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First published online May 8, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.118224 Plant Physiology 147:1034-1045 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Inactive Methyl Indole-3-Acetic Acid Ester Can Be Hydrolyzed and Activated by Several Esterases Belonging to the AtMES Esterase Family of Arabidopsis1,[W],[OA]Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109–1048 (Y.Y., R.X., C.M., E.P.); and Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research, Ithaca, New York 14853 (A.C.V., D.F.K.)
The plant hormone auxin (indole-3-acetic acid [IAA]) is found both free and conjugated to a variety of carbohydrates, amino acids, and peptides. We have recently shown that IAA could be converted to its methyl ester (MeIAA) by the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) enzyme IAA carboxyl methyltransferase 1. However, the presence and function of MeIAA in vivo remains unclear. Recently, it has been shown that the tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) protein SABP2 (salicylic acid binding protein 2) hydrolyzes methyl salicylate to salicylic acid. There are 20 homologs of SABP2 in the genome of Arabidopsis, which we have named AtMES (for methyl esterases). We tested 15 of the proteins encoded by these genes in biochemical assays with various substrates and identified several candidate MeIAA esterases that could hydrolyze MeIAA. MeIAA, like IAA, exerts inhibitory activity on the growth of wild-type roots when applied exogenously. However, the roots of Arabidopsis plants carrying T-DNA insertions in the putative MeIAA esterase gene AtMES17 (At3g10870) displayed significantly decreased sensitivity to MeIAA compared with wild-type roots while remaining as sensitive to free IAA as wild-type roots. Incubating seedlings in the presence of [14C]MeIAA for 30 min revealed that mes17 mutants hydrolyzed only 40% of the [14C]MeIAA taken up by plants, whereas wild-type plants hydrolyzed 100% of absorbed [14C]MeIAA. Roots of Arabidopsis plants overexpressing AtMES17 showed increased sensitivity to MeIAA but not to IAA. Additionally, mes17 plants have longer hypocotyls and display increased expression of the auxin-responsive DR5:β-glucuronidase reporter gene, suggesting a perturbation in IAA homeostasis and/or transport. mes17-1/axr1-3 double mutant plants have the same phenotype as axr1-3, suggesting MES17 acts upstream of AXR1. The protein encoded by AtMES17 had a Km value of 13 µM and a Kcat value of 0.18 s–1 for MeIAA. AtMES17 was expressed at the highest levels in shoot apex, stem, and root of Arabidopsis. Our results demonstrate that MeIAA is an inactive form of IAA, and the manifestations of MeIAA in vivo activity are due to the action of free IAA that is generated from MeIAA upon hydrolysis by one or more plant esterases.
Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), also known as auxin, is a plant hormone involved in many aspects of plant growth and development, such as embryogenesis, vascular differentiation, fruit set and development, and senescence (Woodward and Bartel, 2005
IAA is known to be conjugated to sugars, amino acids, and peptides, and some enzymes that catalyze these conjugating reactions have been characterized (Jackson et al., 2001
A family of hydrolases that acts on IAA-amino acid conjugates and releases IAA from some IAA-amino acid conjugates has been identified in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; LeClere et al., 2002
We have recently discovered an IAA carboxy methyltransferase (IAMT1) in Arabidopsis and several other species that can methylate IAA to form the ester methyl indole-3-acetate (MeIAA; Zubieta et al., 2003
Carboxylesterases catalyze the hydrolysis of a C-O ester linkage in a wide range of compounds, and structural analyses have shown that such enzymes are all members of the
Recently, we have demonstrated that a tobacco protein required for development of systemic acquired resistance, SABP2 (originally identified as salicylic acid binding protein 2), is a methyl salicylate (MeSA) esterase (Kumar and Klessig, 2003 Here, we show that some of the proteins in this group of putative Arabidopsis methylesterases, which we have named MES (for methyl esterases), are able to hydrolyze MeIAA. Analysis of mutants with T-DNA insertions in the AtMES genes indicates that at least one AtMES (AtMES17) is capable of hydrolyzing MeIAA in vivo. We used this mutant to demonstrate that MeIAA itself is an inactive form of IAA.
The Arabidopsis Genome Has 20 MES Genes
A search of the Arabidopsis genome for genes encoding proteins with the highest identity to tobacco SABP2 (MeSA esterase), tomato MJE, and R. serpentina PNAE identified 20 genes forming a close clade within the
The sequence alignment of AtMES1 to AtMES20 revealed that the catalytic triad Ser-His-Asp, a characteristic feature of the /β hydrolase fold family, is conserved in 15 of these proteins (Fig. 2
). In the protein sequences of AtMES11, AtMES13, and AtMES15, the conserved Ser in the catalytic triad is replaced by Asp, a substitution previously found in active /β hydrolases in animals (Holmquist, 2000
Substrate Specificities of 15 MES Esterases To examine whether the AtMES genes encode functional esterases, we obtained full-length cDNAs of 15 AtMES genes, expressed the cDNAs in Escherichia coli, and tested the recombinant proteins for esterase activity. Because AtMES19 and AtMES20 were likely to be pseudogenes, they were not tested. Three other AtMES proteins, AtMES6, AtMES13, and AtMES15, were also not tested, because we were not able to obtain full-length cDNAs.
When the 15 AtMES esterases were tested with the chymotryptic synthetic substrate p-nitrophenyl acetate (PNPA), AtMES1, AtMES2, AtMES3, AtMES4, AtMES7, AtMES8, AtMES9, AtMES16, and AtMES17 showed activity (Table I). Because the AtMES proteins are homologs of SABP2 and MJE, esterases that hydrolyze the methylated plant hormones MeSA and MeJA, respectively, we further examined whether the AtMES proteins are active with known methylated plant hormones, including MeIAA, MeSA, MeJA, MeGA4, and MeGA9 (Shulaev et al., 1997 Among the 15 esterases tested, AtMES1, AtMES2, AtMES3, AtMES7, AtMES9, AtMES16, AtMES17, and AtMES18 displayed hydrolase activity with MeIAA, while AtMES4, AtMES5, AtMES8, AtMES10, AtMES11, AtMES12, and AtMES14 could not hydrolyze MeIAA (Table I). In addition, AtMES1, AtMES2, AtMES4, AtMES7, and AtMES9 displayed MeSA hydrolase activity, while AtMES1, AtMES2, AtMES3, AtMES9, AtMES10, and AtMES16 were active with MeJA. None of the 15 AtMES esterases was active with MeGA4 or MeGA9. AtMES5, AtMES8, AtMES11, AtMES12, and AtMES14 were not active with any of these methylated hormones.
Because AtMES1, AtMES2, AtMES3, AtMES7, AtMES9, AtMES16, AtMES17, and AtMES18 could all hydrolyze MeIAA in vitro, we examined whether they possess MeIAA hydrolase activity in vivo. It has been previously shown that both IAA and MeIAA inhibit root growth in wild-type Arabidopsis seedlings when applied exogenously (Zimmerman and Hitchcock, 1937 T-DNA insertional mutants of AtMES1, AtMES9, AtMES16, and AtMES17 were obtained as described in "Materials and Methods," including two independent mutant lines each for both AtMES16 and AtMES17. There was no T-DNA insertional mutant of AtMES3 reported, and the several T-DNA insertions reported for AtMES2, AtMES7, and AtMES18 turned out upon further examination (described in "Materials and Methods") not to abolish gene transcriptions (data not shown). All mutant lines as well as wild-type Arabidopsis plants were next grown on one-half-strength Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium containing various concentrations of MeIAA or no MeIAA, and their root lengths were measured after 7 d. While in unsupplemented medium, root length of an AtMES17 T-DNA mutant mes17-1 (SALK_092550) seedlings were similar to that of wild type; in the presence of MeIAA concentrations ranging from 0.01 to 1 µM, root length of mutant seedlings was consistently longer than the root length of wild-type seedlings (Fig. 3B ). For example, at 0.5 µM MeIAA, a concentration that inhibits the root growth of wild-type Arabidopsis by 85% on average, wild-type seedlings had an average root length of 4.1 mm and mes17-1 plants had an average root length of 12 mm, 3 times as long as that of the wild type (Fig. 3, A and B). Similar results were obtained with a second independent AtMES17 T-DNA mutant, mes17-2 (SAIL-503-c03; data not shown). The root lengths of AtMES1, AtMES9, and AtMES16 mutant lines grown on MeIAA were the same as wild type. All mutant plants, including the mes17-1 and mes17-2, when grown on one-half-strength MS medium containing different concentrations of IAA, showed no statistically significant difference in root length from that of wild-type plants, although the mes17 mutants appeared to have a slightly diminished response to IAA (Fig. 3, C and D).
To examine directly the fate of exogenously added MeIAA in wild-type and Atmes17 mutant plants, we soaked plants in a 0.5 µM solution of [14C]MeIAA and examined the total amount of [14C]label taken up by the plant and the relative amounts of [14C]MeIAA remaining in the plant tissues. After 30 min of incubation, wild-type plants had no [14C]MeIAA left, but Atmes17-1 plants still contained 58.5% ± 16.5% of the [14C]label taken up in the form of MeIAA (Fig. 4 ).
We also obtained several lines that overexpress AtMES17 under the control of the 35S promoter and tested them for sensitivity to MeIAA and IAA treatments. When AtMES17-overexpressing plants of three independent lines were grown in the presence of 0.5 µM MeIAA for 7 d, their root growth was more severely inhibited than that of wild-type seedlings (see Fig. 5A for one of the lines). However, both types of seedlings had a similar root length in the presence of 0.5 µM IAA (Fig. 5B), suggesting that the increased root inhibition of MeIAA on MES17-overexpressing plants was caused by increased auxin concentration derived from increased rate of MeIAA hydrolysis.
Atmes17 Null Mutants Have a Longer Hypocotyl We observed that mes17-1 mutant plants grown in soil had, in general, longer hypocotyls than wild-type plants. The hypocotyls of 4-week-old mes17-1 plants were on average 32% longer than that of the wild type (Fig. 6 ). Statistical analysis performed by Student's t test returned P values <1 x 10–9, indicating that the differences are significant. When grown on one-half-strength MS medium under continuous light for 8 d, mes17-1 and mes17-2 mutants had hypocotyls longer on average by 29% than that of wild-type seedlings (Fig. 6), with statistical analysis indicating that the differences are significant (P values <1 x 10–5). When grown on one-half-strength MS medium in the dark, however, the hypocotyl lengths of mes17-1 and mes17-2 mutants were the same as that of wild type (Fig. 6). With the exception of hypocotyl length, mes17 mutants grown under normal conditions did not display any obvious phenotypic differences compared to wild type.
The DR5:GUS Reporter Gene Is More Highly Expressed in Atmes17 Null Mutants Compared with Wild-Type Plants
DR5 is a synthetic auxin response element, and the DR5:GUS reporter has been widely used as a marker to study the endogenous distribution of auxin (Ulmasov et al., 1997
mes17-1/axr1-3 Double Mutant Plants Have the Same Phenotype as axr1-3
Plants homozygous for the allele axr1-3, which carries a missense mutation in the AXR1 gene, display resistance to exogenous auxin, as well as a variety of morphological defects due to compromised auxin signaling (Lincoln et al., 1990
Biochemical Characterization of AtMES17 Because AtMES17 displays MeIAA hydrolase activity in vitro and likely does so in vivo, we performed a more detailed in vitro kinetic analysis of the E. coli-expressed and purified AtMES17. AtMES17 displayed hydrolase activity toward MeIAA but not MeJA, MeSA, or MeGAs (Table I). AtMES17 displayed the highest MeIAA hydrolase activity at pH 8.5 and about 60% of the highest activity at pH 6.5 or 9.5. However, at pH 8.0 or higher, nonenzymatic hydrolysis of MeIAA was also observed. We therefore used buffers with pH 7.5, which gave 93% of the maximal enzymatic activity and no observable nonenzymatic hydrolysis. Under these conditions, AtMES17 had a Km value of 13 µM and a Kcat value of 0.18 s–1 for MeIAA. The hydrolase activity was strongly inhibited (44%–75%) by 5 mM Fe2+, Fe3+, Zn2+, and Cu2+, and mildly inhibited by 5 mM Ca2+ and Mn2+ (20% and 34%, respectively). At 5 mM concentration, Na+, Mg2+, K+, and NH4+ had no effects on the hydrolase activity.
Real-time reverse transcription (RT)-PCR analysis showed that the expression of AtMES17 in 10-d-old seedlings is approximately 5-fold higher in the region of the shoot apex than in the rest of the hypocotyl (Fig. 9 ). When AtMES17 transcript levels in the 8-week mature plants were examined, the highest expression levels were observed in stems, followed by roots, flowers, rosette leaves, and siliques, and no AtMES17 transcripts were detectable in cauline leaves (Fig. 9).
The Arabidopsis MES Methylesterase Family
We have identified a family of 20 Arabidopsis proteins that we have designated the AtMES family, based on the sequence similarity of these proteins to experimentally identified methyl esterases, including the tobacco MeSA esterase SABP2 (NtSABP2) and the tomato MJE (LeMJE). This AtMES family is distinct from the previously annotated AtCXE family (Fig. 1), yet both families belong to the Most members of the AtMES family encode proteins of approximately 250 amino acids, similarly to NtSABP2 and LeMJE. AtMES11, AtMES12, AtMES13, AtMES14, and AtMES15 contain an extra region of 90 to 190 amino acids at their N termini (Fig. 2). This N-terminal extension does not appear to constitute a targeting signal peptide, suggesting that these AtMES proteins are localized in the cytosol like the rest of the members in the family. The AtMES11, AtMES12, AtMES13, AtMES14, and AtMES15 proteins also cluster into a close clade within the AtMES family (subfamily 3, Fig. 1), and so far we have not been able to ascribe any enzymatic activity to any of the proteins in this subfamily. Because the AtMES proteins are closely related to LeMJE and NtSABP2, we hypothesized that members of the AtMES family could encode MeIAA esterase(s). Of the members of the AtMES family that we tested, eight AtMES proteins were found to be active with MeIAA, and they all belong to subfamilies 1 and 2. Some of these proteins also hydrolyze other methyl esters under the experimental conditions used in this study, and it is likely that many, and perhaps all, of the AtMES proteins would be found to use multiple substrates upon a more extensive survey of substrates.
We further showed that AtMES17 encodes an esterase that efficiently and specifically hydrolyzes MeIAA to IAA in vitro and is likely to do so in vivo as well. The kinetic parameters of AtMES17 are comparable to previously characterized esterases (Forouhar et al., 2005
The growth of roots of two independent mes17 mutants was much less inhibited by MeIAA than was wild-type root growth (Fig. 3A). However, both mes17 null mutants responded similarly as did wild type to the root inhibition activity of IAA (Fig. 3B), indicating normal auxin signaling in these mutants. Incubating seedlings in the presence of [14C]MeIAA also revealed that mes17 mutants were much less efficient in hydrolyzing [14C]MeIAA than wild-type plants (Fig. 4). We thus conclude that the response of Arabidopsis seedlings to the root inhibition activity of MeIAA is at least partly due to the hydrolytic activity of AtMES17. The observations that some hydrolysis of [14C]MeIAA occurred in the mes17 mutant line and that the root growth of mes17 mutants retained some response to the inhibitory activity of MeIAA also indicate that there are other esterases in addition to AtMES17 that participate in MeIAA hydrolysis in Arabidopsis, consistent with our finding that other AtMES proteins could hydrolyze MeIAA in vitro. These proteins include AtMES16 and AtMES18, which have the highest sequence similarities to AtMES17. However, we obtained two independent T-DNA insertional lines of AtMES16 and observed that both of these null mutants responded to MeIAA similarly to wild type, including in the root growth assay. Microarray data indicates that transcript levels of AtMES17 in roots are more than 10 times higher than those of AtMES16 (AtGenExpress Visualization Tool; Schmid et al., 2005
The much-reduced (although not completely abolished) response of roots of mes17 mutants in the root inhibition assay with exogenously supplied MeIAA coupled with the observation that these mutants are much less efficient in the hydrolysis of MeIAA also suggest that the inhibition is due to IAA and not MeIAA. Consistent with this interpretation, when AtMES17 was overexpressed, its roots were even more sensitive to MeIAA than wild-type plants (Fig. 5), likely because MeIAA was hydrolyzed in these plants even faster than in wild type. The observation that the mes17-1/axr1-3 double mutant plants have the same phenotype as axr1-3 is also consistent with the putative role of MES17 in producing IAA, which acts upstream of AXR1. A similar albeit more extensive analysis of the effects of MeIAA treatment on axr1 and other auxin response mutants has also concluded that MeIAA is likely to be inactive by itself (Li et al., 2008
mes17-1 mutants have longer hypocotyls than wild-type plants. The regulation of hypocotyl length is a complex process that is under the influence of many factors, including light, nutrients, and hormones such as IAA, ethylene, and brassinosteroids (Jensen et al., 1998
In seedlings, AtMES17 is expressed at highest levels in the shoot apex, but it is also expressed at lower levels elsewhere (Fig. 9). mes17-1 plants display a stronger auxin response in the shoot apex as well as in other parts of the plant (as assessed by the DR5:GUS reporter system; Fig. 7). Although it seems paradoxical that mes17 mutants appear to have higher levels of IAA, it may be that the higher GUS staining in this line indicates a higher rate of transport of IAA rather than a higher level of IAA concentration, brought about by higher but transient and localized concentrations of MeIAA due to the decrease in (but not complete absence of) overall MeIAA esterase activity. Methylation of IAA to enhance its transport (and subsequent hydrolysis by MES enzymes) would be analogous to the transport of SA as biologically inactive MeSA from the site of infection to distal tissue for development of systemic acquired resistance (Park et al., 2007
A high-resolution spatial map depicting auxin concentration as well as activities of MES17 and IAMT is needed to validate this hypothesis. Recently, a cell type-specific microarray analysis has shown that in a given area of roots, genes involved in auxin biosynthesis are expressed in different cells than genes regulating auxin homeostasis or auxin transport (Brady et al., 2007 In conclusion, our results suggest that MES17 functions in auxin homeostasis in vivo and that MeIAA itself is not an active auxin. Because MeIAA is more nonpolar than IAA, MeIAA could more easily diffuse across membranes, and it is therefore possible that transport of IAA (in the form of MeIAA) to neighboring cells or even to more distant targets could be enhanced, where it could be hydrolyzed back to the active auxin IAA by esterases belonging to the MES family.
Plant Material and Growth Conditions
Wild-type Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) ecotype Columbia was used in all experiments. The AtMES17 full-length cDNA was ligated into pCHF3 vector (Varbanova et al., 2007
Arabidopsis plants grown in soil were under 16-h-light/8-h-dark cycles at 22°C. Arabidopsis plants grown on one-half-strength MS medium (Murashige and Skoog, 1962
All chemicals were purchased from Sigma. MeIAA and IAA were dissolved in 95% ethanol to make stock solutions of different concentrations. Stock solutions were then diluted 1:1,000 into one-half-strength MS medium, and the medium was poured into square plates. Plates containing chemicals were wrapped in aluminum foil and stored at 4°C before use.
Isolation of AtMES cDNAs and construction of Escherichia coli expression vectors of all AtMES genes, except AtMES11, AtMES12, and AtMES18, are described elsewhere (A.C. Vlot and D.F. Klessig, unpublished data). Full-length cDNA of AtMES11 (U22904), AtMES12 (U15905), and AtMES18 (U50042) were obtained from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center (ABRC), and subcloned into pENTR/D-TOPO (Invitrogen) and subsequently p-His-9 vector (a Gateway adapted derivative of pET28a). The plasmid containing the respective AtMES cDNA was transformed into E. coli and expressed as previously described (Nam et al., 1999 For protein purification, nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid agarose (Qiagen) was loaded into a column and washed with 10 bed volumes of water followed by 10 bed volumes of lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 500 mM NaCl, 20 mM imidazole, pH 8.0, 20 mM β-mercaptoethanol, 10% [v/v] glycerol, and 1% [v/v] Tween 20). Ten bed volumes of cell lysate was passed over the column and subsequently washed with 10 bed volumes of lysis buffer, and 20 bed volumes of wash buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 500 mM NaCl, 20 mM imidazole, pH 8.0, 20 mM β-mercaptoethanol, and 10% [v/v] glycerol). The protein was eluted with elution buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 500 mM NaCl, 250 mM imidazole, pH 8.0, 20 mM β-mercaptoethanol, and 10% [v/v] glycerol) and collected in 0.5-mL fractions. After being examined by SDS-PAGE, elution fractions containing the most abundant purified proteins were pooled and concentrated by centrifugation in the Amicon Ultra-4 centrifugal filter (Millipore). Concentrated proteins were finally resuspended in a buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 10 mM NaCl, 20 mM β-mercaptoethanol, and 10% (v/v) glycerol. All purification procedures were performed at 4°C.
The chymotryptic substrate PNPA was dissolved in acetonitrile to make a stock solution of 100 mM. An assay was prepared containing 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 0.05% Triton X-100, 1 mM PNPA, and 200 µL expression lysate. Control assays were set up in parallel with denatured protein. Esterase activity was estimated by the rate of hydrolysis determined spectrophometrically at 410 nM. The assay was carried out at room temperature, and OD410 values were measured at 2-min intervals up to 30 min. All assays were performed in duplicate. An AtMES protein was considered active when the reaction product determined by OD410 was at least 3 times that of the control assay.
Esterase assays with MeIAA, MeSA, MeJA, MeGA4, and MeGA9 as substrates were performed using the coupled methyltransferase assay, as previously described (Forouhar et al., 2005 For kinetic analysis of AtMES17, the amount of IAA generated from the esterase assay was quantified by HPLC analysis on a Waters 2690 Separations Module. HPLC separation of MeIAA and IAA was achieved over a Waters Nova-Pak C18 column, using an 8-min linear gradient from 65% acetonitrile in 1.5% phosphoric acid to 90% acetonitrile, with the flow rate set at 1 mL/min and the column temperature set to 30°C. In-line UV light spectra (200–450 nm) were obtained using an attached Waters 996 photodiode array detector. Eluting compounds were identified by comparison of both UV light spectra and elution volume with authentic MeIAA and IAA. IAA peak area detected at 278.4 nM (the maximum absorption wavelength for IAA) was plotted onto a standard curve created at identical parameters to calculate the product of each reaction.
[14C]MeIAA was produced by incubating IAA with [14C]SAM and IAMT under assay conditions described previously (Zubieta et al., 2003
Appropriate enzyme concentrations and incubation time were chosen so that the reaction velocity was linear over time with no more than 10% of the substrate consumed during the time period. The determination of kinetic parameters was as described (Yang et al., 2006b
The following T-DNA insertional mutants were obtained from ABRC: Salk_006044 (AtMES1), Salk_030442 (AtMES9), Salk_151578 (AtMES16), Salk_139756 (AtMES16), Salk_092550 (AtMES17), and SAIL-503-c03 (AtMES17). The T-DNA insertion sites in these AtMES genes were verified first by PCR using T-DNA-specific primer SALKLBb1 (5'-GCGTGGACCGCTTGCTGCAACT-3', for SALK lines) or SAILLB3 (5'-TAGCATCTGAATTTCATAACCAATCT-3', for SAIL lines) and the genomic primers designed for each T-DNA insertional line as follows: Salk_006044 forward (5'-CACCGAACACTCACCATCCTTCG-3') and reverse (5'-TTAAACGAATTTGTCCGCGATTTTCAG-3'); Salk_030442 forward (5'-ATGAAGCATTATGTGCTAGTTCACGGAGGC-3') and reverse (5'-TTAGGGATATTTATCAGCAATCTTTAGAAG-3'); Salk_151578 forward (5'-TTACTAACTCACCTCTCTTCTTCTTCG-3') and reverse (5'-ATACGCTAAGGCATCGAAGGG-3'); Salk_139756 forward (5'CTCTCTTGTCCGATCTCCCTCC-3') and reverse (5'-CCCTGGATTGCTTCGCATG-3'); Salk_092550 forward (5'-GCGTTTGACAAATGTGACAAGGC-3') and reverse (5'-GGTTTGATAATAGCACTGGTGGG-3'); and SAIL-503-c03 forward (5'-ATGGCGGAGGAGAATC-3') and reverse (5'-TTAGATAGAACCGACGGAAACGGC-3'). PCR results were verified by sequencing. All homozygous T-DNA insertional lines were confirmed by PCR with specific primers and subsequent Southern blot. RT-PCR was done with RNA extracted from homozygous lines to ensure absence of the respective gene transcript (see Supplemental Fig. S1 for mes17 mutants). Homozygous T-DNA insertional lines were also obtained for AtMES2 (Salk_050266), AtMES7 (Salk_054303, Salk_036791), and AtMES18 (CS826062). However, full-length gene transcripts were detectable in these mutants.
The root length of seedlings was measured with a ruler, and at least 20 measurements were taken to calculate the mean and SD values. Hypocotyl lengths of 4-week-old plants grown in soil were measured with a ruler. To measure hypocotyl length of seedlings grown on plates, seedlings were gently lifted with forceps from plates onto acetate sheets and digitized with a flat-bed scanner at a resolution of 1,200 dpi. Seedling scans were analyzed by ImageJ 1.37v software (National Institutes of Health), through which the hypocotyl lengths of seedling were measured. Twenty seedlings were analyzed for each measurement to calculate mean and SD values.
RNA extraction, purification, and real-time RT-PCR were performed as described (Varbanova et al., 2007
DR5:GUS/mes17 plants were obtained by crossing the DR5:GUS line into the mes17-1 mutant line. Plants homozygous for both DR5:GUS and mes17-1 were analyzed for GUS activity and compared to that of wild-type DR5:GUS. Seedlings were grown on one-half-strength MS medium for 8 d and incubated in GUS staining solution (100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 6.8, 10 mM EDTA, 0.2% Triton X-100, and 0.2 mg/mL 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-β-D-glucuronide) for 16 h, after which chlorophyll were extracted with 75% ethanol for 24 h. Quantitative GUS assay was carried out as described by Nakamura et al. (2003)
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Dr. Mark Estelle at the University of Indiana for providing the axr1-3 line. We thank Dr. Yunde Zhao at the University of California at San Diego for providing the DR5:GUS line. Received February 22, 2008; accepted April 23, 2008; published May 8, 2008.
1 This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (Arabidopsis 2010 project grant no. MCB–0312466 to E.P., and grant no. IOB–0525360 to D.F.K.).
2 Present address: Department of Plant Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824.
3 Present address: School of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Kangwon National University, Chuncheon 200–701, Korea.
4 Present address: Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research, 50829 Cologne, Germany. 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: Eran Pichersky (lelx{at}umich.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.108.118224 * Corresponding author; e-mail lelx{at}umich.edu.
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