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First published online November 16, 2007; 10.1104/pp.107.106831 Plant Physiology 146:310-320 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Physiological Roles of the β-Substituted Alanine Synthase Gene Family in Arabidopsis1,[W],[OA]Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Chiba University, Chiba 263–8522, Japan (M.W., K.S.); RIKEN Plant Science Center, Yokohama 230–0045, Japan (M.K., A.O., A.F., K.S.); and Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Tokushima Bunri University, Tokushima 770–8514, Japan (M.N.)
The β-substituted alanine (Ala) synthase (Bsas) family in the large superfamily of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-dependent enzymes comprises cysteine (Cys) synthase (CSase) [O-acetyl-serine (thiol) lyase] and β-cyano-Ala synthase (CASase) in plants. Nine genomic sequences encode putative Bsas proteins in Arabidopsis thaliana. The physiological roles of these Bsas isoforms in vivo were investigated by the characterization of T-DNA insertion mutants. Analyses of gene expression, activities of CSase and CASase, and levels of Cys and glutathione in the bsas mutants indicated that cytosolic Bsas1;1, plastidic Bsas2;1, and mitochondrial Bsas2;2 play major roles in Cys biosynthesis. Cytosolic Bsas1;1 has the most dominant contribution both in leaf and root, and mitochondrial Bsas2;2 plays a significant role in root. Mitochondrial Bsas3;1 is a genuine CASase. Nontargeted metabolome analyses of knockout mutants were carried out by a combination of gas chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry and capillary electrophoresis time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The level of -glutamyl-β-cyano-Ala decreased in the mutant bsas3;1, indicating the crucial role of Bsas3;1 in β-cyano-Ala metabolism in vivo.
Sulfur is an essential macronutrient that is required for the growth of plants. Assimilation of sulfur in plants depends mostly upon Cys formation from the sulfate ion. Cys is the first organic precursor in the formation of sulfur-containing metabolites such as Met and glutathione (GSH; Leustek and Saito, 1999 -glutamyl-β-cyano-Ala in cyanogenic plants such as Vicia sativa (Ressler et al., 1963
Nine putative Bsas genes have been identified in whole-genome sequencing of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; Arabidopsis Genome Initiative, 2000
Although these biochemical characterizations and subcellular localization studies were relatively well conducted, the actual roles of Bsas genes in vivo are not necessarily clear. Questions such as whether each Bsas isoform is redundant or has a specific function in vivo and to what extent each Bsas isoform contributes to the synthesis of Cys and β-cyano-Ala remain unresolved. It is therefore important to conduct in vivo analysis to reveal the actual function of individual Bsas isoforms. The available sequence information of the entire Arabidopsis genome and rich genetic resources make it possible to provide genetic evidence for the roles of Bsas genes in vivo. This article reports the analysis of T-DNA-inserted knockout mutants of Arabidopsis for their gene expression, enzyme activities, and metabolite profiles. Furthermore, nontargeted metabolite profiles of bsas mutants revealed that Arabidopsis can accumulate -glutamyl-β-cyano-Ala as a consequence of the CASase action of Bsas3;1. Through the conjunctive study of genetic analysis of knockout mutants and previously reported biochemical analysis of recombinant proteins, the physiological function of these Bsas genes in vivo is clarified.
Expression Analysis Indicates That Four Bsas Genes Are Presumed to Play Major Roles
In Arabidopsis, there are nine genes encoding putative Bsas (Arabidopsis Genome Initiative, 2000
Knockout Mutants Showed No Visible Phenotypic Changes
On searching the Salk Institute Insertional Mutation Database, T-DNA insertion mutants (Alonso et al., 2003
Bsas1;1, Bsas2;1, and Bsas2;2 Predominantly Contribute to Cellular CSase Activity
CSase activity was determined in crude protein extracts of the bsas mutants in leaves (Fig. 3A
) and in roots (Fig. 3B) and compared with the wild type. Greater reductions in CSase activity were observed in bsas1;1, decreasing to 50% in leaf and 24% in root as compared to that in the wild type. In bsas2;1, CSase activity decreased to 75% in leaf and 80% in root. In bsas2;2, CSase activity did not change in leaf, but decreased to 82% in root. Activities in other bsas mutants did not change significantly as compared with those in the wild type. Cytosolic Bsas1;1, plastidic Bsas2;1, and mitochondrial Bsas2;2, which were considered to be predominant CSases from biochemical analysis (Hell et al., 1994
Bsas3;1 Plays a Major Role as CASase
CASase activity was determined in crude protein extracts of the bsas mutants from leaves (Fig. 4A
) and from roots (Fig. 4B). Activity in the bsas3;1 mutant decreased dramatically to 36% in leaf and 45% in root as compared to those in the wild type. This result suggests that the mitochondrial Bsas3;1, which was considered to be a genuine CASase judging by the substrate specificity of recombinant protein (Hatzfeld et al., 2000
Cellular Thiol Contents Are Affected by the Knockout of Bsas1;1 and Bsas2;2 To determine whether Cys and GSH levels were altered in bsas mutants, thiol levels were measured in leaves and roots (Fig. 5 ). In leaf, thiol levels in bsas1;1 alone were significantly lower compared with the wild type: Cys content was down to 72% and GSH content was down to 83%. In root, significant reductions in thiol levels were observed in bsas1;1 and bsas2;2: Cys and GSH contents were down to 72% and 77% in bsas1;1 and 83% and 85% in bsas2;2, respectively. These results suggest that cytosolic Bsas1;1, the gene expression and the CSase activity of which were high in both leaf and root, was mainly responsible for Cys biosynthesis. The role of mitochondrial Bsas2;2 is presumably more important in the root. The high level of Bsas2;2 expression and reduction of CSase activity in bsas2;2 observed in root (Figs. 1 and 3) support this hypothesis.
Nontargeted Metabolome Analysis Pinpointed the Lack of Accumulation of -Glutamyl-β-Cyano-Ala in the bsas3;1 MutantTo investigate the whole metabolic change in each bsas mutant, we performed nontargeted gas chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GC-TOF/MS) and capillary electrophoresis time-of-flight mass spectrometry (CE-TOF/MS) analyses in the leaves of mutant plants. Nontargeted metabolome analysis may lead to the identification of specific metabolites whose levels are altered by knockout genes of unknown functions and may present an overview of the global perturbation of cellular metabolism. Principal component analysis generated from GC-TOF/MS and CE-TOF/MS data matrices showed no obvious differences between the wild-type and all bsas mutant plants (Supplemental Fig. S3). This result indicates that the changes in whole-metabolite accumulation for all bsas mutants were quite small.
To detect differentially accumulated metabolites, metabolite peak areas were compared in the wild type and in each bsas mutant (Fig. 6A
). No significant change in β-cyano-Ala contents, which accumulated in trace amounts even in wild-type plants, was observed between the bsas mutants and the wild type despite significant changes in CAS activity in bsas1;1 and bsas3;1. In bsas3;1, however, an unknown peak observed at mass-to-charge ratio (m/z) 244.0924 by CE-TOF/MS was dramatically decreased as compared with that in the wild type (Fig. 6B). This m/z (244.0924) matched the theoretical m/z of
Upon addition of β-cyano-Ala to the growth medium, accumulation of -glutamyl-β-cyano-Ala increased in the bsas3;1 mutant plant to levels similar to those found in the wild-type plant undergoing the same treatment (Fig. 7
). This result suggests that -glutamyl-β-cyano-Ala was a metabolite derived from β-cyano-Ala. These results indicate that Arabidopsis metabolizes cyanide to β-cyano-Ala and eventually to -glutamyl-β-cyano-Ala as the presumable storage form, and Bsas3;1 is primarily responsible for the synthesis of β-cyano-Ala and, subsequently, -glutamyl-β-cyano-Ala.
Physiological Roles of Bsas Isoforms by in Vivo Experiments
Analyses of Bsas gene expression and characterization of bsas mutants reveals that cytosolic Bsas1;1, plastidic Bsas2;1, and mitochondrial Bsas2;2 are genuine CSases and mitochondrial Bsas3;1 is a true CASase in Arabidopsis (Fig. 8A
). The cytosolic Bsas1;1 is primarily responsible for the synthesis of Cys in leaf and root. The role of mitochondrial Bsas2;2 is more important in root than in leaf. Different quantities of mitochondrial Bsas2;2 in photosynthetic leaf and nonphotosynthetic root suggest that these two tissues have different requirements for cellular Cys. In bsas4;1, bsas4;2, bsas4;3, and bsas5;1, no obvious changes were observed in CSase activity, CAS activity, thiol contents, and
The pioneer study (Riemenschneider et al., 2005
The Cys synthetic system comprising CSase and SATase is localized in all cellular compartments where protein synthesis occurs (Lunn et al., 1990
Cytosolic Bsas1;1 was most abundant in the leaf and root in Arabidopsis (Figs. 1 and 3). The importance of the cytosolic CSase isoform under cadmium stress has also been reported in Arabidopsis (Dominguez-Solis et al., 2001
It was reported that CSase and CASase could carry out both reactions with different substrate affinities and efficiency (Ikegami et al., 1993
CASase is presumed to be involved in cyanide detoxification and amino acid metabolism (Blumenthal et al., 1968
This knowledge on cyanide metabolism in Arabidopsis raises the question of the significance of this metabolic process. Thus far, CASase has been considered to detoxify cyanide produced during ethylene production. However, its role in cyanide detoxification remains to be clarified (Meyer et al., 2003
The bsas3;1 mutant could grow similarly to wild-type plants despite its low
Plant Materials and Growth Conditions
Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana ecotype Col-0) plants were used as the wild type in this study. Plants were cultured on germination medium (GM)-agar medium containing 1% Suc (Valvekens et al., 1988
The T-DNA-inserted mutants of Arabidopsis line 072213 (bsas1;1), line 021183 (bsas2;1), line 000860 (bsas2;2), line 022479 (bsas3;1), line 097875 (bsas4;1), line 092696 (bsas4;2), line 103855 (bsas4;3), and line 034133 (bsas5;1) were obtained from the Salk Institute. Homozygous mutants were identified by following the protocol described at the Salk Insertional Mutant Database by using a PCR method (Alonso et al., 2003
Total RNA of the wild type and each bsas mutant was extracted with the RNeasy plant mini kit (Qiagen), and cDNA was synthesized with SuperScript II RNase H– reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen) following the manufacturer's instructions. One hundred nanograms of cDNA were used for quantitative real-time PCR analysis. The primer list for real-time PCR is provided in detail in Supplemental Table S2. SYBR green real-time PCR master mix (Toyobo) was used for amplification according to the protocols provided by the supplier. RT-PCR analysis was standardized based on equal quantities of cDNA samples and the respective plasmid DNA or PCR product of each gene was used to draw a standard curve. Primers were designed for Actin2, as described by Himanen et al. (2002)
The enzymatic activity of CSase was determined in the reaction mixture (50 µL) containing 50 mM potassium phosphate (pH 8.0), 5 mM Na2S, and 12.5 mM OAS. The reaction was performed at 30°C for 10 min and terminated by the addition of 10 µL of 7.5% (w/v) TCA. The Cys produced was quantified by spectrophotometry using the acid-ninhydrin method at 560 nm (Gaitonde, 1967
Quantitative analyses of reduced forms of Cys and GSH were performed by a combination of monobromobimane fluorescent labeling and HPLC (Anderson, 1985
Sixteen plants were planted on a single plate separated into fourths to minimize the differences in growth conditions. Four wild-type plants were planted on one-fourth, and four bsas mutant plants were planted on each of the remaining fourths. Five plates were replicated for each bsas mutant. Each sample was extracted with a concentration of 25 mg fresh weight of tissues per microliter of the extraction medium (methanol:chloroform:water [3:1:1; v/v/v]) by using a Retsh mixer mill MM 310 at a frequency of 30 Hz–1 for 3 min at 4°C. After centrifugation for 5 min at 15,100g, 400 µL of the supernatant of each plate were put together in accordance with each section of fourths. Four hundred microliters of the 2-mL supernatant were used for GC-TOF/MS analysis, and another 400 µL were used for CE-TOF/MS analysis.
The analysis of metabolites by GC-TOF/MS, including the derivatization step and the processing of MS data, was performed as described elsewhere (Kusano et al., 2007a
Analysis of metabolites by CE-TOF/MS was performed using an Agilent CE capillary electrophoresis system (Agilent Technologies), an Agilent G3250AA LC/MSD TOF system (Agilent Technologies), an Agilent 1100 series binary HPLC pump, and the Agilent G1603A CE-MS adapter and Agilent G1607A CE-ESI-MS sprayer kit. Agilent G2201AA ChemStation software for CE and Analyst QS software for TOF/MS were used. For cationic compounds, separations were carried out using a fused silica capillary (50 µm i.d. x 100 cm total length) filled with 1 M formic acid as the electrolyte. The sample solutions were injected at 50 mbar for 15 s (15 nL). Prior to each run, the capillary was flushed with electrolyte for 5 min. The applied voltage was set at 30 kV. The capillary temperature was maintained at 20°C, and the sample tray was cooled below 4°C. Fifty percent (v/v) methanol-water containing 0.5 µM reserpine was delivered as the sheath liquid at 10 µL min–1. ESI-TOF/MS was conducted in the positive ion mode and the capillary voltage was set at 4 kV. A flow rate of heated dry nitrogen gas (heater temperature 300°C) was maintained at 10 psig. In TOF/MS, the fragmentor, skimmer, and Oct RFV voltage were set at 110, 50, and 160 V, respectively. In acquiring a fragment ion mass spectrum, the fragmentor voltage was increased to 210 V. Automatic recalibration of each acquired spectrum was performed using reference masses of reference standards. The methanol dimer ion ([2M + H]+; m/z 65.0597) and reserpine ([M + H]+; m/z 609.2806) provided the lock mass for exact mass measurements. Exact mass data were acquired at a rate of 1.5 cycles s–1 over a 50 to 1,000 m/z range. Analysis of anionic compounds and nucleotides was carried out as described previously (Soga et al., 2002a
The obtained data matrix (observations: samples, variables: 337 peaks, including peaks with mass spectral tags [137 annotated peaks from GC-TOF/MS plus 200 annotated or stably appearing peaks from CE-TOF/MS analysis; Supplemental Tables S4 and S5]) was used for statistical analysis. For statistical multivariate analysis, principal component analysis was performed with SIMCA-P 11.0 software, using log10-transformed and autoscaled data (Umetrics AB). Simple comparisons of means of obtained peak areas were performed by Welch's t test. A difference of P < 0.05 was considered to be significant. In terms of minimizing the effect of zero substitution, we scaled all normalized peak areas by 10,000 and then added 1 uniformly.
Rosette leaves were extracted twice in 10 volumes (fresh-weight basis) of 80% ethanol at 50°C. The supernatant was evaporated and resuspended in 5 volumes (fresh-weight basis) of water for HPLC analysis.
Wild type and bsas3;1 were grown for 3 weeks on GM-agar medium. Plants were transferred to GM-agar medium or medium containing β-cyano-Ala (100 µM and 1 mM) and cultured for 3 d. Leaves were harvested and
Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession numbers NM_117574 (Bsas1;1), NM_113145 (Bsas1;2), NM_129937 (Bsas2;1), NM_115838 (Bsas2;2), NM_116009 (Bsas3;1), NM_122685 (Bsas4;1), NM_111366 (Bsas4;2), NM_122686 (Bsas4;3), NM_111234 (Bsas5;1), NM_112764 (Actin2), NM_121982 (
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Dr. Pär Jonsson (Umeå University, Sweden) and Dr. Thomas Moritz (Umeå Plant Science Centre, Sweden) for providing the scripts for processing of GC-TOF/MS data; Mr. Makoto Kobayashi and Ms. Naomi Hayashi (RIKEN Plant Science Center, Japan) for excellent technical support on GC-TOF/MS analysis; and Mr. Ryo Nakabayashi (Chiba University, Japan) for identification of -glutamyl-β-cyano-Ala. Received August 3, 2007; accepted November 2, 2007; published November 16, 2007.
1 This work was supported in part by grants-in-aid from the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture, Sports and Technology, Japan. 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: Kazuki Saito (ksaito{at}faculty.chiba-u.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.107.106831 * Corresponding author; e-mail ksaito{at}faculty.chiba-u.jp.
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