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First published online January 18, 2008; 10.1104/pp.107.113555 Plant Physiology 146:1117-1127 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Light Induces Peroxisome Proliferation in Arabidopsis Seedlings through the Photoreceptor Phytochrome A, the Transcription Factor HY5 HOMOLOG, and the Peroxisomal Protein PEROXIN11b1,[C],[W],[OA]Department of Energy Plant Research Laboratory, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824
Peroxisomes are single membrane-delimited subcellular organelles that carry out numerous vital metabolic reactions in nearly all eukaryotes. Peroxisomes alter their morphology, abundance, and enzymatic constituents in response to environmental cues, yet little is known about the underlying mechanisms. In this work, we investigated the regulatory role of light in peroxisome proliferation in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). We provide evidence that light induces proliferation of peroxisomes in Arabidopsis seedlings and that the peroxisomal protein PEX11b plays an important role in mediating this process. The far-red light receptor phytochrome A (phyA) and the bZIP transcription factor HY5 HOMOLOG (HYH) are both required for the up-regulation of PEX11b in the light. We further demonstrate that the phyA and hyh mutants exhibit reduced peroxisome abundance, a phenotype that can be rescued by overexpressing PEX11b in these plants. The HYH protein is able to bind to the promoter of PEX11b, suggesting that the PEX11b gene is a direct target of HYH. We conclude that HYH and PEX11b constitute a novel branch of the phyA-mediated light signaling cascade, which promotes peroxisome proliferation during seedling photomorphogenesis.
Peroxisomes are ubiquitous eukaryotic organelles enclosed by a single membrane and devoid of DNA. They perform a variety of metabolic functions that differ depending on the species, cell type, developmental stage, and prevailing environmental conditions (Purdue and Lazarow, 2001
Although direct evidence has not been obtained from plant systems, cell biological and phylogenetic evidence suggested that peroxisomes can be formed de novo in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and have an ER origin in evolutionary history (Hoepfner et al., 2005
In addition to de novo formation from the ER, peroxisomes can multiply by division, constitutively or under induced conditions (the latter is also called proliferation). Yeast peroxisomes are believed to divide through a specific order of partially overlapping events, including organelle elongation, membrane constriction, and fission (Fagarasanu et al., 2007
Peroxisome abundance is strongly affected by external signals. Yeast peroxisomes proliferate in response to nutritional stimuli, such as oleate and methanol and nitrogen sources, to metabolize these substrates for carbon or nitrogen utilization (Gurvitz and Rottensteiner, 2006
We are particularly interested in the role of light, one of the major environmental cues, in peroxisome proliferation. Light affects many aspects of plant development, from seed germination, seedling photomorphogenesis, shade avoidance, photoperiodism, circadian clock entrainment, phototropism, chloroplast movement, stomata opening, to flowering (Jiao et al., 2007 Here, we investigated the impact of light on peroxisome proliferation in living plant cells and identified the underlying signal transduction pathway mediating this process. We present evidence that light promotes peroxisome proliferation, at least in part, by activating the expression of the peroxisomal gene PEX11b through the photoreceptor phytochrome A (phyA) and the bZIP transcription factor HYH.
Light Induces Peroxisome Proliferation
To address the question of whether light plays a role in peroxisome proliferation, we analyzed transgenic Arabidopsis seedlings constitutively expressing a fusion of the yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) with C-terminal PEROXISOME-TARGETING SIGNAL TYPE1 (PTS1; consisting of Ser-Lys-Leu). These YFP-PTS1 plants displayed fluorescently labeled peroxisomes as numerous punctate structures in virtually all cell types (Fan et al., 2005
The number of peroxisomes was quantified using ImageJ software, which has been used in many studies to quantitatively analyze the number and morphology of cells and subcellular structures (Soyombo et al., 2006
As a first step in understanding light induction of peroxisome proliferation at the mechanistic level, we focused our attention on the PEX11 proteins, the only Arabidopsis proteins shown to date to be specifically involved in peroxisome proliferation during dark-to-light transition. Overexpression of each of the five PEX11 isoforms led to peroxisome elongation and population increase to various degrees (Lingard and Trelease, 2006 We examined the kinetics of light induction of PEX11b by reverse transcription (RT)-PCR with total RNA isolated from 3-d dark-grown seedlings exposed to white light for different time periods. The expression level of PEX11b was very low in dark-grown seedlings, but increased steadily after exposure to light, reached its maximum at 4 h, and started to drop by 12 h (Fig. 2A ). The kinetics of PEX11b expression in light largely correlated with those of the light-dependent alterations in peroxisome morphology and abundance observed in the YFP-PTS1 plants (Fig. 1), implicating a specific role for PEX11b in light-mediated peroxisome elongation and population increase.
This correlation prompted us to examine loss-of-function PEX11b mutants for defects in peroxisome proliferation. To this end, we analyzed YFP-PTS1-expressing RNA interference (RNAi) plants generated in our previous study, each having a strongly reduced transcript level of PEX11a, PEX11b, or PEX11e (lines 1, 4, and 7 in Orth et al., 2007
For optimal growth and development, higher plants are able to monitor the wavelength, quantity, direction, and duration of light via several families of photoreceptors, transduce the signals through complex protein networks, including transcription cascades, and mount a wide array of responses (Chen et al., 2004
To identify components in the light signaling pathways responsible for activating PEX11b, we obtained null mutants of various light signaling genes and analyzed light-induced PEX11b expression in these lines using RNA-blot and RT-PCR analyses. First, we checked several photoreceptors known to perceive different wavelengths of light during seedling development, namely, phyA for far-red, phyB for red, and cryptochrome 1 (cry1) and cry2 for blue light (lowercase letters are used in the light research field to refer to the holoproteins; Chen et al., 2004
To identify phyA signaling intermediates involved in the regulation of PEX11b, we further examined null mutants of several well-characterized players in the phyA signaling pathway, including the novel nuclear protein FHY1, the homologous nuclear proteins FHY3 and FAR1, the GRAS family member PAT1, and the basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factor HFR1 (Hudson et al., 1999 Given that the light up-regulation of PEX11b was strongly decreased in phyA compared with other photoreceptor mutants, and that the light induction of PEX11b was relatively weak in hyh among all the downstream light signaling mutants tested, we further examined these two mutants for possible peroxisome phenotypes. To this end, the YFP-PTS1 marker gene was individually crossed into the phyA, cry1, and hyh mutant background; cry1 served as a control. Confocal microscopic analysis of the YFP-PTS1-expressing mutants revealed a drastic decrease in peroxisome abundance in phyA and hyh, but not in cry1, in both germinating seedlings (data not shown) and adult plants (Fig. 3, D–G). When quantitatively compared with the wild-type plants (13,850.4 ± 1,046.4/mm2), there was a 22.5-fold decrease in peroxisome abundance in phyA (615.5 ± 523.2/mm2; P < 0.001), a 7.5-fold decrease in hyh (1,846.7 ± 369.3/mm2; P < 0.001), but no significant reduction in cry1 (12,311.4 ± 2,154.5/mm2; P = 0.1047; Fig. 3H). These results led us to the conclusion that the far-red light receptor phyA and the bZIP transcription factor HYH may play direct roles in peroxisome proliferation through activating the expression of PEX11b.
We further tested the hypothesis that phyA and HYH promote peroxisome proliferation in light through PEX11b by overexpressing the PEX11b gene in the phyA and hyh mutants to see whether the peroxisomal phenotype in these mutants could be rescued. We conducted an in vivo transient assay in the leaves of the YFP-PTS1-expressing phyA and hyh plants by introducing a PEX11b overexpression construct via leaf Agrobacterium infiltration. Two days postinoculation, we observed many elongated peroxisomes, as well as an increase in the total number of peroxisomes in the phyA and hyh mutants overexpressing PEX11b; this phenotype is similar to what we observed previously in wild-type plants overexpressing PEX11b (Orth et al., 2007
HYH Interacts with the Promoter of PEX11b
HYH and its homolog, HY5, are transcription factors that contain a bZIP DNA-binding domain and play redundant, as well as specific, roles in gene regulation during photomorphogenesis (Oyama et al., 1997
The promoters of light-inducible genes in plants harbor various types of cis-elements, collectively named light-response elements (LREs), which are bound by transcription factors and mediate light-dependent gene activation (Ueda et al., 1989
Considering that the PEX11b promoter is laden with LREs commonly found in light-responsive promoters, it is possible that HY5 and HYH may differ in their binding affinity to the PEX11b promoter. To test this hypothesis, we performed an electrophoretic mobility shift assay. A DNA fragment containing 200 bp of the PEX11b promoter immediately upstream of the TSS was used as a probe to determine whether it could be bound by purified HYH-His fusion protein. As shown in Figure 5A
, we detected binding of HYH-His with the DNA probe, which was competed away efficiently with 50 and 100 molar excess unradiolabeled probes. Despite the fact that HYH and HY5 share 88.5% amino acid identity in the DNA-binding domain (Holm et al., 2002
To ensure that the recombinant protein HY5-His used in our study was functional in DNA binding, we subsequently tested whether HY5-His was able to bind G box, an LRE absent from the 200-bp promoter of the PEX11b gene, but was shown previously to be bound by both HY5 and HYH (Holm et al., 2002 Based on these data, we conclude that HYH is able to bind specifically to the PEX11b promoter and therefore is most likely a direct transcription activator of PEX11b in the light.
Dark-germinated Arabidopsis seedlings contain maximal activity of the glyoxylate cycle enzyme isocitrate lyase at 3 d, which gradually declines afterward (P. Yang and J. Hu, unpublished data). Consistent with this finding, we found more (basal) elongated peroxisomes in the dark-grown cotyledon cells than in adult tissue (observed in our previous studies, such as Fan et al. [2005]
Given their sessile nature, plants have evolved a complex web of signaling events to perceive and respond to environmental cues, such as light (Chen et al., 2004
In addition to the identification of PEX11b as one of the late up-regulated genes by phyA in previous microarray studies (Tepperman et al., 2001
A previous kinetic study of the action of phyA and phyB showed that phyA was responsible for initiating hypocotyl growth inhibition at the onset of continuous red light. This role of phyA started to decrease after 3 h of irradiation, at which point the phyA protein began to be degraded and the contribution of phyB to hypocotyl inhibition became predominant (Parks and Spalding, 1999
As a photoreceptor primarily perceiving far-red light, the phyA protein is mainly cytoplasmic in the dark and translocates into the nucleus after being activated by light, where it interacts with various transcriptional factors to regulate the transcription of far-red light-responsive genes (Wang and Deng, 2003
HY5 and HYH are master regulators in the light signaling transcription cascades in photomorphogenesis, affecting the expression of numerous downstream genes (Oyama et al., 1997
PEX11 proteins from various organisms play mostly conserved roles in promoting peroxisome elongation and population increase (Thoms and Erdmann, 2005
Plant Growth, Light Conditions, and Genetic Crosses
The wild-type Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants used in this study were from the Columbia-0 (Col-0) ecotype. The phyA (SALK_014575), hfr1 (SALK_037727), pat1 (SALK_064220), far1 (SALK_031652), fhy1 (SALK_130614), fhy3 (SALK_002711), and cry2-1 (Mockler et al., 2003 Seeds were surface sterilized with 20% commercial bleach and 0.025% Triton X-100, washed five times with sterile water, plated on 0.5x Murashige and Skoog medium solidified with 0.6% phytagar, stratified at 4°C for 2 d, and subject to 1-h white light treatment to induce synchronous germination. Plates were then kept for 3 d in the dark at 21°C and subsequently exposed to white (70 µmol m–2 s–1), far-red (2 µmol m–2 s–1), red (90 µmol m–2 s–1), or blue (30 µmol m–2 s–1) light for the designated length of time. After the seedling stage, plants were transferred to soil and grown in growth chambers at 21°C with 100 µmol m–2 s–1 white-light conditions and 16/8-h photoperiod. Genetic crosses were made between YFP-PTS1 plants and phyA, cry1, or hyh. F3 plants homozygous for YFP-PTS1 and the mutant alleles were selected after confirmation by fluorescence microscopy and RT-PCR analysis with gene-specific primers.
Databases used in this study include PLACE (http://www.dna.affrc.go.jp/PLACE) and PlantCARE (http://bioinformatics.psb.ugent.be/webtools/plantcare/html).
Epifluorescence microscopy was performed with an Axio Imager M1 microscope (Carl Zeiss) for visualization of the YFP-PTS1 protein (excitation 500 ± 12 nm; emission 542 ± 13.5 nm). A confocal laser-scanning microscope (Zeiss LSM 510 META) was also used to obtain images of YFP-PTS1 proteins. A 488-nm argon ion laser was used for excitation of YFP and chlorophyll. Emission filters of 505- to 530-nm bandpass and 650-nm longpass were used for YFP and chlorophyll, respectively. Images were acquired at 63x.
Peroxisome quantification data were obtained from microscopic images analyzed by ImageJ software using the procedure described by Shi et al. (2007)
Total RNA was isolated from 3-d dark-grown seedlings using the Qiagen RNeasy plant mini prep kit. Total RNA (15 µg) was loaded onto the gel and blotted to nylon membranes. The PEX11b probe was derived from a 0.7-kb fragment of the cDNA clone (Orth et al., 2007 For RT-PCR analysis, total RNA was reverse transcribed with the Omniscript RT kit (Qiagen). PEX11b-specific primers At3g47430F (5'-CAGTGATCCGTTTCTTGGCG-3') and At3g47430R (5'-GGCCAGTTCCTATACCAACC-3') were used to amplify a 0.43-kb product from PEX11b. UBQ10-1 (5'-TCAATTCTCTCTACCGTGATCAAGATGCA-3') and UBQ10-2 (5'-GGTGTCAGAACTCTCCACCTCAAGAGTA-3') from the UBQ10 gene (At4g05320) were used to amplify a cDNA product (approximately 320 bp) as a loading control. For PEX11b and UBQ10 amplification, PCR was performed with the following conditions: 94°C for 3 min, 30 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 57°C for 30 s, 72°C for 30 s, and a final extension at 72°C for 4 min.
P35S:PEX11b, a PEX11b overexpression construct in the pCAMBIA vector (Orth et al., 2007 Specific oligonucleotides were synthesized for amplification of the following genes: HYH N terminus, 5'-CACGCCATGGGCATGTCTCTCCAACGACC-3' and HYH C terminus, 5''-ATAAGAATGCGGCCGCGTGATTGTCATCAGTTTTAGG-3' for HYH (At3g17609); HY5 N terminus, 5'-CATGCCATGGGCATGCAGGAACAAGCGAC-3' and HY5 C terminus, 5'-CCGCTCGAGAAGGCTTGCATCAGCATTAG-3' for HY5 (At5g11260). Using these primer pairs, complete coding regions of HYH and HY5 were PCR amplified with the pfu turbo enzyme (Stratagene) using Arabidopsis total cDNA from light-grown seedlings as template. The products were separately cloned into NcoI and NotI sites of the bacterial pET-28a expression vector (Novagen). Recombinant full-length HYH and HY5 proteins fused to 6x-His in the pET28a+ vector (Novagen) were expressed in bacteria and purified with nickel nitilotriacetic acid agarose (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's protocol.
The Agrobacterium-mediated transient expression assay was performed as described in Wieland et al. (2006)
The 200-bp promoter of PEX11b was PCR amplified from genomic DNA using the primer pair forward (5'-CCGCTCGAGGCACAAATTCTCGGATTTC-3') and reverse (5'-GCTCTTGTTGTCTCATGTTTTGATATTCAAGCTTGGG-3'). The amplified product was digested with HindIII for 2 h, gel purified, and used for labeling with 32P
For binding assay with the G box, oligonucleotides were synthesized for the G-box sense strand, 5'-CCGCTCGAGAATTATCTTCCACGTGGCATTATTCC-3', and antisense strand, 5'- GGAATAATGCCACGTGGAAGATAATTCTCGAGCGG-3', with an XhoI site at the 5' end of each oligonucleotide. Equal molar quantities of the two strands were annealed by incubating sequentially at 95°C for 30 s, 72°C for 2 min, 37°C for 2 min, and, finally, 25°C for 2 min. Annealed oligonucleotides were then digested overnight with XhoI, extracted with phenol-chloroform, and ethanol precipitated. The precipitated pellet was then washed with 70% ethanol, dried, resuspended in Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), and used for labeling with 32P
The DNA-binding assays were performed as described by Yadav et al. (2002) Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession numbers NP_190327 (PEX11b), NP_850605 (HYH), and NP_568246 (HY5).
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We would like to express our thanks to Dr. Sigrun Reumann, Dr. Meng Chen, Navneet Kaur, and Dr. Vandana Yadav for comments on the manuscript; Dr. Chunjie Tian for help with statistical analysis; the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center for phyA, fhy1, fhy3, far1, pat1, hfr1, cca1, and cry1 seeds; Dr. Magnus Holm for hyh, hy5, and cry2 seeds; and Karen Bird and Marlene Cameron for editorial and graphic assistance. Received November 20, 2007; accepted January 10, 2008; published January 18, 2008.
1 This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (grant to J.H.). 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: Jianping Hu (huji{at}msu.edu).
[C] Some figures in this article are displayed in color online but in black and white in the print edition.
[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.107.113555 * Corresponding author; e-mail huji{at}msu.edu.
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