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First published online July 20, 2007; 10.1104/pp.107.099838 Plant Physiology 145:106-118 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
A Study of Gibberellin Homeostasis and Cryptochrome-Mediated Blue Light Inhibition of Hypocotyl Elongation1,[W],[OA]Bioenergy and Biomaterial Research Center, Hunan University, Changsha 410082, China (X.Z., J.X., X.L.); Department of Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095 (X.Y., J.L., K.T.B., C.L.); and School of Plant Science, University of Tasmania, Hobart 7001 Tasmania, Australia (E.F., G.M.S., J.L.W., J.B.R.)
Cryptochromes mediate blue light-dependent photomorphogenic responses, such as inhibition of hypocotyl elongation. To investigate the underlying mechanism, we analyzed a genetic suppressor, scc7-D (suppressors of cry1cry2), which suppressed the long-hypocotyl phenotype of the cry1cry2 (cryptochrome1/cryptochrome2) mutant in a light-dependent but wavelength-independent manner. scc7-D is a gain-of-expression allele of the GA2ox8 gene encoding a gibberellin (GA)-inactivating enzyme, GA 2-oxidase. Although scc7-D is hypersensitive to light, transgenic seedlings expressing GA2ox at a level higher than scc7-D showed a constitutive photomorphogenic phenotype, confirming a general role of GA2ox and GA in the suppression of hypocotyl elongation. Prompted by this result, we investigated blue light regulation of mRNA expression of the GA metabolic and catabolic genes. We demonstrated that cryptochromes are required for the blue light regulation of GA2ox1, GA20ox1, and GA3ox1 expression in transient induction, continuous illumination, and photoperiodic conditions. The kinetics of cryptochrome induction of GA2ox1 expression and cryptochrome suppression of GA20ox1 or GA3ox1 expression correlate with the cryptochrome-dependent transient reduction of GA4 in etiolated wild-type seedlings exposed to blue light. Therefore we propose that in deetiolating seedlings, cryptochromes mediate blue light regulation of GA catabolic/metabolic genes, which affect GA levels and hypocotyl elongation. Surprisingly, no significant change in the GA4 content was detected in the whole shoot samples of the wild-type or cry1cry2 seedlings grown in the dark or continuous blue light, suggesting that cryptochromes may also regulate GA responsiveness and/or trigger cell- or tissue-specific changes of the level of bioactive GAs.
Cryptochromes are blue light receptors that regulate various photomorphogenic responses in plants, including deetiolation and photoperiodic control of floral initiation (Cashmore, 2003
GAs are tetracyclic diterpenoid hormones that promote growth, such as hypocotyl elongation (Olszewski et al., 2002
GA is well known for its involvement in phytochrome-regulated hypocotyl elongation (Kamiya and Garcia-Martinez, 1999 Prompted by a study of the genetic suppressor of cry1cry2 that corresponds to the Arabidopsis GA2ox8 gene, we investigated the relationship between GA homeostasis and cryptochrome-mediated deetiolation. We showed that increased expression of a GA2ox gene caused hypersensitive or constitutive photomorphogenesis, depending on the relative levels of GA2ox overexpression. We further demonstrated that cryptochromes are required for the blue light induction of GA2ox1 expression and blue light suppression of GA20ox1 and GA3ox1 expression. Although all those observations are consistent with a simple hypothesis that cryptochromes may inhibit accumulation of bioactive GAs to suppress hypocotyl growth, our analyses of the GA4 content in whole shoot samples indicate the involvement of a more complex mode of regulation in the cryptochrome-mediated photomorphogenic responses.
Overexpression of GA2ox8 Suppresses the Long Hypocotyl Phenotype of the cry1cry2 Mutant
To investigate the genetic mechanisms underlying cryptochrome-mediated light responses in plants, we prepared an activation-tagging population (see "Materials and Methods") in the cry1cry2 double mutant, which exhibits a long hypocotyl phenotype when grown in blue light (Guo et al., 1998
The scc7-D locus contains a T-DNA inserted in an intergenic region, at 4,293 bp upstream from the start codon of GA2ox8 (Fig. 1, G–H), and GA2ox8 seems the only one overexpressed among the six T-DNA flanking genes tested (Fig. 1I). The light-hypersensitive phenotype of scc7-D can be rescued by exogenous GA3 (Fig. 1J). In addition, scc7-D also showed a dwarf and late-flowering phenotype (data not shown). Similar dominant alleles of the GA2ox8 gene have been reported previously, and it was shown that GA2ox8 encodes a GA2ox that catalyzes 2 -hydroxylation of C20-GAs (Schomburg et al., 2003
The level of GA2ox8 mRNA in scc7-D was probably high enough to cause exaggerated hypocotyl inhibition in blue light via phytochromes, some of which can act as blue light receptors, but not high enough to suppress hypocotyl elongation in the absence of light. Indeed, transgenic plants overexpressing the GFP-GA2ox8 fusion protein under the control of a strong 35S promoter exhibited a GA-rescuable constitutive photomorphogenic phenotype (Fig. 2, A–C
). Similar to scc7-D, the 35S::GFP-GA2ox8 seedlings are also hypersensitive to light (Fig. 2, A and B). But contrary to scc7-D, the etiolated 35S::GFP-GA2ox8 transgenic seedlings grown in the dark also showed short hypocotyls, as well as unhooked and partially opened cotyledons (Fig. 2, A and B). The phenotype of 35S::GFP-GA2ox8 was rescued by exogenous GA3 (Fig. 2C; data not shown). The levels of the 35S::GFP-GA2ox8 mRNA were markedly higher in transgenic 35S::GFP-GA2ox8 seedlings than that of the GA2ox8 mRNA in scc7-D or wild-type seedlings (Fig. 2D), which explains why 35S::GFP-GA2ox8 lines are constitutively photomorphogenic regardless of light whereas scc7-D seedlings showed exaggerated photomorphogenic response only in light. Our observation that overexpression of a GA2ox enzyme, which catalyzes inactivation of GAs, caused constitutive photomorphogenesis is consistent with a previous report that the ga1 mutant impaired in the ent-copalyl diphosphate synthase gene showed constitutive photomorphogenesis (Sun et al., 1992
Association between GA Homeostasis and Blue Light Inhibition of Hypocotyl Elongation
The study of scc7-D prompted us to further explore a possible association between cryptochrome function and GA homeostasis. The wild-type and the cry1cry2 mutants (grown at 22°C) responded only weakly to bioactive GA3 or GA4, regardless of light conditions (Fig. 3
). Even under the highest fluence rate of blue light tested, whereby the wild-type seedlings normally exhibited minimum hypocotyl elongation, high concentrations of GA3 or GA4 (0.1–1 mM) failed to elicit a large increase in hypocotyl growth or to phenocopy the cry1cry2 mutant in the wild-type seedlings (Fig. 3, A and E). It is noteworthy that although various hormones have been shown to antagonize light inhibition of hypocotyl growth when applied exogenously, such treatments never completely reverse the inhibitory effect of light on growth (Vandenbussche et al., 2005
We next examined how the cry1cry2 mutant responded to GA biosynthesis inhibitors. The GA biosynthesis inhibitors, paclobutrazol (Fig. 3B) or ancymidol (Fig. 3D), can both rescue the long-hypocotyl phenotype of the cry1cry2 mutant, which is consistent with the observation of the cry1 mutant (Folta et al., 2003
The Arabidopsis genome encodes up to eight GA2ox-related sequences, referred to as GA2ox1 to GA2ox8 (see "Materials and Methods"). However, the mRNA expression of only six members (GA2ox1, GA2ox2, GA2ox4, GA2ox6, GA2ox7, and GA2ox8) was readily detected in our study. GA2ox5 seems to be a pseudogene (Hedden et al., 2001
We first analyzed blue light regulation of GA2ox expression in response to inductive blue light treatment. In this experiment, 6-d-old etiolated seedlings were exposed to blue light (100 µmol m–2 s–1) for 0.5 to 24 h, and the level of mRNA expression of the GA2ox genes was examined at various time points. In wild-type seedlings, all six GA2ox genes tested showed various degrees of blue light induction of mRNA expression (Fig. 4
). For example, the expression of GA2ox1 and GA2ox8 increased about 2- to 3-fold within 60 min of blue light treatment, or about 6- to 8-fold within 8 h of blue light treatment, respectively (Fig. 4B). The blue light-induced mRNA expression is transient for most GA2ox genes tested. The expression generally increased immediately after blue light treatment, peaked within 12 h, and returned to the dark level within 24 h of blue light treatment. Four of the GA2ox genes tested (GA2ox1, GA2ox2, GA2ox6, and GA2ox8) showed reduced blue light induction in the cry1 or cry1cry2 mutant (Fig. 4; data not shown). The blue light induction of GA2ox1 expression was partially impaired in the cry1 mutant (data not shown), but it was almost completely abolished in the cry1cry2 mutant (Fig. 4). Our results are consistent with a previous DNA microarray study by Thomas Kretsch and colleagues (http://www.uni-tuebingen.de/plantphys/AFGN/atgenex.htm) but opposite to the result of another DNA microarray study (Folta et al., 2003
The transient nature of the blue light induction of GA2ox expression observed in the 24 h inductive blue light treatment (Fig. 4) may be due to the diurnal or circadian rhythmic expression of the GA2ox genes. To test this possibility, seedlings were entrained in long-day (16-h light/8-h dark) and short-day (8-h light/16-h dark) photoperiods for 10 d and then transferred to continuous white light for 2 d. Samples were collected every 3 h for 1 d before transfer and 2 d after transfer to the free-running condition, and the expression of each GA2ox gene was analyzed. The mRNA expression of all six GA2ox genes exhibited either a diurnal rhythm or circadian rhythm (Fig. 5 ; data not shown). Among them, GA2ox1 and GA2ox2 showed the most robust circadian rhythms that were sustained in seedlings transferred from the long-day or short-day photoperiod to continuous white light for at least 2 d (Fig. 5, A and B; data not shown). The phase of the circadian rhythm of GA2ox2 was dramatically different in plants grown in long-day and short-day photoperiods (Fig. 5B). It has been shown recently that GA4 is the active GA regulating floral initiation (Eriksson et al., 2006
We next compared the steady-state levels of GA2ox expression in seedlings grown in continuous blue light or dark (Fig. 6 ). Four GA2ox genes (GA2ox1, GA2ox2, GA2ox4, GA2ox7) tested showed higher steady-state levels of mRNA in seedlings grown in continuous blue light than in etiolated seedlings (Fig. 6A). Under continuous blue light, the expression of GA2ox1 showed a more pronounced blue light response than other GA2ox genes; the mRNA expression of GA2ox1 was at least 7-fold higher in light-grown wild-type seedlings than that in etiolated wild-type seedlings (Fig. 6A). A more pronounced blue light effect on the GA2ox1 expression is consistent with that observed under other conditions (Figs. 4 and 5) and that found in continuous white light (Achard et al., 2007
Cryptochromes Mediate Blue Light Suppression of GA20ox1 and GA3ox1 mRNA Expression
In addition to the GA2ox enzymes that catalyze catabolism or inactivation of bioactive GAs such as GA4, two other dioxygenases, GA20ox and GA3ox, that catalyze synthesis of bioactive GAs are also critical to GA homeostasis (Hedden and Phillips, 2000
Cryptochromes Mediate Transient Blue Light Suppression of GA4 Accumulation
To test whether cryptochrome-mediated blue light regulation of gene expression changes correlate with changes in the level of bioactive GA4, we examined GA4 levels in etiolated wild-type and cry1cry2 mutant seedlings exposed to blue light. As expected, the level of GA4 showed a statistically significant decline in the wild-type seedlings exposed to blue light for 4 h (Fig. 8A
). The blue light-induced decrease of GA4 was dependent on cryptochromes, because no statistically significant reduction of GA4 was detected in the cry1cry2 mutant (Fig. 8A). After a blue light treatment for 24 h, the level of GA4 in the etiolated wild-type seedlings exposed to blue light became indistinguishable from that in the etiolated seedlings (Fig. 8A), suggesting the cryptochrome-dependent blue light inhibition of GA4 accumulation was transient or rhythmic. The transient decrease of GA4 upon transfer from dark to blue light appears to correlate with the transient (or rhythmic) increase of GA2ox1 expression (Figs. 4 and 5) and transient (or rhythmic) decrease of GA20ox1 and GA3ox1 expression (Supplemental Figs. S1 and S2). A transient decline of bioactive GA accumulation in etiolated seedlings exposed to blue light has also been reported previously in pea (Foo et al., 2006
Finally, we compared GA4 levels in etiolated wild-type and cry1cry2 seedlings with those grown under continuous blue light. Interestingly, we detected no significant difference in GA4 level in those samples (Fig. 8B). However, because whole-shoot samples were used in our GA analyses, we cannot exclude the possibility that a localized or cell-specific change of GA4 content may occur in seedlings grown in continuous blue light.
In this study, we showed that increased expression of a GA2ox gene genetically suppressed the cry1cry2 mutant (Figs. 1 and 2). Although this observation by itself may have alternative interpretations, our follow-up photophysiological (Fig. 3) and gene expression studies (Figs. 4–5) demonstrate that cryptochromes are indeed positive regulators of GA2ox genes, especially GA2ox1. We showed that cryptochromes are required for the transient induction of GA2ox1 expression in etiolated seedlings exposed to blue light, for the sustained elevation of GA2ox1 expression in seedlings grown in continuous blue light, and for maintaining a high amplitude of the circadian rhythm of GA2ox1 expression in seedlings grown in long-day photoperiods. Consistent with the cryptochrome-mediated blue light stimulation of the expression of the GA catabolic gene GA2ox1, we also demonstrated that cryptochromes mediate blue light suppression of the expression of GA biosynthesis genes GA20ox1 and GA3ox1 (Fig. 7). We concluded that cryptochromes are positive regulators of GA2ox1 but negative regulators of GA20ox1 and GA3ox1. These cryptochrome-regulated gene expression changes may result in a blue light-dependent reduction of bioactive GAs. Given the well-established role of GA as a growth promoter, we propose that cryptochrome-regulated change in GA homeostasis is an important mechanism underlying blue light inhibition of hypocotyl elongation.
Consistent with this hypothesis, our analyses of GA4 content showed a cryptochrome-dependent transient reduction of GA4 in etiolated wild-type seedlings exposed to blue light (Fig. 8A). This result correlates with the transitory/rhythmic expression patterns of many GA metabolism/catabolism genes (Figs. 4 and 5; Supplemental Figs. S1 and S2). However, in contrast to the transient reduction in GA levels in deetiolating seedlings exposed to blue light, we did not detect a significant reduction of GA4 in the wild-type seedlings grown in continuous blue light (Fig. 8B) or white light (G.M. Symons and J.B. Reid, unpublished data). Neither did we detect a significant effect of the cry1cry2 mutation on the GA4 level in seedlings grown in continuous blue light (Fig. 8B). These results impose a significant challenge to the hypothesis that cryptochromes inhibits hypocotyl elongation solely by reducing GA4 levels. Similar observations have been previously reported in pea (O'Neill et al., 2000
However, we cannot escape the question why continuous blue light caused markedly changed mRNA expression of the GA2ox1, GA20ox1, and GA3ox1 genes (Figs. 4–7
Plant Materials
Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutants cry1, cry2, cry1cry2, phyA, and cry1cry2phyA used in this study are in the Columbia background as described previously (Mockler et al., 2003
To prepare an activation-tagging population, the cry1cry2 plants were transformed using the binary vector pSKI015 and Agrobacterium strain GV3101 as described (Weigel et al., 2000 To investigate the response of hypocotyl elongation to exogenous GA3, paclobutrazol, or ancymidol, seeds were surface sterilized for 30 s in 70% ethanol, placed in 0.1% Hgcl2 for 8 min, and rinsed five times with sterile, distilled water. About 100 seeds were placed in Murashige and Skoog agar growth medium. All hormone and inhibitor stocks were dissolved in 70% (V/V) ethanol at a concentration 500 times greater than the final concentration used. GA3 (Shanghai Solvent), GA4 (Sigma), and/or GA biosynthesis inhibitors ancymidol (Sigma) or paclobutrazol (J&K Chemical Ltd), were added into the Murashige and Skoog medium to the final concentrations indicated in the respective figures. Seeds were placed in the dark at 4°C for 4 d, exposed to white light for 12 h to enhance germination before transferring to temperature-controlled growth chambers, and grown under continuous blue, red, or FR light or in the dark at 22°C unless it is indicated otherwise (i.e. 26°C). For studies of light- or clock-regulated gene expression, about 300 sterile seeds were sown on Murashige and Skoog agar medium, cold treated at 4°C for 4 d, exposed to white light for 12 h, and grown in the dark for 6 d before transfer to various light treatments. Alternatively, seedlings were grown under white light (20 ± 3 µmol m–2 s–1) with long-day (16-h light/8-h dark) or short-day (8-h light/16-h dark) photoperiod for 10 d, and some petri dishes were transferred to continuous white light for 2 d. At the end of treatment, petri dishes were dipped in liquid nitrogen, and tissues (mostly shoot devoid of roots) were harvested by gentle scraping and stored at –80°C for RNA extraction.
In addition to light sources reported previously (Shalitin et al., 2002
Whole shoot (all tissues except root) samples were used to analyze the GA content. For inductive light experiments, seeds were sown thickly on pots filled with potting mix, covered with a fine mesh, and placed in weak fluorescent light at 4°C for 4 d. Plants were transferred to dark at 22°C for 6 d and then transferred to 60 µmol m–2 s–1 blue light at 22°C using light source described (Platten et al., 2005
For GA measurement, 3 to 4 g whole shoot samples were harvested, placed in ice-cold 80% methanol, homogenized, and the extract was filtered as described (Symons and Reid, 2003
Although the transient reduction in GA4 level may result from reduced conversion of the precursor GA9 to GA4 and/or increased inactivation of GA4 to the 2
The accession numbers of genes discussed in this report are: GA2ox1 (At1g78440), GA2ox2 (At1g30040), GA2ox3 (At2g34555, mRNA not detectable), GA2ox4 (At1g47990), GA2ox5 (pseudogene), GA2ox6 (At1g02400), GA2ox7 (At1g50960), GA2ox8 (At4g21200), GA20ox1 (At4g25420), GA20ox2 (At5g51580), GA20ox3 (At5g07200), GA3ox1 (At1g15550), and GA3ox2 (At1g80340).
Total RNA was isolated using Puprep RNAeasy mini kit (Ambiogen Life Tech Ltd). DNA-free RNA was obtained by RQ1 DNase I treatment according to the manufacturer's instructions (Promega). The amount of mRNA was analyzed using semiquantitative reverse transcription (RT)-PCR as decribed (Mockler et al., 2003 PCR was generally performed with a 5 min denaturation at 95°C followed by 24 to 35 cycles with each cycle composed of 95°C for 30 s, 55 to 60°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 30 s. PCR products were analyzed using 1.5% agarose gel eletrophoresis. RT-PCR reactions for each experiment were repeated at least three times, and the representative gel images were shown. The expression level of the ACTIN2 gene was used as the internal control to normalize and calculate relative expression levels of genes tested using ImageJ (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/). Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession numbers At1g78440, At1g30040, At2g34555, At1g47990, At1g02400, At1g50960, At4g21200, At4g25420, At5g51580, At5g07200, At1g15550, and At1g80340.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
The authors thank Detlef Weigel for providing the activation-tagging vectors, Professor L.N. Mander for the GA standards, and John Klejnot for critical reading of the manuscript. Received March 22, 2007; accepted June 13, 2007; published July 20, 2007.
1 This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (grant no. GM56265 to C.L.), Changjiang scholarship (to C.L.), and 985 higher education enhancement fund to Hunan University. J.L. and K.B. were partially supported by UC MEXUS-CONACYT fellowship from the University of California and the BOYSCAST award from India, respectively.
2 These authors contributed equally to the article.
3 Present address: Department of Plant Physiology, College of Agriculture, Vellayani, Thiruvananthapuram–695, India.
4 These authors contributed equally to the article. The authors 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) are: Xuanming Liu (xml05{at}126.com) and Chentao Lin (clin{at}mcdb.ucla.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.107.099838 * Corresponding author; e-mail clin{at}mcdb.ucla.edu.
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