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First published online May 23, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.121301 Plant Physiology 147:1126-1142 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Global Identification of DELLA Target Genes during Arabidopsis Flower Development1,[C],[W],[OA]Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Sciences (X.H., L.S., L.Y.C.L., Z.T., J.-H.H., H.Y.), and Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory (X.H., W.-W.H., L.S., L.Y.C.L., H.Y.), National University of Singapore, Singapore 117543
Gibberellin (GA) plays important roles in regulating many aspects of plant development. GA derepresses its signaling pathway by promoting the degradation of DELLA proteins, a family of nuclear growth repressors. Although the floral organ identity is established in flowers of the GA-deficient mutant ga1-3, the growth of all floral organs is severely retarded. In particular, abortive anther development in ga1-3 results in male sterility. Genetic analysis has revealed that various combinations of null mutants of DELLA proteins could gradually rescue floral organ defects in ga1-3 and that RGA is the most important DELLA protein involved in floral organ development. To elucidate the early molecular events controlled by RGA during flower development, we performed whole-genome microarray analysis to identify genes in response to the steroid-inducible activation of RGA in ga1-3 rgl2 rga 35S:RGA-GR. Although DELLA proteins were suggested as transcriptional repressors, similar numbers of genes were down-regulated or up-regulated by RGA during floral organ development. More than one-third of RGA down-regulated genes were specifically or predominantly expressed in stamens. A significant number of RGA-regulated genes are involved in phytohormone signaling or stress response. Further expression analysis through activation of RGA by steroid induction combined with cycloheximide identified eight genes as immediate targets of RGA. In situ hybridization and transgenic studies further showed that the expression pattern and function of several selected genes were consistent with the predictions from microarray analysis. These results suggest that DELLA regulation of floral organ development is modulated by multiple phytohormones and stress signaling pathways.
GAs are a class of tetracyclic diterpenoid phytohormones that control many aspects of plant development throughout the plant life cycle (Richards et al., 2001
The GA-induced DELLA proteolysis is mediated by the recently identified GA receptors. GA-INSENSITIVE DWARF1 (GID1), which encodes a soluble protein with similarity to hormone-sensitive lipases, was first identified as a GA receptor in rice (Oryza sativa; Ueguchi-Tanaka et al., 2005
Recent studies have demonstrated that environmental signals, such as salt and light, and other phytohormones, such as ethylene, auxin, and abscisic acid (ABA), regulate plant growth by affecting the GA-induced destabilization of DELLA proteins (Achard et al., 2003
GAs are known to play various roles in plant reproductive development, and different species respond differently to GAs (Pharis and King, 1985
To date, several microarray analyses have been carried out to identify genes affected by DELLA proteins or GA in Arabidopsis at different developmental stages, including seed germination and seedling and floral development (Ogawa et al., 2003
In this study, we aimed to identify early targets of DELLA proteins involved in flower development. As RGA plays a more prominent role than other DELLA proteins in mediating GA's effect on flower development, we focused on the identification of RGA target genes using established ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 35S:RGA-GR transgenic plants expressing a steroid-inducible version of RGA, which has been shown to retain the same biological function as RGA (Cheng et al., 2004 Our microarray results revealed an almost similar number of genes that were down-regulated or up-regulated by RGA at the inflorescence apex after 4 h of induction. Over 38% of RGA down-regulated genes were expressed in stamen and more than one-third of down-regulated genes were specifically or predominantly expressed in stamen, suggesting that regulation of stamen development is a major molecular event controlled by DELLA proteins during flower development. We also found that a significant number of RGA-regulated genes were involved in phytohormone signaling or the stress response. This observation indicates that the regulation of floral organ development by DELLA proteins is modulated by multiple phytohormones or environmental signals.
Microarray Analysis of RGA-Regulated Genes in Flower Development
Previous genetic analyses have shown that RGA plays a more prominent role than other Arabidopsis DELLA proteins in repressing floral organ development (Cheng et al., 2004
Our previous study showed that the induction of RGA activity in ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 35S:RGA-GR inflorescence apices for more than 6 h altered the expression of several floral homeotic genes, which, however, did not occur in the presence of cycloheximide, an inhibitor of protein translation (Yu et al., 2004b To validate the genes identified in our microarray analysis, we randomly examined the expression of some genes using independent sets of RNA samples prepared from dexamethasone- and mock-treated inflorescence apices of ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 35S:RGA-GR by semiquantitative reverse transcription (RT)-PCR (Fig. 2 ). For these selected genes, the relative changes of gene expression in dexamethasone- and mock-treated samples were consistent with those revealed by microarray, although the absolute values for mRNA abundance were not always consistent in both analyses. These RT-PCR results confirmed that the microarray data obtained were reproducible and that the RGA-inducible system coupled with microarray analysis could identify genes whose expression was affected by RGA activity within a short time span.
Functional Assessment of RGA-Regulated Transcriptome
All of the identified 806 genes were subjected to functional assessment by the NetAffx Gene Ontology Mining Tool (https://www.affymetrix.com/analysis/netaffx/go_analysis_netaffx4.affx; Table I
). Among the 393 RGA down-regulated genes, 366 genes each had an assigned molecular function based on amino acid homology, and the other 27 genes were unknown. The largest group of down-regulated genes (a total of 171 genes) encoded metabolic enzymes, of which a large number of genes were involved in the remodeling and modification of cell wall structure, such as those encoding cell wall proteins (Pro-rich cell wall proteins, extensins, Hyp-rich glycoproteins [HRGPs], Gly-rich proteins [GRPs], expansins), glycoproteins (arabinogalactan, xyloglucan transferase, polygalacturonase), and pectin-related enzymes (Showalter, 1993
Among the 413 RGA up-regulated genes, 380 genes each had an assigned molecular function (Table I). Similar to the RGA down-regulated genes, metabolic genes were overrepresented, accounting for about 35% of total RGA up-regulated genes. One unique feature for RGA up-regulated genes was the overrepresentation of genes encoding transcription factors (11%) and proteins with protein-binding (17%) or nucleic acid-binding (15%) activity, whereas their ratios in the whole genome were only 6%, 7%, and 7%, respectively. These genes included those encoding transcription factors of the zinc finger, MYB, bHLH, WRKY, and bZIP families and those encoding proteins related to the ubiquitination pathway, such as F-box, SKP, SPOP, and RING zinc finger proteins. These results imply that RGA might be able to activate regulatory genes involved in the repression of floral organs during flower development. This is consistent with a recent study showing that DELLA proteins promote the expression of downstream negative components, including putative transcription factors and ubiquitin E2/E3 enzymes, in seedling development (Zentella et al., 2007
A previous microarray experiment compared transcriptomes in unopened floral buds of ga1-3, ga1-3 gai-t6 rga-t2 rgl1-1 rgl2-1, and wild-type plants (Cao et al., 2006
In another recent microarray analysis, Zentella et al. (2007)
We found that three genes showed consistent responses in the above experiments and our analysis. At1g75900, encoding an extracellular lipase (EXL3), was down-regulated by RGA, while At3g63010 and At2g39570, encoding AtGID1b and an ACT domain-containing protein, respectively, were up-regulated by RGA (Supplemental Tables S1–S4). Therefore, it is possible that DELLA proteins constitutively regulate these genes in the whole process of plant development. In particular, AtGID1b, a GA receptor gene in Arabidopsis, has been identified as a direct target of RGA in seedling development (Zentella et al., 2007
We further investigated the spatial expression of RGA-regulated genes in various floral organs by analyzing our data with the Genevestigator online meta-analysis tool (Zimmermann et al., 2004
To understand the spatial specificity of expression of RGA-regulated genes, we compared our data with the microarray data set containing genes specifically or predominantly expressed in one type of floral organ (Wellmer et al., 2004
We found that RGA down-regulated genes included some previously published stamen-specific genes. A group of oleosin genes encoding GRPs (GRP14, -16, -17, -19, and -20) are expressed in tapetum and pollen coat (Alves-Ferreira et al., 1997
During stamen development, microsporogenesis exhibits a unique pattern of differentiation, which is different from sporophyte differentiation and characterized by a great change in gene expression profiles throughout four successive stages of male gametophyte development in Arabidopsis (Honys and Twell, 2004
Jasmonates (JAs) play an important role in stamen development and pollen maturation. A single application of JA can fully rescue the defects of pollen viability and fertility found in the JA biosynthesis mutant opr3, which is defective in the isoform of 12-oxo-phytodienoate (OPDA) reductase (Stintzi and Browse, 2000
Glucosinolates (GSLs), a group of bioactive secondary metabolites in the Brassicaceae family derived from amino acids, function in plant defense against herbivores and microorganisms (Mikkelsen et al., 2003
ABA plays an antagonistic role to GA in cereal aleurone and vegetative tissues and interacts with the GA pathway by either acting downstream of DELLA proteins (Gomez-Cadenas et al., 2001
Ethylene is known to modulate Arabidopsis reproductive growth, such as flower senescence and fruit maturation (Kieber, 1997
RGA up-regulated genes also included KNAT2 (At1g70510), which is a member of the class I KNOTTED-like homeobox (KNOX) transcription factors (Reiser et al., 2000
As low concentrations of auxin promote the GA-mediated destabilization of DELLA proteins (Achard et al., 2006
Since DELLA proteins integrate responses to various hormonal and environmental signals of adverse conditions (Achard et al., 2006
To identify promising candidates that could mediate RGA's effect on flower development, we selected genes that either show significant expression changes in our microarray analysis or encode potentially important regulatory proteins for further expression analysis in response to RGA activity. We first examined the time course expression of these genes in the inflorescence apices of ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 35S:RGA-GR-containing floral buds younger than stage 10 that underwent either dexamethasone or mock treatment for 0, 2, 4, and 8 h. Second, we applied a combined treatment of dexamethasone and cycloheximide, an inhibitor of protein synthesis, at the 4-h time point to identify potential immediate targets of RGA. To examine whether these genes are regulated by GA, their expression was also analyzed in mock- and GA-treated ga1-3 plants. Quantitative real-time PCR analyses revealed eight genes that were potentially immediate targets of RGA, because the combined treatment of dexamethasone and cycloheximide resulted in a similar increase or decrease in expression of these genes as observed with dexamethasone treatment alone (Fig. 5 ). Since RGA modulates the expression of these genes independently of protein synthesis, they might be immediate targets of transcriptional regulation by RGA. Although there are some fluctuations in their expression levels, four genes (At3g28830, At3g16750, At3g62950, and At5g49450) showed consistent down-regulated or up-regulated expression in response to the induced RGA activity at different time points compared with their expression at 0 h. Three other genes (At3g62230, At5g61420, and At2g17840) were either down-regulated or up-regulated after 4 h of RGA induction. The expression of At5g22920 was up-regulated by RGA within 4 h of induction but down-regulated afterward.
As expected, the expression of six genes under GA treatment was opposite to that induced by RGA activity under dexamethasone treatment, suggesting that these genes are regulated by DELLA proteins in response to GA. On the contrary, two genes, At3g62230 and At3g62950, exhibited a similar expression trend by induced RGA activity and GA treatment. As GA also affects gene expression in a DELLA-independent mode (Cao et al., 2006
To study the spatial expression of these genes in floral organs, we performed in situ hybridization on mock- and dexamethasone-treated ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 35S:RGA-GR flowers. We found that three of eight genes demonstrated altered expression specifically in anthers in response to RGA activity (Fig. 6
). At5g49450 (AtbZIP1), a member of the group S1 Arabidopsis bZIP transcription factor family, was immediately up-regulated by RGA (Fig. 5). A previous study has shown that group S1 proteins, including AtbZIP1, can form heterodimers with group C bZIP proteins to directly regulate the Arabidopsis Pro dehydrogenase gene (ProDH; At3g30775; Satoh et al., 2004
At3g62230, encoding an unknown F-box family protein, was specifically expressed in stamens (Supplemental Table S7) and immediately down-regulated by RGA (Fig. 5). In situ hybridization confirmed that At3g62230 was localized in anthers of wild-type and mock-treated ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 35S:RGA-GR flowers at stage 10 (Fig. 6, D and E). Its expression was specifically restricted in sperm cells of pollen after mitotic division at floral stage 12 (Fig. 6, G and H). Upon dexamethasone treatment, At3g62230 transcripts were rapidly repressed by RGA activity (Fig. 6, F and I). Another gene, MYB28 (At5g61420), which regulates the production of aliphatic GSLs (Hirai et al., 2007
To understand the function of immediate target genes of RGA, we further characterized two RGA up-regulated genes, AtbZIP1 and At3g62950, by generating overexpression transgenic plants. Our assumption is that if RGA acts as a growth repressor in flower development, overexpression of its immediately up-regulated genes would more or less compromise floral organ development similar to that exhibited by excessive activity of RGA in ga1-3. Overexpression of AtbZIP1 did not exhibit abnormal phenotypes in floral shape and organization (Fig. 7, A and B
). However, anther dehiscence of 35S:AtbZIP1 was delayed with the release of a considerably reduced number of pollen grains (Fig. 7F) compared with those of the wild type (Fig. 7E) at floral stage 14 (Smyth et al., 1990
At3g62950, encoding a glutaredoxin-like protein, was an immediate target up-regulated by RGA (Fig. 5; Supplemental Table S1). At3g62950 was expressed strongly in sepals but weakly in other floral organs (Supplemental Table S5). In addition to retarded vegetative growth (data not shown), overexpression of At3g62950 also impaired floral organ development of early flowers in the primary inflorescence, resulting in undeveloped petals and stamens and male sterility because of nondehiscent anthers (Fig. 7, C and G). These phenotypes resembled those of ga1-3 (Fig. 7, D and H), implying that alteration of At3g62950 expression may be responsible for floral defects in ga1-3. At least 31 glutaredoxin genes that possess a typical glutathione-reducible CXXC or CXXS active site have been identified in the Arabidopsis genome (Rouhier et al., 2004
Identification of RGA-Regulated Genes in Flower Development
The DELLA proteins are conserved repressors of GA signaling that play regulatory roles in a wide range of processes during plant growth, including seed germination, root growth, leaf expansion, stem elongation, and the development of reproductive organs (Dill and Sun, 2001 In this study, we have identified early target genes of DELLA proteins involved in flower development by whole-genome microarray analysis of genes in response to the steroid-inducible activation of RGA in ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 35S:RGA-GR inflorescence apices. The microarray results have been confirmed by semiquantitative RT-PCR analysis of randomly selected genes. Further studies by quantitative real-time PCR coupled with treatment by a protein synthesis inhibitor have revealed eight RGA immediate target genes. Three of them are differentially expressed in anthers in response to RGA, while two of them, when overexpressed in transgenic plants, inhibit floral organ development like DELLA proteins. These results suggest that our RGA-inducible system coupled with microarray analysis is competent at discovering RGA target genes in floral organ development.
The flowers of the GA-deficient mutant ga1-3 typically exhibit retarded elongation of petals, stamens, and pistils and arrested anther development. Loss-of-function mutants of DELLA proteins can rescue almost all of these phenotypes (Cheng et al., 2004
Although RGA-regulated genes are found in various floral organs, over 38% of RGA down-regulated genes are highly expressed in stamens (Table II), and over one-third of these down-regulated genes are specifically or predominantly expressed in stamens (Supplemental Table S7). These results suggest that DELLA proteins negatively regulate stamen development through a group of stamen-specific genes.
Arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs) are HRGPs that are massively glycosylated and particularly abundant in cell walls, plasma membranes, and extracellular secretions (Showalter, 2001
In ga1-3, microsporogenesis is arrested at around floral stage 10 prior to pollen mitosis, which is mainly due to the repressive function of RGA and RGL2 (Cheng et al., 2004 Taken together, these results suggest that RGA predominantly represses stamen development during flower development and is involved in all phases of microsporogenesis and pollen tube growth.
JA regulates at least three developmental pathways in stamen maturation: filament elongation, anther dehiscence, and pollen viability (McConn and Browse, 1996
Ethylene has been proposed to act similarly to or possibly in concurrence with jasmonic acid as a signaling molecule controlling anther dehiscence in tobacco, because ethylene insensitivity causes the delayed degeneration of the stomium cells and dehydration (Rieu et al., 2003
DELLA proteins have been proposed to play a key integrative role in the phytohormone signal response network (Achard et al., 2003
It has been suggested that GA-promoted destabilization of DELLA proteins integrates plant responses to environmental signals under adverse conditions and that the growth restraint conferred by DELLA proteins promotes survival, probably via the redirection of resources (Achard et al., 2006
Among the RGA up-regulated and KIN10-induced genes, AtbZIP1 (At5g49450) and At5g22920 are immediate targets of RGA, because their expression is up-regulated by RGA in the presence of the protein synthesis inhibitor (Fig. 5). AtbZIP1 expression is weak in wild-type floral organs but immediately induced by RGA in anthers at floral stage 10 (Fig. 6, A–C). A previous study has shown that AtbZIP1 forms a heterodimer with group C bZIP proteins to activate the expression of ProDH (At3g30775), which is induced in response to hypoosmotic conditions occurring during rehydration after stress recovery (Satoh et al., 2004
As key repressors of GA-responsive growth, DELLA proteins accumulate in the nucleus and are rapidly degraded in response to GA (Silverstone et al., 2001 Our microarray analysis has identified almost a similar number of genes that are up-regulated or down-regulated by RGA within a short time span. At least four genes have been found to be immediately up-regulated by RGA even in the presence of the protein synthesis inhibitor (Fig. 5), suggesting that RGA could intrinsically activate them independently of protein synthesis. As the change of expression of RGA-regulated genes could be mediated by RGA-interacting transcription factors, the exact function of DELLA proteins in the transcription regulatory complex needs to be further investigated.
Plant Materials and Growth Conditions
Wild-type and transgenic Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants of the same Landsberg erecta ecotype were grown at 22°C under long days (16 h of light/8 h of dark). Generation of ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 35S:RGA-GR plants was as described previously (Yu et al., 2004b
Inflorescence apices of ga1-3 rga-t2 rgl2-1 35S:RGA-GR transgenic plants were mock treated (0.03% ethanol and 0.015% Silwet L-77) or treated with 10 µM dexamethasone and 0.015% Silwet L-77. As a control, inflorescence apices of ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 nontransgenic plants were also treated under the same conditions. After 4 h, the treated inflorescence apices containing floral buds younger than stage 10 were collected and immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen. Total RNA was isolated using the RNeasy RNA isolation kit (Qiagen), and its quality was assessed by gel electrophoresis. To ensure that dexamethasone treatment of these plants was effective, some dexamethasone- and mock-treated plants were continuously cultivated to observe the phenotypic change of floral organs.
Three sets of biologically independent replicates were used for each treatment. Total RNA (5 µg) extracted from each set of samples was used for cDNA synthesis followed by copy RNA (cRNA) labeling and fragmentation according to the manufacturer's instructions using the One-Cycle Target Labeling and Control Reagents Kit (Affymetrix). Fragmented cRNAs were hybridized on the Affymetrix Arabidopsis ATH1 high-density genome arrays for 16 h followed by washing and staining using GeneChip Fluidics Station 450. GeneChip Scanner was used to scan the probe arrays, and signals were obtained by GeneChip Operating Software (GCOS). The GCOS-generated data files (.CHP file) were imported into GeneSpring GX 7.3.1 (Agilent) for further analysis. All samples were normalized per chip to the 50th percentile and per gene to median signals. Cross-gene error model was used in the data interpretation. Genes were filtered by Affymetrix flags to appear as "present or marginal in at least 6 out of 9 samples." This reduced 22,810 total genes to 13,622 genes. Up- or down-regulated genes were defined independently as those with a statistically significant change in three treatment/control pairs (P < 0.05). We first compared the transcriptomes in ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 35S:RGA-GR activated by dexamethasone treatment relative to mock treatment and then compared the transcriptomes in dexamethasone-treated ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 35S:RGA-GR relative to those in dexamethasone-treated nontransgenic ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2. Only genes that consistently showed altered expression over 1.5-fold in these two comparisons in three biological replicates were chosen as RGA-regulated genes. For meta-analysis with other data sets, Microsoft Excel was used to manage and filter the microarray data. Spatial analysis of gene expression in various floral organs was performed online by Genevestigator (Zimmermann et al., 2004
For the time course experiments, inflorescence apices of ga1-3 rgl2-1 rga-t2 35S:RGA-GR plants containing floral buds younger than stage 10 were collected at 0, 2, 4, and 8 h after a single mock or dexamethasone treatment. To examine the effect of cycloheximide (10 µM) and GA4 (100 µM) on gene expression, inflorescence apices were collected 4 h after a single treatment. Total RNAs were isolated using the RNeasy RNA isolation kit (Qiagen) and reverse transcribed by the ThermoScript RT-PCR system (Invitrogen). Quantitative real-time PCR assays were performed in triplicate on a 7900HT Fast Real-Time PCR system (Applied Biosystems) using TUBULIN2 (TUB2) as an internal control as described previously (Liu et al., 2007
To generate overexpression constructs of RGA-regulated genes, the coding regions of the selected genes were amplified from inflorescence cDNAs using primers with adaptors containing appropriate restriction sites (Supplemental Table S10). The resulting PCR products were digested with restriction enzymes and cloned into the corresponding sites of pGreen-35S (Yu et al., 2004a
Nonradioactive in situ hybridization experiments were performed as described previously (Yu et al., 2004a Raw and processed microarray data are available at the National Center for Biotechnology Information Gene Expression Omnibus (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/) with the series identifier GSE10019.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank H.M. Soo for assistance with microarray analysis. We thank Dr. Toshiro Ito and members of the laboratory of H.Y. for critical reading of the manuscript. Received April 16, 2008; accepted May 20, 2008; published May 23, 2008.
1 This work was supported by the Academic Research Fund (grant no. R–154–000–263–112) from the Ministry of Education, Singapore, and by intramural research funds from the Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory.
2 These authors contributed equally to the article. 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: Hao Yu (dbsyuhao{at}nus.edu.sg).
[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.108.121301 * Corresponding author; e-mail dbsyuhao{at}nus.edu.sg.
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