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Plant Physiology 144:550-561 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists Translocation in Legumes: Assimilates, Nutrients, and Signaling Molecules1School of Plant Biology M090, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia 6009, Australia (C.A.A.); and School of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia (P.M.C.S.)
Translocation or long distance transport in plants is achieved by a vascular network that connects and is an integral part of all organs. The vasculature comprises two distinctly different and separate cellular translocation pathways: xylem and phloem. The principal xylem pathway is the transpiration stream that moves nutrients and water taken up by roots to the shoot. This stream also bears products of root metabolism and solutes that reflect features of the internal and external root environment. Phloem provides the means for redistributing xylem-delivered solutes to weakly transpiring organs, but most significantly phloem distributes the carbon assimilated by photosynthesis (principally as Suc) to heterotrophic organs like roots, vegetative and reproductive apices, flowers, fruits, and developing seeds. Together these two translocation streams provide all the nutrients and assimilates, in appropriate forms and proportions, to enable growth and development in an ordered and regulated fashion. Because translocation connects distant components of the plant body, xylem and phloem have long been considered to fulfill a role in communicating between organs, through the movement of plant hormones and other signaling molecules. Such signals are envisaged to move with assimilates by mass flow. However, phloem also transmits pressure/concentration (turgor) information at rates greatly in excess of mass flow of solutes (Thompson and Holbrook, 2004 While the supporting evidence for these diverse roles of translocation has been gathered from many species, this article will highlight information that is specific to legumes where it is available, drawing particularly on data from the author's laboratory for members of the genus Lupinus.
Much of our knowledge of what is found in and translocated by phloem comes from analyses of sieve tube (ST) exudate and in xylem by analyses of sap, displaced from the vasculature by applying either increased or decreased pressure. A range of techniques has been developed and exploited to sample transport fluids and it is appropriate to consider the likely limitations that collection methods impose on interpretation of the compositional data they have generated.
The gold standard for phloem has been considered to be analyses of exudate collected from the detached stylets of sap sucking insects such as aphids. Aphid stylectomy has been applied mostly to woody and herbaceous dicotyledon species (Peel, 1975
Even though an aphid or leaf hopper stylet may enter and draw initially on a single ST, each microliter of exudate is equivalent to the lumenal volume of about 2,500 STs (Dixon, 1975
The issue of purity of phloem exudate has been addressed by a number of groups. Giavalisco et al. (2006) Xylem contents are collected as tracheal sap by centrifugal pressure or vacuum displacement from stems and from root systems under natural root pressure, or by applying external pressure in a closed vessel, following detachment of the shoot. Xylem vessels or tracheids connect directly to the apoplast of surrounding tissues and it is reasonable to expect that water and solutes in the apoplast will be included in the collected sap. While generally positive or negative pressures applied are not great, nevertheless, materials from the apoplast or in the xylem but not normally translocated are likely to be mobilized. The contents of nonvascular cells damaged at the severed stem sections including phloem might be expected to contaminate xylem sap. While these considerations will not have a significant impact on the nature and form of the major solutes in phloem and xylem they are likely to be important for minor constituents and especially on the macromolecules that have been found in exudates or saps and for which long distance signaling roles have been postulated, based on their assumed translocation. Confirming the constituents identified in phloem exudate move across a graft union becomes an important criterion to prove translocation.
The principal assimilates translocated from sites of synthesis (sources) to sites of their utilization in growth and development (sinks) are those of carbon and of nitrogen. In legumes Suc is the predominant sugar (Zimmermann and Ziegler, 1975
There is a massive body of experimental data that relates to assimilate translocation ranging from the pioneering studies of ST exudates collected from woody species through the 14C-labeling studies that began in the late 1940s and led to a continuing area of research seeking to describe mechanisms of translocation (for review, see Canny, 1973
In addition to the major solutes involved in translocation, analysis of exudates from lupin species has revealed an extraordinarily wide range of low Mr minor constituents (Atkins, 1999
From quantitative accounting of changes in carbon and nitrogen in component organs together with knowledge of carbon gains and losses through photosynthesis and respiration coupled with carbon and nitrogen translocation as solutes in xylem and phloem it proved possible to develop empirical models that quantified translocation and source/sink relations in the legume white lupin. This approach has been extended in lupin to the carbon and nitrogen nutrition of individual organs (Layzell et al., 1981
Ever since early studies that measured protein content and recorded the myriad of enzyme activities assayed in ST exudate (Eschrich and Heyser, 1975
The localization of tagged antibodies at either light or electron microscopy levels of resolution have led to positive associations of proteins with structure and this has also been the case for phloem CCs (Terce-Laforgue et al., 2004
Stadtler et al. (2005)
There is now little doubt that proteins are mobile in phloem and further that there may be destination-selective translocation. The elegant experiments of Aoki et al. (2005)
The question about the functional significance of protein translocation is largely just speculation based on likely annotation of sequence data derived from mass spectrometry (MS) proteomic analysis. From cucurbit exudate a complete and apparently functional antioxidant defense system has been recovered (Walz et al., 2002
Buhtz et al. (2004)
Legumes provide an opportunity to study two phenomena involving long distance signaling: autoregulation of nodule development and cluster root formation. When nodule development is initiated there is an exchange of signals between the roots and shoot to regulate the number of nodules that develop. This signaling also appears to be related to one of the mechanisms (but not all) by which legumes regulate the symbiosis in response to soil nitrogen conditions. Split root experiments, where one part of a root system was inoculated with rhizobia and subsequently inhibited nodulation on the other part, suggested that the signal was systemic. A number of mutants, super- or hypernodulators (HAR1 in Lotus japonicus, GmNARK in soybean, SYM29 in pea [Pisum sativum], and SUNN in Medicago truncatula) have been identified where this control is lost (Carroll et al., 1985
Proteoid or cluster roots are densely clustered secondary roots with determinant growth that are a feature of many species in the Proteaceae as a response to low soil phosphorus levels (Lamont, 2003
The vasculature of the plant provides an ideal pathway for rapidly transmitting information from sources to sinks together with assimilates and nutrients. Despite some uncertainty in relating solute composition of exudates to actual translocation there seems little doubt that the channels of xylem and phloem do indeed carry molecular signals. It is likely that some assimilates engage in regulatory functions but similar roles for the myriad of other small molecules, the plant growth regulators, nucleic acids, proteins, and peptides in phloem are probable. The transpiration stream also provides a means for the rapid long distance movement of signals that originate in roots and in legumes also in nodules, and which are postulated to regulate events in the shoot.
Plant physiologists refer to translocation of major solutes in phloem as representing the source/sink relations of a plant, a feature that determines harvest index (ratio of grain yield to plant biomass at final harvest) and has been the single most important trait exploited in domestication of a species and its improvement by plant breeders. Despite the obvious significance of this relationship, the means by which it is regulated remain elusive, but intuitively some sort of signaling mechanism has been invoked. Trewavas (2006)
Sugars unloaded from the phloem in seeds may act as regulators of seed development with the high ratio of hexose to Suc produced by cell wall-bound invertases acting to enhance cell division in cotyledons early in development in Vicia faba (for review, see Weber et al., 2005
Despite the many analyses of exudates that document the presence of all known plant growth regulators (except the brassinosteroids; Symons and Reid, 2004
Perhaps the most studied example is acropetal movement of abscisic acid (ABA) through xylem to its site of action in the shoot, linking soil water deficit to stomatal function and the water relations of leaves (Jackson, 1993
The significance of long distance transport of CK in plant development is far from clear (Dodd and Beveridge, 2006
White lupin has also provided evidence for the presence of gibberellins (GAs) in phloem and xylem and their likely translocation (Hoad, 1995
The systemic and cell-to-cell signaling role of low Mr peptides is a significant feature of metabolic and posttranscriptional gene regulation in animals. A similar role for bioactive peptides is also a feature of plant development and while a number have been implicated in regulation of important processes through intercellular communication (e.g. the 14 amino acid CLV peptides; Fiers et al., 2004
Systemin (18 amino acid peptide) was thought to be mobile in phloem of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) causing an induced response to herbivory in leaves and other tissues distant from the initial site of wounding. Phloem mobility was supported by 14C-labeling studies and more or less specific expression of its precursor protein, prosystemin, in phloem parenchyma (Jacinto et al., 1997
The gene responsible for the supernodulation phenotype in a number of legumes has been identified as a Leu-rich repeat receptor-like kinase similar to CLV1 (Krusell et al., 2002
There is little doubt that the recent discovery of a number of RNA species in phloem exudates and the possibility that some of these may function as specific regulators of gene expression has opened up a new and exciting role for long distance translocation. The many studies that over the years have sought to explain developmental responses in plants as a consequence of some translocated cue or signal may now have the possibility for rational explanation. More specifically, the idea of controls that modify gene expression at a level outside local molecular networks (Sachs, 2005
mRNAs
Small RNAs
Much of the evidence for translocation of siRNAs to induce systemic gene silencing is based on grafting experiments showing systemic spread of gene silencing from silenced stocks to wild-type scions and the presence of siRNAs directed against the transgene in tissue from the scion (Palauqui et al., 1997
miRNAs are important regulators of plant development and responses to environmental signals. The majority of their target genes are transcription factors and they play an important role in clearing regulatory transcripts from daughter cell lineages to allow a change in developmental state (Rhoades et al., 2002
Yoo et al. (2004)
Despite the fact that the genome sequence for lupin is not available and is not likely to become available in the near future the genus offers a valuable model for studies that link long distance translocation with plant growth and development. It could be particularly useful in identifying long distance signal molecules that relate to symbiosis and cluster root development. In addition, a number of lupin species are crops that produce economic yields of high protein grain and in this respect the information on translocation in this genus could serve as models for other pulse (grain legume) crops. Their unique feature that permits ready access to the transport fluids of xylem and phloem at a number of sites on both vegetative plants and plants during reproductive development has potential to provide new information about the molecular events that are regulated as consequence of translocation of solutes and signal molecules, both large and small. Most importantly, phloem exudates can be readily collected at both sources and sinks (Pate et al., 1979 Received February 14, 2007; accepted April 3, 2007; published June 6, 2007.
1 This work was supported by grants from the Australian Research Council. 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: Craig Anthony Atkins (catkins{at}cyllene.uwa.edu.au). www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.107.098046 * Corresponding author; e-mail catkins{at}cyllene.uwa.edu.au; fax 610864881001.
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