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First published online April 13, 2007; 10.1104/pp.107.097568 Plant Physiology 144:961-975 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Apyrases (Nucleoside Triphosphate-Diphosphohydrolases) Play a Key Role in Growth Control in Arabidopsis1,[W],[OA]Section of Molecular Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Texas, Austin, Texas 78712 (J.W., Y.S., T.B., J.T., D.A., A.G., S.R., S.J.R.); and Section of Molecular Biotechnology, Technical University of Dresden, 01069 Dresden, Germany (I.S., F.J.)
Expression of two Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) apyrase (nucleoside triphosphate-diphosphohydrolase) genes with high similarity, APY1 and APY2, was analyzed during seedling development and under different light treatments using -glucuronidase fusion constructs with the promoters of both genes. As evaluated by -glucuronidase staining and independently confirmed by other methods, the highest expression of both apyrases was in rapidly growing tissues and/or tissues that accumulate high auxin levels. Red-light treatment of etiolated seedlings suppressed the protein and message level of both apyrases at least as rapidly as it inhibited hypocotyl growth. Adult apy1 and apy2 single mutants had near-normal growth, but apy1apy2 double-knockout plants were dwarf, due primarily to reduced cell elongation. Pollen tubes and etiolated hypocotyls overexpressing an apyrase had faster growth rates than wild-type plants. Growing pollen tubes released ATP into the growth medium and suppression of apyrase activity by antiapyrase antibodies or by inhibitors simultaneously increased medium ATP levels and inhibited pollen tube growth. These results imply that APY1 and APY2, like their homologs in animals, act to reduce the concentration of extracellular nucleotides, and that this function is important for the regulation of growth in Arabidopsis.
Apyrases (nucleoside triphosphate-diphosphohydrolases) are enzymes that can hydrolyze nucleoside triphosphates (NTPs) and/or diphosphates, but not nucleoside monophosphates or nonnucleoside phosphates. They are found in all eukaryotes and are far more efficient in removing phosphates from NTP/nucleoside diphosphate than other phosphatases. They are characterized by conserved motifs (Handa and Guidotti, 1996
The majority of characterized apyrases are ectoapyrases (i.e. enzymes that are anchored in the plasma membrane with their active site pointing out into the extracellular matrix [ECM] of cells). In animal cells, where a signaling role for extracellular ATP (eATP) and ADP has been established for over two decades (Burnstock and Knight, 2004
Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) has seven apyrases, two of which, APY1 and APY2, are most similar to the pea (Pisum sativum) ectoapyrase NTP9 (Steinebrunner et al., 2000
Here we report three lines of evidence that APY1 and APY2 play an important role in the control of plant cell growth: Transcript abundance for APY1 and APY2 is highest in tissues and cell types that are growing rapidly, constitutive expression of one of these genes results in enhanced growth of hypocotyls and pollen tubes, and suppression of both genes in Arabidopsis or chemical suppression of apyrase enzyme activity results in impaired growth. We also show that the same light signal that suppresses the growth of hypocotyls simultaneously induces a loss of transcripts and protein of APY1 and APY2 in this tissue and provide evidence that a key function of the two apyrases is, like their vertebrate counterparts (Zimmermann, 2001
Expression of APY1 and APY2 Is Strongest in Cells That Are Rapidly Expanding and/or Accumulate Auxin In the primary roots of 7-d-old seedlings, promoter:GUS analysis shows that both APY1:GUS and APY2:GUS are expressed highly in the root-hypocotyl junction (Fig. 1A ) and root tip, mainly the root cap and the columella cells (Fig. 1, B and C), but with some staining also in the more proximal meristematic zone. However, in the distal elongation zone, expression of the two constructs differs, with APY2:GUS but not APY1:GUS showing strong expression there (Fig. 1, B and C).
The pattern in apical roots was verified independently by in situ localization (Fig. 1D). The in situ staining pattern for APY1 in primary roots (top) was the same as its pattern in lateral roots (data not shown) and the in situ staining pattern for APY2 in lateral roots (shown in Fig. 1D, middle) is identical to that of the promoter:GUS staining pattern for APY2 in lateral roots found by Sun (2003) In the apical or early maturation zone just basal to the elongation zone, APY1:GUS and APY2:GUS are expressed mostly in the vascular tissue, with less staining in the surrounding cortex and epidermal layers (Fig. 1A, bottom). As the root elongates, expression of APY1:GUS and APY2:GUS in the tissue between the apical and basal regions of the zone of maturation totally disappears (data not shown).
Among aerial vegetative tissues, staining for APY1:GUS and APY2:GUS is evident in the veins of light-grown cotyledons (Fig. 1E), is weak or nonexistent throughout mature leaves and stems, except in some leaf veins and near the leaf base (Fig. 1F), and is readily detectable in young, but not mature, trichomes and in stipules (Fig. 1G). Stipule staining is restricted to the upper part of this tissue (Fig. 1G, inset), where auxin and flavonoids also accumulate (Aloni et al., 2003
Among flowering tissues, promoter:GUS fusions showed that expression of these two constructs varied with the stage of floral development. Development of Arabidopsis flowers has been divided into 12 stages, each characterized by landmark events (Smyth et al., 1990 Postpollination, both APY1:GUS and APY2:GUS were also expressed strongly in the separation layer of the abscission zone of flower organs, where petal, sepal, and stamen fall off after anthesis. Figure 1M shows that after abscission of these organs, staining exists only at the former area of attachment to those flower structures. When pollination was prevented by removing the stigma before anthesis, staining in this area remained strong (data not shown), indicating that expression of apyrases in the separation layer is pollination independent.
Light rapidly inhibits elongation of hypocotyls in Arabidopsis, where growth changes become apparent in about 8 min (Parks and Spalding, 1999
The ability of white light to inhibit hypocotyl growth is reduced in phytochrome A (phyA), phyB, and phyAphyB mutants (Neff and Chory, 1998 Detailed immunoblot analysis of the kinetics of red-light-induced changes in apyrase protein content in hypocotyls, using a polyclonal antibody that recognizes both APY1 and APY2, revealed that the apyrase protein level decreased dramatically within 3 min after the end of 4-min irradiation and then remained barely detectable for 125 min after (Fig. 2C). Similarly, but with a slightly longer lag time, transcript levels for both APY1 and APY2 declined significantly by 15 min after 4-min red-light irradiation, as revealed by semiquantitative reverse transcription (RT)-PCR assay (Fig. 2D).
To reveal APY1 and APY2 gene function in whole plants, it would be important to characterize the phenotype of double-knockout (DKO) plants. However, DKO progeny could not be produced easily because DKO pollen cannot germinate (Steinebrunner et al., 2003 Growth phenotypes of these DKO plants were compared to wild type and plants carrying the transformation vector alone (+vector) as controls. Some DKO plants from transgenic lines DEX:APY1 and DEX:APY2 expressed the transgene even in the absence of DEX (data not shown) as determined by Southern-blot analysis of RT-PCR products (see "Materials and Methods"). These DKO mutants were termed leaky and their phenotype was indistinguishable from the wild type and vector control. In nonleaky DKO mutants, on the other hand, no APY1 and APY2 message was detectable by Southern-blot analysis of RT-PCR products in the absence of DEX (data not shown). Of six DEX:APY1 and four DEX:APY2 lines tested, only four and two were nonleaky, respectively.
Seed germination was carried out on agar and the germination rate was the same in DKO and wild-type plants (data not shown). The phenotype of light-grown aerial tissue, cotyledons, and hypocotyls was also identical for all genotypes during the first 7 d after germination (Fig. 3A
); however, primary roots were already severely affected by the absence of APY1 and APY2 transcripts after 7 d of growth (Fig. 3A). Roots of wild-type, vector-only control, and leaky DKO seedlings were 14.5 ± 1.40 mm in length, whereas those of nonleaky DKO plants were only 4.76 ± 1.56 mm long. In etiolated seedlings, the hypocotyls of DKO plants (length 18.1 ± 1.0 mm) were shorter than those of wild-type plants (length 23.4 ± 0.2 mm) and this difference was statistically significant (P
As DKO seedlings continued to grow in the light on agar, their hypocotyl and root size differences compared to wild-type plants became greater. To evaluate the basis of the size differences in these tissues, quantitative analysis comparing the lengths of hypocotyl and root cortex cells in wild-type and DKO plants was carried out. This analysis revealed that, after 10- and 13-d growth in the light, the length of hypocotyl cortex cells was significantly smaller in DKO plants (Table I ), approximately enough to account for the size difference in wild-type and DKO hypocotyls. In contrast, after 10-d growth, the length of root cortex cells in DKO plants was not significantly different from these cells in wild-type plants (Table I). Thus, the significantly smaller root length of DKO plants at this stage should be attributed to reduced cell number. However, in 13-d-old plants, the lengths of root cortex cells, like those of hypocotyl cells, were significantly smaller in DKO plants. Note that measurements in 10- and 13-d-old seedlings were carried out separately.
The only cellular abnormalities observed in the primary roots of mutant seedlings suppressed in APY1 and APY2 expression were that the root tips of these mutants lacked a well-defined meristematic zone and had a greatly reduced zone of elongation. As a result, the zone of differentiation, marked by the differentiation of root hairs, extended almost all the way to the root tip (data not shown). Seedlings were transferred to soil after 7 d on agar and 7 d later all genotypes had developed to the same extent (Fig. 4, AD ). After 17 d on soil, however, the growth difference of nonleaky DKO plants to those with APY1 and/or APY2 transcripts had become very apparent. Wild-type plants with vector-only and leaky DKO mutants had grown at least three sets of true leaves (Fig. 4, EG) and these leaves were several times bigger than 10 d earlier (Fig. 4, AC). In nonleaky DKO plants (Fig. 4H), true leaves had remained the size of the cotyledons from stage 7 (Fig. 4D) and the third set of true leaves was barely visible. Growth of nonleaky DKO plants arrested in this stage so, at day 24 on soil (Fig. 4L), the number and size of leaves had not changed. Plants with APY1 and/or APY2 transcripts, however, had grown flower stalks after 24 d on soil (Fig. 4, IK) and their overall size was approximately 10 times the size of nonleaky DKO mutants. Some nonleaky DKO plants grew tiny flower stalks (data not shown), but none ever formed seed-containing siliques.
We tested whether induction of the APY1 or APY2 transgene could reverse the dwarf phenotype of nonleaky DKO plants. DEX treatment of these plants started after 7 d on soil. Although transcription of APY1 or APY2 from the DEX promoter clearly reversed the blockage of germination observed in DKO pollen, DEX treatment of intact plants did not usually restore wild-type growth (data not shown). Most plants remained in their arrested stage, similar to the untreated plants (Fig. 4, H and L) and eventually died like the untreated control. In one nonleaky DKO mutant, DEX treatment induced some growth of the flowering stem and production of a small number of seeds. To further assess the effects of suppression of APY1 and APY2 on growth, we carried out this suppression by inducing an apyrase-directed RNAi construct in apy2 plants that were wild type for APY1, but homozygous for the apy2 knockout mutation. The RNAi construct was made by inserting a sense and an antisense region of APY1 cDNA (132 bp) into the vector with an intron in between. The structure of this construct predicts that when estradiol is applied to transformed plants harboring the RNAi construct, the hormone will induce production of the sense-intron-antisense mRNA, which will form a hairpin structure, making it a target for breakdown by the RNAi machinery of the cell. The small pieces (approximately 23 bp) of double-strand RNA formed from this breakdown would be expected to target and silence APY1, and our results indicate that this happens. We developed three lines of transgenic plants harboring the RNAi construct and designed a gene-specific probe that could be used to assess transcript levels of APY1 in them by RNA gel-blot analysis (Fig. 5A ). After confirming that the induction of the RNAi construct by estradiol in apy2 mutants significantly depressed the expression of APY1 (Fig. 5B), we found that induction also significantly reduced the growth of all three lines, both at the seedling and flowering stages of growth (Fig. 5, C and D). Although all three lines had suppressed growth, the level of growth suppression did not correlate with the level of message reduction.
In dark-grown seedlings, the most rapidly growing tissue is the hypocotyl. Shortened hypocotyl length was found in 3.5-d-old etiolated seedlings of all three RNAi lines after they had germinated and grown the entire time in medium containing estradiol. The length of hypocotyls in apy2 mutant plants was about 15% shorter than in the wild-type strain and the average length of etiolated hypocotyls in RNAi lines was about 70% of the wild-type control (Fig. 6A ). All three RNAi lines and apy2 mutant plants had significantly shorter hypocotyl lengths compared to wild-type seedlings (P < 0.01; Fig. 6A).
In light-grown seedlings, the most rapidly growing tissue is the primary root. Primary root growth of estradiol-treated RNAi seedlings grown in the light was analyzed from day 3 to day 6. Seedlings exhibited a significantly reduced rate of root elongation in all three lines (Fig. 6B), resulting in significantly shorter roots by day 6 (Fig. 6B). To test whether estradiol itself can inhibit root growth, the difference of root length in estradiol-treated and nontreated seedlings, both apy2 and wild-type plants, was measured. Data showed estradiol had no effect on apy2 mutant plants, which were used as the background plants of the RNAi lines. Although estradiol did slightly reduce the growth of wild-type roots, still it reduced the root growth of the three RNAi lines to a much greater extent than did the wild type and apy2 mutants (Fig. 6C). This demonstrated that the shorter root length of RNAi lines was not due to applying estradiol. Wild-type adult plants treated with estradiol were indistinguishable from RNAi plants that were not treated with estradiol (data not shown). Although estradiol-treated RNAi seedlings (Fig. 5C) resemble the genetic DKO seedlings (Fig. 3A) in being dwarf, there is one statistically significant difference between the two: the former have more radially expanded (larger diameter) primary roots than the latter (diameter of 0.371 ± 0.018 mm compared to 0.323 ± 0.032 mm; P < 0.05, n = 7).
Beyond decreased growth, the most notable developmental effects of suppressing the expression of both APY1 and APY2 were decreased formation of lateral roots and increased formation of adventitious roots. In lateral root measurements (Table II ), the apy2 mutant used as the control was not different from wild-type plants in this characteristic. In the adventitious root measurements, comparison of a representative 23 wild-type and 23 DKO plants grown on the same plates revealed that only two of the wild-type plants, but 17 of the DKO plants, had adventitious roots, a difference that was statistically significant (P < 0.01). Roots emerging from the root-shoot interface in DKO plants in Figure 3A are adventitious roots, not lateral roots.
Overexpression of Apyrase Enhances Growth In etiolated seedlings, overexpressing lines of APY1 and APY2 were analyzed by measuring the hypocotyl length. Overexpressing APY1 resulted in a 15% increase in growth over that of wild type (Fig. 7A ), but overexpressing APY2 did not increase growth (data not shown). Under continuous light conditions, growth of wild-type plants and plants overexpressing APY1 or APY2 was not different.
Growth of APY2-overexpressing (Song et al., 2006
Polyclonal antibodies to Arabidopsis apyrase were tested for their effects on apyrase activity and on pollen tube growth. As expected, antiapyrase immune serum (but not preimmune serum) strongly inhibited the apyrase activity from Arabidopsis pollen germination medium (PGM; Supplemental Fig. S1). Immune serum applied in amounts of 0.4 µg or above significantly inhibited pollen tube growth, but preimmune serum at 0.6 µg did not (Fig. 8A
). The level of inhibition was increased with the increasing concentration of immune serum (Fig. 8A). Consistent with these results, two selective chemical inhibitors of apyrase previously characterized (Windsor, 2000
For pollen growth experiments in which the volume of growth medium applied was 150 µL, the [eATP] in the medium was measured by luciferin-luciferase assay (Jeter et al., 2004 When apyrase antibodies were applied to germinated pollen, they consistently increased the [eATP] of the pollen growth medium compared to medium without immune sera. Expressed as fold increases, they were statistically significantly higher in the samples treated with immune serum than those recorded in the preimmune and buffer control samples (Fig. 8B). Apyrase inhibitors also consistently increased the [eATP] of the pollen growth medium (Supplemental Fig. S2B). The inhibitor/antibody-induced increase in medium [ATP] was evident within the same time frame (15 min) that these agents inhibited pollen tube growth.
Pollen tubes, etiolated hypocotyls, and root tips are among the fastest growing tissues in plants. All three show high expression of APY1:GUS and APY2:GUS. In contrast, nongrowing tissue, such as mature, fully expanded leaves, have little or no expression of the GUS constructs. Moreover, expression in hypocotyls is drastically reduced by the same light signal that induces their decreased growth. The promoter:GUS results are consistent with PCR assays in hypocotyls, which showed that red light induces a rapid decrease in the level of apyrase transcripts. Even more pertinent to the argument that apyrase expression is correlated with growth is the observation that the red-light signal that activates phytochromes induces the disappearance of the apyrase protein from etiolated hypocotyls within 3 min after the end of 4-min irradiation, or less than one-half the time it reportedly takes for red light to noticeably reduce the growth of hypocotyls, which is about 8 min (Parks and Spalding, 1999
Regulation of apyrase transcripts by light could involve both mRNA turnover and down-regulation of transcription. The 3'-untranslated region of APY2, but not of APY1, has a AUUUA motif that can serve as an instability domain (Zhang and Mehdy, 1994
Other regions of high expression of APY1:GUS and APY2:GUS are associated either with cell growth or differentiation. These include the root-shoot interface, the stigma papilla cells, veins of cotyledons, and the abscission zone of floral tissues. All of these sites are also regions of auxin accumulation and/or transport and most show high expression of the pin-formed (PIN) proteins associated with auxin transport (Leyser, 2005 Promoter:GUS results suggest the possibility that apyrases may play a central role in growth control. Strong support for this hypothesis comes from the observation that transgenic plants suppressed in apyrase expression have a dwarf phenotype with drastically reduced root and shoot growth. This phenotype was confirmed by two independent genetic approaches: (1) generation of apy1/apy2 DKO lines and (2) suppression of APY1 in apy2 mutants by the estradiol-inducible expression of double-stranded APY1 RNA. In light-grown seedlings of both DKO plants and RNAi-suppressed plants, growth inhibition is more evident in roots, which grow more rapidly in wild-type seedlings than in hypocotyls, which grow only slowly in the light. Although hypocotyl cortical cells are shorter in DKO plants than in wild type at both ages tested (10 and 13 d), 10-d-old root cortical cells are not. However, Figure 3 reveals that the roots of 7-d-old DKO seedlings grown in the light already are dramatically shorter than wild-type roots. This would suggest that APY1 and APY2, which both have some expression in the meristematic region of root tips (Fig. 1), may play a role in cell division control as well as in cell expansion control, and that both roles contribute to overall growth control in roots. Consistent with this hypothesis, root tips of DKO seedlings have a poorly defined meristematic zone and a greatly reduced zone of elongation (data not shown).
The estradiol treatment that induced the expression of double-strand APY1 RNA clearly suppressed normal growth in those mutants, but DEX treatment only rarely reversed the growth defects in DEX-inducible DKO mutants, even though induction of the transgene after DEX application was confirmed by RT-PCR (data not shown). One explanation could be that the chimeric DEX-regulated steroid receptor that is part of the inducible system (Aoyama and Chua, 1997 In estimating background expression of apyrase even in the so-called nonleaky DKO mutants, there is always the possibility that there is some low expression that is undetectable by RT-PCR. That this may be the case in the nonleaky DKO mutants is suggested by the fact that DKO lines generated without an inducible system display an even more severe dwarf phenotype than the DKO mutants presented here (C. Wolf, M. Hennig, and I. Steinebrunner, unpublished data). If DKO mutants have some low level of expression of APY1 and/or APY2, it is unlikely that this expression is identical to that in the mutants silenced by the RNAi constructs. This may be one explanation as to why the seedlings of these two mutant types do not have identical phenotypes, with the hypocotyls and roots of the mutants expressing RNAi constructs being thicker. A BLAST search of the whole genome of Arabidopsis revealed that, except for APY1 and APY2, there are no other genes that have sequences similar to that used in the RNAi construct, including other apyrases, so it is unlikely that the phenotypic differences between the two types of mutants can be attributed to suppression of other apyrase genes in RNAi-silenced mutants. Nonetheless, this and other possible explanations would have to be tested.
Although the ineffectiveness of DEX in rescuing the DKO lines will make it more difficult to propagate DKO lines, the dwarf growth of multiple lines of DKO plants and plants suppressed in apyrase expression by double-stranded RNA induction underscores a key role for apyrase in growth. Obviously, neither cell division nor even the growth of newly divided cells is totally blocked in plants mutated in APY1 and APY2. Nonetheless, combination of the expression data in Figures 1 and 2 and the suppression results of Figures 3 to 6
To the extent that APY1 and APY2 are expressed in locales accessible to chemical inhibitors of their activity, these inhibitors could mimic the growth effects of suppressing the APY1 and APY2 genes. Polyclonal antibodies that recognize both APY1 and APY2 would be the most specific agents to block the activity of these enzymes and, as would be expected, they do inhibit the apyrase enzyme activity released by Arabidopsis pollen tubes as they grow. The observation that they also inhibit pollen tube growth reinforces genetic evidence linking APY1 and APY2 expression to growth and points to the likelihood that these enzymes are functioning as ectoapyrases. Small-molecule inhibitors of apyrase enzyme activity have been described (Windsor et al., 2002 Although APY1 and APY2 are already strongly expressed in rapidly growing hypocotyls and pollen tubes, the constitutive (and increased) expression of APY1 in hypocotyls and of APY2 in pollen further enhances their growth. These growth-promoting effects are not as dramatic as the growth suppression that results from reduced apyrase expression, suggesting that in wild-type hypocotyls and pollen cells apyrase expression is near optimal for growth. Still, the overexpression data further support the hypothesis that the expression of APY1 and APY2 is closely linked to growth control. Based on apyrase studies in vertebrates and yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), at least two different functions could account for why apyrases exert such dramatic effects on growth. One function is that of an ectophosphatase to reduce the signaling activity of [eATP] and thus turn off nucleotide activation of purinoceptors. The other is as a Golgi enzyme that regulates glycoprotein synthesis.
Regarding ectophosphatase function, APY1 and APY2 could potentially play this role because they both have signal peptides (Steinebrunner et al., 2000
In animal cells, ATP is released to the outside of cells through secretory activity because secretory vesicles enclose high levels of ATP and they release this into the ECM when they fuse with the plasma membrane (Lazarowski et al., 2003
Consistent with the findings of Kim et al. (2006)
The nanomolar levels of ATP measured in the bulk medium in which pollen is growing is likely a vast underestimate of the level of ATP at least transiently present at the cell surface when nucleotides are released from the cell. A recent report by Yegutkin et al. (2006)
Kim et al. (2006)
How could an increase in [eATP] be linked to a decrease in growth? As yet there are insufficient data to answer this question. The fact that submicromolar levels of eATP can induce signaling changes in plants (Demidchik et al., 2003
Apart from receptor considerations, one downstream effect initiated by eATP that could help explain its influence on growth is on auxin transport. Increased [eATP] (by external application) can block auxin transport and promote auxin accumulation in tissues (Tang et al., 2003
To the extent that high [eATP] can lead to the accumulation of growth-inhibitory levels of auxin (and/or of NO), maintenance of lower [eATP] through apyrase activity at growth points may be needed to maintain growth. Observations consistent with this interpretation are that APY1:GUS and APY2:GUS assays show the highest expression in cells where the PIN auxin efflux facilitators are also highly expressed, and plants suppressed in apyrase expression have decreased lateral root formation, just like both mutants in aux1 (Marchant et al., 2002
The considerations above do not exclude the possibility that some fraction of APY1 and APY2 function in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) or Golgi, for certainly apyrases would move through the ER-Golgi pathway on the way to the plasma membrane. There is a well-developed model for apyrase function in the Golgi of yeast related to control of protein glycosylation (Hirschberg et al., 1998
The two apyrases do not have to play identical roles in Arabidopsis. The amino acid sequences of APY1 and APY2 are 87% identical and these two apyrases at least partially complement each other's function (Steinebrunner et al., 2003
In summary, our data reveal the finding that the expression of two closely related apyrase enzymes that can lower the [eATP] of plant cells is closely correlated with growth and, in fact, is needed for normal growth in Arabidopsis. Because cells release ATP as a consequence of growth (Kim et al., 2006
Plant Material and Growth Conditions
Unless otherwise noted, Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) ecotypes Columbia (CS907) and Wassilewskija (Ws) were used as wild types in this study. Seeds were planted directly on autoclaved Metro-Mix 200 soil or surface sterilized and planted on solidified Murashige and Skoog medium (4.3 g/L Murashige and Skoog salts [Sigma], 0.5% [w/v] MES, 1% [w/v] Suc, and 0.8%, 1.0%, or 1.2% [w/v] agar, raised to pH 5.7 with 5 M KOH). The apy1 and apy2 mutants were isolated previously (Steinebrunner et al., 2003 Phytochrome mutants phyA-201, phyB-5, and phyA201/phyB-5 and Ws wild-type plants were used for plant transformation. All types of plants were grown at 22°C under continuous light. For etiolated seedlings, seeds were put on solidified Murashige and Skoog medium and grown in the dark for 7 to 10 d. In assays of DKO plants complemented with a wild-type gene, to induce the transgene, plants were sprayed with water containing 30 µM DEX and 0.01% (v/v) Tween 20 or watered with 30 nM DEX.
Wild-type and DKO plants used for microscopic analysis were grown together on the same agar plate. Plants were processed using protocols from Ruzin (1999)
In the text below, more than a score of different primers were used, defined as follows: AAR566 (5'-CACAGCGTAATTCTTCGGACC-3'), AP1F (5'-CCCAAGCTCTCTCCGCTACCTTTGGAATTCAGACG-3'), AP1R (5'-GCGTCGACTCGATAGACACAAGTCCCTGATGAGAGTC-3'), AP2F (5'-ACGCGTCGACATGGTCATTTGAGGTGGCAGAGAATATG-3'), AP2R (5'-GCTCTAGACGTCAACAGAGTCGGATGTAGGAGAATGG-3'), APT1_for (5'-TCCCAGAATCGCTAAGATTGCC-3'), APT1_rev (5'-CCTTTCCCTTAAGCTCTG-3'), APY1-NF (5'-TAGAAGCAGTATCCTCACC-3'), APY1-NR (5'-ACAGAGGTTACGTATGCGG-3'), APY2-NF (5'-CATAGTTGGGAGTTACCCATCTCCC-3'), APY2-NR (5'-TACCAGACTCCAGGAGCTCAGTGG-3'), Apy1-SalI (5'-ATAGTCGACGTATTTCACCTTCTT-3'), Apy1-XhoI (5'-ATACTCGAGAAACCAACCTGTGGC-3'), Apy-a (5'-ATAGAATTCATGACGGGGAAGGGA-3'), Apy-b (5'-ATCGATACCGTCGACCTCGAGTGGTGAGGATACTGCTTCT-3'), AraF172 (5'-GCAGCCGTAACTTGCAATC-3'), AraF172 (5'-GCAGCCGTAACTTGCAATC-3'), Arapy2F (5'-GCTTTCCCAAATTCACCGT-3'), DEXF (5'-GCCGCCAGTGTGATGGATATCTGC-3'), Myc-c (5'-AGAAGCAGTATCCTCACCATCTCGAGGTCGACGGTATCGA-3'), Myc-e (5'-GTATCATTCATTCAGTCAAAAGTCCTC-3'), RNAiI-EcoRI (5'-ATAGAATTCGTATTTCACCTTCTT-3'), RNAiI-SpeI (5'-ATAACTAGTAAACCAACCTGTGGC-3'), UBQ1 (5'-GATCTTTGCCGGAAAACAATTGGAGGATGGT-3'), and UBQ2 (5'-CGACTTGTCATTAGAAAGAAAGAGATAACAGG-3').
The Arabidopsis genomic bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clone T6K12, which contains the APY1 promoter region, was obtained from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center (ABRC). MRG7, which contains the APY2 promoter region, was kindly provided by Kazusa DNA Research Institute. Both promoter regions used include the 5'-untranslated region sequences of APY1 and APY2 genes. The promoter of APY1 was first amplified by PCR using primers AP1F and AP1R and subcloned into TOPO vector pCR2.1 (Invitrogen). Then the 3-kb HindIII-SalI fragment was subcloned into binary vector pBI101 (provided by Dr. Mark Estelle, University of Indiana), which contains a promoterless GUS gene, to create pBI-APY1:GUS. To construct pBI-APY2:GUS, the APY2 promoter was amplified using primers AP2F and AP2R by PCR and subcloned into vector pCR2.1. Then a 2.8-kb SalI-XbaI fragment was subcloned into vector pBI101. The constructs pBI-APY1:GUS and pBI-APY2:GUS were transformed into Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain GV3101(pMP90) and the vacuum infiltration method (Clough and Bent, 1998
GUS transformants were grown on regular Murashige and Skoog medium for root and cotyledon staining. For staining of flowers, siliques, and leaves, soil-grown plants were used. GUS staining was performed according to Lehman et al. (1996) To make the staining for APY1:GUS and APY2:GUS in pollen tubes stand out more clearly in the pollinated flower, wild-type plant stigmas were used for in vivo germination of pollen from APY1:GUS and APY2:GUS plants. Wild-type flowers were emasculated the day before pollination. The next morning, pollen from fully opened APY1:GUS or APY2:GUS flowers were brushed onto the wild-type stigmas and allowed to germinate for 2 h. A regular GUS-staining procedure was then followed to make APY1:GUS and APY2:GUS expression in pollen tubes clearly visible (Fig. 1L).
The method followed was a liquid-phase whole-mount RT-PCR protocol that was a combination of the in situ RT-PCR protocol (Koltai and Bird, 2000 Tissues thus prepared then underwent liquid-phase RT-PCR in a solution containing RNase inhibitor, Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase, and either the APY1 or APY2 gene-specific reverse primer to reverse transcribe the APY1 or APY2 message. PCR reactions were performed using Taq polymerase with forward (APY1-NF, APY2-NF) and reverse (APY1-NR, APY2-NR) primers with digoxigenin-labeled dUTP to yield a labeled PCR product of about 250 bp for APY1 and 270 bp for APY2. Samples were stained immediately after PCR. They were washed twice for 5 min in PBT and blocked for 30 min in PBT containing 3% (w/v) bovine serum albumin, then incubated overnight at 4°C in 1 mL of antibody, which was a preabsorbed, alkaline-phosphatase-conjugated antidigoxigenin monoclonal antibody (Boehringer Mannheim/Hoffmann-La Roche) diluted 1:1,500 in blocking solution. The antibody solution was then replaced by fresh blocking solution and incubated for 10 min. Samples were washed five times in PBT for 15 to 30 min and placed in 35 x 10-mm petri plates with 1 mL of washing buffer (10 mM Tris, 15 mM NaCl, pH 9.5) containing 150 µg/mL 4-nitroblue tetrazolium chloride and 370 µg/mL 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-phosphate (Boehringer Mannheim/Hoffmann-La Roche). Color development was monitored by microscopy and stopped by rinsing samples with double-distilled water. Control samples were treated exactly as above (fixation, permeabilization, washing, etc.), except in some cases only the reverse transcriptase was excluded from the RT reaction or only Taq polymerase was left out of the PCR reactions. Both controls looked essentially the same (negative) and the control in Figure 1D is a no-Taq control.
Sequence for the APY1 open reading frame without the first 105 bp coding for a putative transmembrane domain was inserted into the BamHI site following the polyhistidine tag of the pET28a vector (Novagen). The BamHI cleavage site was added to either end of the APY1 sequence by PCR. In-frame insertion of each construct was confirmed by sequencing. The recombinant protein was expressed in the Escherichia coli strain BL21 (Novagen) and purified under denaturing conditions on a nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid agarose column (Qiagen) following the manufacturer's instructions. This column-purified protein was loaded onto 10% SDS-PAGE, and the band containing the protein of the correct size was excised. The gel slice was sent to Pocono Rabbit Farm and Laboratory, Inc., to immunize two guinea pigs, gp18 and gp19, respectively. The affinity of antiserum gp18 was equal to both recombinant denatured APY1 and APY2 proteins. Gp18 serum was affinity purified on CM Affi-Gel Blue according to the manufacturer's instructions and used for the immunoblot analysis, growth assays, and apyrase activity assays.
Etiolated 4-d-old seedlings were harvested in a cold room, 4°C, illuminated only by a dim green light-emitting diode. Their roots were removed with a razor blade and their aerial portion placed in a 1.5-mL reaction tube and snap frozen in liquid nitrogen. Before harvesting the light-treated seedlings, the petri dishes containing them were placed vertically in racks, set into light chambers, and exposed to a light-emitting diode source with an emission maximum of 670 nm and an irradiance of 31 µmol m2 s1 for 240 s at 22°C. Frozen tissue was ground in a mortar filled with liquid nitrogen and a pestle. Once the tissue was ground and placed in a 1.5-mL reaction tube, 15 or 25 µL of a buffer containing 125 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.8, 1% (w/v) SDS, 10% (v/v) glycerol, 50 mM Na2S2O5 were added and tissue immediately boiled for 5 min. Samples were then centrifuged briefly at 4°C, then quantified via Bradford assay with Bio-Rad protein assay dye reagent concentrate. Fifteen micrograms total protein were mixed with 6x sample buffer and proteins separated via SDS-PAGE, transferred to 0.2-µm nitrocellulose membranes (Schleicher & Schuell), and probed with gp18 antibody serum diluted 1:1,000. Secondary antibody was a conjugated affinity-purified anti-guinea pig IgG (goat) coupled to an 800-nm fluorochrome diluted 1:5,000 (Rockland IRDye 800CW). The fluorochrome signals were detected and analyzed using the Odyssey infrared imaging system (LI-COR Biosciences).
All seeds were sterilized with 20% (v/v) bleach and plated on Murashige and Skoog agarose plates containing 1% (w/v) Suc. Seeds were allowed to vernalize for 4 d, then were grown in darkness for 4 d. Seedlings were given light treatments as follows: D, no light, etiolated tissue; R, 4 min, 30 µmol m2 s1 red light, then harvested immediately; R10, 4 min, 30 µmol m2 s1 red light followed by 10-min darkness, then harvested immediately; R15, 4 min, 30 µmol m2 s1 red light followed by 15-min darkness, then harvested immediately; R30, 4 min, 30 µmol m2 s1 red light followed by 30-min darkness, then harvested immediately. Tissue was harvested by cutting the aerial portion of the seedlings away from the roots and freezing them in liquid nitrogen. Total RNA isolation was performed on each sample using the RNeasy mini kit (Qiagen), following the manufacturer's protocol. Two micrograms of RNA were treated with Deoxyribonuclease I (Invitrogen). DNAse-treated RNA was then used to synthesize first-strand cDNA using SuperScript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen), following the manufacturer's protocol. Two microliters of the first-strand cDNA reaction were used as template in 25-cycle PCR reactions. The following pairs of gene-specific primers were used separately to amplify each of the cDNA samples: UBQ1 and UBQ2 (Weigl and Glazebrook, 2001
Double-heterozygous plants were transformed with either the cDNA for APY1 or APY2 under the steroid-inducible vector pTA7002 (Aoyama and Chua, 1997
RNA was isolated from leaves of untreated DEX lines, subjected to DNAseI digestion, and reverse transcribed as published previously (Steinebrunner et al., 2003
Pollen and styles were used from flowers from the upper one-third of primary inflorescences from same-age plants. Wild-type styles from emasculated flowers at stage 12 (Smyth et al., 1990 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||