production. In Arabidopsis and cucumber, two ferrochelatase (FC) genes have been isolated (Miyamoto et al., 1994
Most reactions from HEMA to protoporphyrin IX are thought to occur in plastids (Beale, 1999 In this study, we have analyzed the expression of Arabidopsis HEMA2 (AtHEMA2) and FC1 (AtFC1) isoforms. Our results showed that the expression of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 was induced in photosynthetic tissues by oxidative stress conditions, such as wounding or ozone fumigation. This induction may involve the inhibition of labile proteinous factors, which may repress the transcription of these genes or may cause the generation of ROS. Analysis of insertional mutants of both genes showed that AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 function for heme biosynthesis in nonphotosynthetic tissues under normal conditions, but under stress conditions, they are induced in photosynthetic tissues to supply heme probably for defensive hemeproteins outside plastids.
Induction of the Expression of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 by CHX
It has been shown in cucumber that the expressions of CsFC1 and CsHEMA2 were induced by CHX (Suzuki et al., 2002
Effects of Wounding on the Expression of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1
In transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) carrying AtFC1 promoter fused with reporter genes, Suc, wounding, oxidative stress, and tobacco mosaic virus infection induced the promoter activity of AtFC1 (Singh et al., 2002
To carry out a detailed study of the expression profiles of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 genes, the promoter region was fused to a reporter gene uidA encoding GUS and introduced into transgenic plants. For AtFC1, a fragment ranging from 1,018 to +69 bp upstream of the translation start site, including 5' untranslated region and the sequence encoding the first 23 amino acids, was translationally fused to uidA. The resultant construct was introduced into Arabidopsis via Agrobacterium-mediated transformation and designated AtFC1::GUS. For AtHEMA2, the transgenic line (AtHEMA2::GUS) was provided by Dr. M.J. Terry (Ujwal et al., 2002
As shown in Figure 2A
, the levels of endogenous AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 mRNA rapidly increased within 30 min of wounding treatment. The inductions of both genes were transient and returned to the initial levels within 3 h. We carried out histochemical analysis of transgenic lines, AtHEMA2::GUS and AtFC1::GUS. A leaf was wounded with forceps and then the entire plant was stained histochemically for GUS activity after 6 h. Consistent with the previous report (Ujwal et al., 2002
Global Analysis of Wounding for Responsive Arabidopsis Genes Related to Hemoproteins and Heme Biosynthesis
Wounding is known to induce the expression of hemoproteins, in particular cytochrome P450 and peroxidase for the repair of cell walls via suberin and lignin synthesis (Lagrimini and Rothstein, 1987
The wounding-inducible expression occurs not only in the wounded leaves (local response) but also in distal unwounded leaves (systemic response; Bowles, 1993
After global normalization, we calculated the logarithmic fold expression value of each gene (see "Materials and Methods"). Genes specifically responsive to wounding with fold expression of more than 0.4 or less than 0.4 and a peak maximal fold within 1 h were defined as wounding-specific early responsive genes. Among these genes, we identified two genes encoding hemoproteins and one related protein, the expression of which was specifically responsive to wounding (Table I
). Two genes are involved in the cytochrome P450 family and one gene encoding NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. For the cytochrome P450 family, cinnamate-4-hydroxylase (C4H; CYP73A5 [At2g30490]) and CYP82G1 (At3g25180) were identified. The peak induction of the former genes was 1 h after wounding, while the peak of the latter was at 0.5 h. C4H is localized on the cytosolic surface of the endoplasmic reticulum membrane, and is known to be involved in the general phenylpropanoid pathway, which provides a variety of secondary metabolites that are involved in differentiation and the protection of plant tissues against environmental stresses (Hahlbrock and Scheel, 1989
Among genes corresponding to heme and tetrapyrrole biosynthesis, AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 were the only genes whose expression was induced by wounding. The peak induction of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 was 0.5 and 0.25 h after wounding with fold expressions of 0.47 and 0.40, respectively, confirming the rapid and transient induction of these genes (Fig. 1A). No other tetrapyrrole biosynthetic genes were induced but rather decreased by wounding. For instance, the transcripts of AtHEMA1 and CHLH, a subunit of Mg chelatase, both of which were recognized as the most important regulatory enzymes for Chl biosynthesis (Matsumoto et al., 2004
It is well known that ROS such as H2O2 and superoxide are generated in plant tissues in response to wounding (Orozco-Cardenas and Ryan, 1999 The exposure of 200 nL L1 ozone for 6 h resulted in the increase of mRNA levels of both genes (Fig. 3A ). Actually, quantitative analysis confirmed the increase of GUS activity in ozone-fumigated AtHEMA2::GUS and AtFC1::GUS (Fig. 3B). Histochemical staining showed that GUS activity was induced in the whole body of AtHEMA2::GUS and AtFC1::GUS plants, although the intensities of GUS staining varied among developmental leaves (Fig. 3, C and D).
Then, we assessed the effects of two different reagents that generate ROS on the expression of both genes. Paraquat (methyl viologen) promotes the formation of ROS by diverting electrons from photosynthetic electron transport to reduce O2 to superoxide (Suntres, 2002
These results demonstrated that the generation of ROS is involved in the induction of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1, and wounding-induced accumulation of ROS is likely to be involved in the local induction of these genes.
It has been suggested that CHX, an inhibitor of cytoplasmic protein synthesis, also functions as an agonist to initiate the signaling pathway that regulates the expression of genes responsive to extracellular stimuli such as wounding (Nishiuchi et al., 2002
To clarify whether the induction of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 expression is specific to inhibition of cytoplasmic protein synthesis, we further examined the effects of other protein synthesis inhibitors, puromycin and chloramphenicol, which inhibit cytoplasmic and plastidic protein synthesis, respectively. As shown in Figure 5D, as well as 100 µM CHX, treatment of 100 µM puromycin but not 100 µM chloramphenicol, increased the endogenous mRNA levels of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1, showing that inhibition of cytoplasmic protein synthesis is involved in the induction of both genes.
To investigate the physiological function of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1, we isolated insertional mutants of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1. A transposon-tagged mutant of AtHEMA2 (15-2026-1) was obtained from the transposon-tagging line collection of RIKEN, Japan (Ito et al., 2002
Visible phenotypes of these insertional mutants were almost comparable to each ecotype background (Supplemental Fig. S1). In fact, growth and various parameters concerning photosynthesis, such as Chl and carotenoid contents, and the efficiency of PSII, were almost equal in the respective wild types (Supplemental Table S4). As it has been suggested that AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 function in heme biosynthesis in nonphotosynthetic tissues, we determined the heme contents in rosette leaves and roots in these mutants using a recently developed sensitive heme assay (Masuda and Takahashi, 2006
As shown in Figure 2, it appeared that the expression of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 was induced by wounding, suggesting that AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 function in heme synthesis in wounding regions. The measurement of heme content, however, could not detect significant differences between wounded leaves and untreated leaves of athema2 and atfc1 (data not shown), probably because the wounding-dependent induction is limited to the surrounding local area of wounding regions. Since ozone exposure induced AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 in a whole body of seedlings (Fig. 3), we measured the heme content in ozone-exposed seedlings. As shown in Figure 7 , in wild-type seedlings, the exposure of 200 nL L1 ozone for 6 h resulted in the 1.6- to approximately 2.3-fold induction of heme content. In both mutants, the ozone-induced increase in heme content was affected. The levels of heme in atfc1 mutant were rather decreased after ozone exposure (Fig. 7). In athema2, the level of heme remained unchanged after ozone exposure. These results suggest that both AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 are involved in ozone-induced increase in heme content in Arabidopsis.
Expressions of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 Are Regulated in the Same Manner
It has been shown that AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 possess similar expression profiles (Singh et al., 2002
We presumed that such induction would occur under stress conditions, such as wounding, since in transgenic tobacco carrying the AtFC1 promoter fused with reporter genes, Suc, wounding, oxidative stress, and tobacco mosaic virus infection induced the promoter activity of AtFC1 (Singh et al., 2002
In fact, as AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 was induced by paraquat and Rose bengal, ROS may be possible candidates for the signal molecules that mediated wounding-induced expression of both genes. Currently, we do not know whether ROS species directly affect the biosynthesis of the putative protein factor that represses the expression of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 or act as a signaling molecule for regulation, and which ROS species are involved in this regulation. As Rose bengal that photodynamically produces singlet oxygen was effective for the induction of both genes, it is likely that singlet oxygen is involved in the induction. It has been shown that H2O2, a substrate produced in the oxidative burst, has less effect on AtFC1 promoter activity (Singh et al., 2002
It should be noted that the induction profiles of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 after wounding are similar to those of wound-responsive genes, so-called immediate early responsive genes, which are activated rapidly after wounding (Suzuki et al., 1998
The preferential expression in nonphotosynthetic tissues under normal conditions suggested that AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 function in heme biosynthesis in nonphotosynthetic tissues. Here, using insertional knockout mutants of these genes, we demonstrated that these genes are actually responsible for heme synthesis in these organs. In both mutants, although the heme contents were reduced by nearly half in the roots, the growth rate and photosynthetic parameters were almost equal to the respective wild types. These results suggest that neither gene is essential for photosynthetic growth under normal conditions, probably because the predominantly expressed other isoforms, AtHEMA1 and AtFC2, redundantly complement the loss of function of AtHEMA2 or AtFC1. In this study, we demonstrated that the expression of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 was induced under oxidative stress conditions, such as wounding and ozone exposure. Actually, ozone exposure induced heme in wild types and this induction was significantly reduced in both mutants. The reduction was less pronounced in athema2 than atfc1, probably because of their basal expression levels. These results suggest that AtFC1, which showed a higher expression than AtHEMA2, is primarily responsible for the ozone-induced increase in heme content in this condition. The selection of wounding-specific early responsive genes by cDNA macroarray identified defensive hemoproteins outside plastids, such as cytochromes P450, C4H, and APX1. Since these genes are related to defensive responses such as cell wall biosynthesis or antioxidants, it is reasonable to consider that AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 function for rapid heme supply to these hemoproteins.
C4H is one of the most abundant P450s in plants and is involved in the general phenylpropanoid pathway, which provides a variety of secondary metabolites that are involved in differentiation and the protection of plant tissues against environmental stresses (Hahlbrock and Scheel, 1989
Another possible function of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 is production of the heme molecule that acts as a signal for stress-inducible genes. Heme and its derivatives have been shown to regulate a variety of cellular processes in animal and bacterial systems, such as transcription (Guarente and Mason, 1983
Consequently, our study showed the existence of tetrapyrrole biosynthetic pathway that is distinctly controlled by AtHEMA2 and AtFC1 in Arabidopsis. Among tetrapyrrole biosynthetic enzymes tested, genes encoding these two enzymes are specifically coregulated in Arabidopsis. Since CHX-sensitive induction of cucumber HEMA and FC isoforms was observed, it is possible that such distinctly controlled tetrapyrrole biosynthetic pathways are generally conserved in dicot plants or in higher plants. Analysis of insertional knockout mutants showed that these enzymes function for heme biosynthesis in nonphotosynthetic tissues under normal conditions, but are induced in photosynthetic tissues under oxidative conditions. It should be noted that the expression of genes encoding key enzymes for Chl biosynthesis, such as AtHEMA1 and CHLH, was repressed by wounding. Thus, it is likely that switching of Chl to heme biosynthesis may occur in photosynthetic tissues under oxidative conditions, which is attributed by repression of AtHEMA1 and CHLH, and induction of AtHEMA2 and AtFC1. The produced heme would be transported outside plastids, and bind to defensive hemoproteins, such as APX1 and C4H, forming an active holoenzyme. It is not known how heme is transported outside plastids. Complete understanding of the regulation of these networks will require further physiological and molecular genetic studies, probably with multiple mutants of corresponding genes.
Plant Material
Seeds of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) were germinated and grown on solidified Murashige and Skoog medium (Murashige and Skoog, 1962
Isolation of genomic DNA and genomic Southern hybridization were performed as described previously (Masuda et al., 2003
The 5'-upstream region of AtFC1, which was amplified by PCR between 1,018 to +69 bp from the translation initiation site, was translationally ligated into a uidA gene in BamHI and SalI sites of a pBI101 vector. The fragment included the region coding for the first 23 amino acids of the AtFC1 gene. The PCR fragment was sequenced and checked for PCR errors. The obtained construct was introduced into Arabidopsis via Agrobacterium-mediated transformation.
Histochemical analyses for GUS expression were carried out in independent transgenic lines for each construct. Plant samples were soaked at 37°C for 1 d in GUS assay solution, which included 1 mm 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylglucronide, 0.5 mm K3Fe(CN)6, 0.5 mm K4Fe(CN)6, 0.3% (v/v) Triton X-100, 20% (v/v) methanol, and 50 mm inorganic phosphate-buffered saline. Samples were then soaked in 70% (w/v) ethanol for 1 d to stop the reaction and remove Chl. For quantitative GUS assay, three independent samples of frozen plant material were homogenized with GUS extraction buffer (50 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, 10 mM
The 13,516 EST clones covering 8,384 loci (Asamizu et al., 2000
Quality evaluation and global normalization of cDNA macroarray data were performed as described previously (Sasaki-Sekimoto et al., 2005
Seedlings were harvested and homogenized in 80% acetone, followed by centrifugation to remove debris. In mature leaves, Chl (a and b) and carotenoid contents of the samples were determined according to Arnon (1949)
Heme was extracted from Arabidopsis according to the acid acetone extraction method (Stillman and Gassman, 1978
Arabidopsis seeds were germinated on blocks of glass wool and grown in a chamber at 22°C at a relative humidity of 50% to 60% under a photosynthetic photon efflux density of 80 µmol photons m2 s1 in 14 h light/10 h dark cycles. Plants were watered with a liquid fertilizer (Hyponex 5-10-5) and diluted 2,000-fold. Sixteen-day-old plants were exposed to a single dose of 200 nL L1 ozone in a chamber as described by Matsuyama et al. (2002)
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Dr. M.J. Terry for kindly providing AtHEMA2::GUS seeds. We also thank Dr. Takeshi Obayashi for help with the statistical analysis of array data. Received March 23, 2007; accepted March 28, 2007; published April 6, 2007.
1 This work was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (grant nos. 16570030 and 18570034) and the 21st Century Center of Excellence from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan. This work was also supported by Yamada Science Foundation.
2 This article is dedicated to the memory of Professor Ken-ichiro Takamiya of the Tokyo Institute of Technology who passed away suddenly after a traffic accident in 2005. 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: Tatsuru Masuda (ctmasuda{at}mail.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp).
[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.107.100065 * Corresponding author; e-mail ctmasuda{at}mail.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp; fax 81354544321.
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