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First published online May 30, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.121590 Plant Physiology 147:1886-1897 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
The Arabidopsis Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase Is Important for Pollen Development1,[W],[OA]POSTECH-UZH Global Research Laboratory, Division of Molecular Life Sciences, POSTECH, Pohang 790–784, Korea (Yu.L., Y.C., Yo.L.); Environmental Biotechnology National Core Research Center, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju 660–701, Korea (Yo.L.); School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Korea University, Seoul 136–701, Korea (E.-S.K., Y.-Y.C.); Center for Plant Intracellular Trafficking, POSTECH, Pohang 790–784, Korea (I.H.); and Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907–1392 (C.J.S.)
Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase has been reported to be important for normal plant growth. To characterize the role of the enzyme further, we attempted to isolate Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants that do not express the gene, but we could not recover homozygous mutant plants. The progeny of VPS34/vps34 heterozygous plants, harboring a T-DNA insertion, showed a segregation ratio of 1:1:0 for wild-type, heterozygous, and homozygous mutant plants, indicating a gametophytic defect. Genetic transmission analysis showed that the abnormal segregation ratio was due to failure to transmit the mutant allele through the male gametophyte. Microscopic observation revealed that 2-fold higher proportions of pollen grains in heterozygous plants than wild-type plants were dead or showed reduced numbers of nuclei. Many mature pollen grains from the heterozygous plants contained large vacuoles even until the mature pollen stage, whereas pollen from wild-type plants contained many small vacuoles beginning from the vacuolated pollen stage, which indicated that vacuoles in many of the heterozygous mutant pollen did not undergo normal fission after the first mitotic division. Taken together, our results suggest that phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase is essential for vacuole reorganization and nuclear division during pollen development.
Phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate [PtdIns(3)P] is a phosphoinositide that exists only at very low levels in plant cells (Brearley and Hanke, 1992
The enzyme that produces PtdIns(3)P is phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K), which phosphorylates the D-3 position of phosphoinositides. Three classes of PI3K have been defined based on sequence homology and their selective in vitro substrate specificity (Wymann and Pirola, 1998
In plants, PI3K is encoded by a single-copy gene, AtVPS34. It is essential for normal growth, as demonstrated by the expression of AtVPS34 antisense constructs, which leads to second-generation transformed plants with very severe defects in growth and development (Welters et al., 1994 This study began with our attempt to isolate homozygous T-DNA insertional knockout-PI3K Arabidopsis plants. We discovered that the self-fertilized heterozygous plants produced progeny that segregated 1:1 for wild-type and heterozygous plants, and no homozygous mutant plants were recovered. Reciprocal crosses between heterozygous and wild-type plants revealed a reduction in transmission of the T-DNA insertion allele through the male gametophyte. Cell biological observations confirmed that some male gametophytes of the heterozygous mutant plants had defects that indicated an important role for PI3K during male gametophyte development.
The Progeny of VPS34/vps34 Heterozygous Mutant Plants, Harboring a T-DNA Insertion Allele, Show Distorted Segregation Ratios To identify Arabidopsis T-DNA insertion mutants at the VPS34 locus (At1g60490), we screened the Salk Institute collections using PCR-based genotyping and identified one line, SALK_007281 or vps34-1, which contained T-DNA at position +2,388 relative to the ATG of VPS34 (Fig. 1 ). This line of VPS34/vps34-1 mutant was sensitive to kanamycin although it harbored T-DNA, which necessitated PCR-based analyses of the genotypes. To identify the homozygous knockout mutant plants, hundreds of seedlings grown from the SALK_007281 seeds and their progeny were harvested and DNA was extracted. In PCR-based genotyping with combinations of different gene-specific primers and the T-DNA border primer, no homozygous mutant plants could be identified. A second T-DNA insertion allele (vps34-2; GABI_418H02), which contained a T-DNA at the fifth exon, also did not produce homozygous mutant plants when self-fertilized. Since there were no available homozygous mutant plants, we sought to determine the genetic basis for this phenomenon. Segregation ratios for the self-fertilized progeny of VPS34/vps34-1 and VPS34/vps34-2 were determined. PCR analysis of offspring from self-pollinated VPS34/vps34 plants revealed the ratio for heterozygous and wild-type plants to be 0.83:1 and 1.02:1 in VPS34/vps34-1 and VPS34/vps34-2, respectively (Table I ). The segregation ratios for both lines were not significantly different from 1:1, instead of the expected 3:1 ratio, suggesting a gametophytic defect.
VPS34/vps34 Mutants Show Reduced Male Transmission
To determine which gametophyte caused the abnormal segregation ratio, we tested male and female transmission efficiency (TE) by performing reciprocal crosses between heterozygous and wild-type plants and analyzed the F1 progeny by PCR-based genotyping. With the vps34-1 allele, TE was reduced predominantly through the male and was not significantly reduced in the female (Table II
, top). To verify that one-sided TE was not due to self-pollination, crosses were performed between both alleles of VPS34/vps34 heterozygous plants and homozygous gl1 mutant plants deficient in GLABROUS1 (GL1). GL1 is essential for the initiation of trichome development, and gl1/gl1 plants are devoid of trichomes, whereas GL1/gl1 plants have normal trichome numbers and morphology (Marks and Feldmann, 1989
Expression of the VPS34 Gene in Arabidopsis To determine the site of VPS34 expression during flower development, we generated transgenic Arabidopsis plants harboring the VPS34 promoter::GUS reporter construct. We cloned the upstream promoter region of VPS34 (–1,391 to +125 in relation to ATG) and generated a translational fusion with the GUS coding sequence in the pBI121 vector. This construct was introduced into Arabidopsis, and the transformants were analyzed for GUS expression. Seven independent lines were tested for GUS activity, and all of them showed similar expression patterns. GUS staining was observed in almost all vegetative organs and reproductive organs, including leaves, roots, stems, floral buds, and open flowers (Fig. 2, C and D ). The expression pattern was confirmed by RT-PCR analysis, which showed that transcript for VPS34 was present in seedlings, leaves, roots, stems, green buds, open flowers, and pollen (Supplemental Fig. S1). VPS34::GUS was detected in flowers of all different developmental stages from early flower bud to mature flower (Fig. 2D). In flower buds, VPS34::GUS was detected in pollen mother cells (Fig. 2E) and immature microspores (Fig. 2F), and in open flower, it was highly expressed in mature pollen (Fig. 2G). VPS34::GUS was also expressed in the carpels, stigmas, and sepals (Fig. 2G).
Loss of VPS34 Function Disrupts Pollen Development
The reduction in TE via the male germ line in VPS34/vps34-1 plants suggests a role for VPS34 in pollen development and/or function. Biochemical comparison of PI3K or its product PtdIns(3)P levels between wild-type and mutant pollen grains is not likely to yield unequivocal results with currently available approaches, since homozygous plants are not possible to obtain, and also because the PtdIns(3)P level is very low in plants. Instead, we used cell biological methods to examine changes in the mutant pollen grains. To examine defects in VPS34/vps34 plants, cell viability was tested with propidium iodide, which is excluded from live cells but stains dead cells (Huang et al., 1986
Next, the number of nuclei in pollen grains was observed to examine whether mutant plants have problems with pollen nuclear divisions. Pollen grains were collected from mature anthers, and the number of nuclei was visualized with 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). The result revealed that 95% ± 1% of the pollen from wild-type plants was trinucleate, whereas 82% ± 1% and 86% ± 1% of the pollen from VPS34/vps34-1 and VPS34/vps34-2 plants, respectively, were trinucleate (Fig. 3I). Among the pollen population with less than three nuclei in heterozygous mutants, the largest proportion had two nuclei (Supplemental Table S1). The significantly reduced percentage of pollen with less than three nuclei from VPS34/vps34 plants (P < 0.01) suggests that pollen carrying the mutant allele often failed in nuclear division and could not reach the final stages of development.
Since PtdIns(3)P is important for trafficking of vacuolar proteins in somatic plant cells (Matsuoka et al., 1995
To identify the exact stage of pollen development when vacuoles become aberrant, we sectioned and observed anthers from wild-type and VPS34/vps34-1 plants with a light microscope. Anthers were separated into four different developmental stages, including tetrad of microspores, vacuolate pollen, binucleate pollen after the first mitotic division, and trinucleate pollen. We found that pollen from wild-type and mutant plants did not show any significant differences at the tetrad stage (Fig. 5, A, E, and I ) or at the vacuolated pollen stage (Fig. 5, B, F, and J). Neither was there a clear difference between wild-type and mutant pollen when the large vacuoles started to fragment into smaller ones following the first mitotic division, which gives rise to a vegetative cell and a generative cell (Fig. 5, C, G, and K). However, after the second mitotic division, which gives rise to two sperm cells, pollen grains from VPS34/vps34-1 and VPS34/vps34-2 plants were often distinctly different from those of wild-type plants. In wild-type pollen, the remaining large vacuoles underwent further fragmentation to form numerous small dispersed vacuoles (Fig. 5D), whereas many pollen of mutant plants still contained large and abnormally shaped vacuoles (Fig. 5, H and I, arrowheads). This abnormal vacuolar phenotype was found in 33.8% ± 4.1% (n = 998 pollen grains from eight flower buds) and 36.3% ± 2.6% (n = 1,225 pollen grains from 11 flower buds) of pollen from VPS34/vps34-1 and VPS34/vps34-2 plants, respectively, but in only 4.8% ± 1.6% (n = 704 pollen grains from seven buds) of pollen from wild-type plants.
Similar differences in the vacuolar shape were also found in pollen grains at the mature stage after dehiscence. The proportion of abnormal pollen was 3.7% ± 1.5% (n = 594 pollen grains from five buds), 34.6% ± 3.6% (n = 827 pollen grains from eight buds), and 37.0% ± 2.7% (n = 943 pollen grains from eight buds) from wild-type, VPS34/vps34-1, and VPS34/vps34-2 plants, respectively. This result suggested that vacuoles of vps34 pollen become aberrant at the stage of vacuole reorganization following the first mitotic division. Transmission electron microscopy observations confirmed the results from light microscopy; pollen grains from VPS34/vps34-1 and wild-type plants at the tetrad stage (Fig. 6, A and E, and I and M ) and the vacuolated stage (Fig. 6, B and F, and J and N) were similar, whereas significant differences in the shape of vacuoles at the trinucleate stage were found. At the trinucleate pollen stage, the pollen of VPS34/vps34-1 often contained large vacuoles with irregular protrusions and/or a rugged appearance (Fig. 6, K and O). This contrasts with the small vacuoles of wild-type pollen, which were round and had a smooth periphery (Fig. 6, C and G). The vacuolar abnormality became even more severe in mature pollen of mutant plants after dehiscence; some pollen grains of VPS34/vps34-1 plants were partly empty (Fig. 6, L and P) compared with wild-type pollen (Fig. 6, D and H), which contained dense cytoplasm and many organelles, suggesting cytoplasmic degradation in the pollen of mutant plants. At this stage, pollen grains of VPS34/vps34-1 plants showed diverse and abnormal vacuolar morphology. They had irregular shapes and tended to aggregate (Supplemental Fig. S2A). The large vacuoles had protrusions and contained cytoplasmic fragments and intracellular organelles inside, suggesting that they engulfed the cellular contents (Supplemental Fig. S2). In some severe cases, little cytoplasm remained inside the cells. Mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, and Golgi stacks maintained their normal morphology throughout all stages of pollen development, even until most of cytoplasm was inside the vacuoles (Supplemental Fig. S2H).
VPS34/vps34 Plants Are Defective in Pollen Germination and in Pollen Tube Growth Nearly 70% of the pollen grains from VPS34/vps34 plants survived (Fig. 3E). Although half of the pollen grains from VPS34/vps34 plants are expected to be genotypically normal, the remaining viable pollen grains may carry a vps34 allele. This is in contrast to the genetic data, which showed that male gametophytes with the vps34 allele produced scarcely any progeny. This discrepancy, together with the presence of large abnormal vacuoles in some pollen grains of VPS34/vps34 plants, led us to suspect that a subpopulation of the viable pollen grains may have defects in the subsequent steps: germination, pollen tube elongation, and fertilization. To test whether the loss of VPS34 leads to defects in the steps following pollen maturation, we analyzed pollen germination and tube length in wild-type and VPS34/vps34 plants. Mutant plants showed abnormality in a pollen germination assay in vitro. Pollen grains were transferred to agar medium by gently brushing the inverted flower across the surface and incubated at 28°C for 4 h, and germination rate was analyzed. The percentage of germinated pollen was lower in mutants than in the wild type: 33% ± 1% and 34% ± 1% of pollen grains in VPS34/vps34-1 and VPS34/vps34-2, respectively, compared with 55% ± 1% in the wild type (P < 0.01; Fig. 7A ).
For the germinated pollen, pollen tube length was measured. Pollen tubes from VPS34/vps34 plants were significantly (P < 0.01) shorter than those of wild-type plants: 353.1 ± 3.6 µm, 253.6 ± 5.3 µm, and 266.1 ± 9.1 µm for wild-type, VPS34/vps34-1, and VPS34/vps34-2 plants, respectively. This difference was clearer when the percentage of pollen tubes shorter than 100 µm was analyzed: 30% ± 3% and 22% ± 4% of pollen in VPS34/vps34-1 and VPS34/vps34-2, respectively, could not grow a tube longer than 100 µm, whereas only 7% ± 3% in the wild type could not (Fig. 7B). The pollen tube morphology, however, was normal in the sense that no major difference was apparent in the heterozygous knockout mutants (data not shown). This result suggests that many vps34 pollen could not reach the ovary for fertilization.
Even after germination and growth of pollen tubes, the genotype of male gametophytes might affect seed development at the fertilization and embryogenesis stages that occur in the ovary. In the mature siliques of VPS34/vps34 plants, aborted seeds were seldom detected, but the seed set was slightly sparser than that in the wild type (Fig. 8 ). When seed sets of self-fertilized mature siliques were analyzed quantitatively, the percentage of developed seeds (fertilized ovules) was reduced from 98% ± 0.8% in the wild type to 92% ± 1% and 87% ± 2% in VPS34/vps34-1 and VPS34/vps34-2, respectively; as a result, seed number per silique in mutant plants was significantly reduced compared with that of wild-type plants (P < 0.01; Table III ).
In this article, we provide several lines of evidence that PI3K plays a pivotal role during pollen development. In reciprocal cross experiments, scarcely any pollen carrying vps34 successfully transmitted the mutation, whereas female TE was close to 100% (Table II), suggesting that the expression of VPS34 in the male gametophyte is important for gene transmission. Defective phenotypes of VPS34/vps34 plants were observed at multiple stages during the reproductive process, including pollen development, germination, tube elongation, and fertilization. The most seriously affected stage was pollen development. Less than 70% of the pollen grains from VPS34/vps34 plants survived, and among them many had abnormal vacuoles. Considering that half of the pollen grains from VPS34/vps34 plants should be genotypically and phenotypically normal, it is likely that most male gametophytes with the vps34 allele were already defective prior to germination. The defects in the preceding stages most likely abolish the chance for gametes with the vps34 allele to fertilize eggs and produce a vps34/vps34 zygote. The absence of aborted seeds in the silique of VPS34/vps34 plants is consistent with this interpretation. It remains unknown whether PI3K has a role in the embryogenesis steps as well.
The broad and significant role of PI3K was first suggested by the results of Welters et al. (1994)
Defective vacuole reorganization was prominent in pollen grains of VPS34/vps34 plants (Fig. 5). In wild-type pollen grains, vacuoles are fragmented after the first mitotic division, whereas in some pollen of mutant plants, large vacuoles remained and were retained even until the mature stage of development (Fig. 6). The appearance of a large vacuole before generative cell formation (first pollen mitosis) and its fission into many small vacuoles are generally observed in pollen of various plant species. In wild-type pollen development, enlarged vacuoles that are presumably created by the fusion of preexisting small vacuoles (Owen and Makaroff, 1995
Alternatively, according to studies on vacuolar dynamics in yeast, PI3K may regulate vacuole morphology by providing the precursor of phosphatidylinositol 3,5-bisphosphate [PtdIns(3,5)P2]. PtdIns(3,5)P2 is generated from PtdIns(3)P by Fab1p, the PtdIns(3)P 5-kinase, and is essential for normal vacuole function and morphology in yeast (Yamamoto et al., 1995
The number of nuclei was reduced in some pollen grains of mutant plants (Fig. 3). Among them, the largest population comprised binucleate pollen, the stage during which vacuoles actively fragment in the wild type. These results suggest that the reduction in the number of nuclei may be a consequence of defective vacuolar dynamics in the mutant pollen. A large vacuole starts to fragment after or concurrent with the first nuclear division, and hardly any large vacuoles are detected following the second nuclear division. A generative cell is produced by highly asymmetric division at the side of a microspore, moves into the center of the cell, and proceeds to divide. A large vacuole at the vacuolated stage occupying part of the cytoplasm may hinder movement of the generative cell to the central region of the microspore. Structural changes of vacuoles in dividing cells have also been reported in meristematic cells (Segui-Simarro and Staehelin, 2006
PI3K may be involved in the regulation of nuclear function directly. In animal cells, class I PI3Ks, which generate PtdIns(3,4)P2 or PtdIns(3,4,5)P3, have been reported as important factors in various events of cell division, such as control of cell cycle entry (Álvarez et al., 2003
Aside from the defects during development, mutant pollen was also impaired in tube growth. Average pollen tube length was markedly shorter in VPS34/vps34 than in wild-type plants, and the tube length of mutant plants showed a bimodal distribution, suggesting that a defective group vps34 was mixed with a normal group VPS34. This bimodal distribution was not found in the wild type, which showed the normal distribution (Fig. 7). The pollen tube phenotype could be, at least in part, due to earlier defects during pollen development. However, it is also possible that PI3K activity is required during pollen tube growth per se. During the sexual reproduction of flowering plants, pollen grains germinate on receptive stigmas and produce a tip-growing tube, which rapidly penetrates the style to deliver the male gametes to the ovules. To achieve this, pollen tubes undergo highly polarized, tip-localized expansion, which depends on a complex signaling network that includes ion fluxes and gradients, cytoskeletal reorganization, and membrane trafficking (Hepler et al., 2001
Several genes functionally related to PI3K have been reported to function in late stages of pollen development and/or pollen tube growth, and defects in the expression of these genes impair fertility. PTEN1, which has been shown to dephosphorylate PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 in vitro, is expressed specifically in pollen grains. Suppression of PTEN1 by RNA interference silencing causes cell death at the tricellular stage in Arabidopsis pollen (Gupta et al., 2002 In summary, we showed that PI3K is important for male gametophyte development and successful reproduction of plants. Consequently, genetic and biochemical analyses of PI3K have been difficult. Knockdown of transcript levels with RNA interference silencing techniques may be helpful in this regard, but in our experience, this is also difficult because only the lines of plants with slightly reduced levels of PI3K transcript survive, and they do not show distinct phenotypes. Use of tissue-specific or inducible promoters may be useful for further characterization of the roles of this important enzyme in plant development and physiology.
Plant Growth Conditions Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants were grown in a greenhouse with 16-h-light and 8-h-dark cycles at 22°C ± 2°C. Plants were watered with Hyponex solution (1 g L–1).
Genotyping of VPS34/vps34-1 (SALK_007281) and VPS34/vps34-2 (GABI_418H01) plants and progeny was performed with a PCR-based approach. Genomic DNA was isolated and used as a template for PCR amplification of DNA fragments corresponding to the wild type and the insertion alleles. The following primers were used: LB (5'-GCGTGGACCGCTTGCTGCAACT-3'), LP (5'-TTCGGAATCTCTTCACGGCAC-3'), and RP (5'-CTCCGGAAATCGAGCAACCTT-3') for SALK_007281, and LB (5'-GGGCTACACTGAATTGGTAGCTC-3'), LP (5'-ACTCCACTCCACACAACGAAG-3'), and RP (5'-AAGCAGAAGCTAAGGCTCTGG-3') for GABI_418H01.
The promoter region of AtVPS34 (–1,391 to +125 relative to ATG) was amplified from the genomic DNA of wild-type plants with the specific primers VPS34_Pr_For (5'-GGATCCGTATGAAATTTAGACGATCAAAATTAGGGC-3') and VPS34_Pr_Rev (5'-AAGCTTCCGATCGTTATATGAAGATATAATCGGTGC-3') and then ligated to the GUS gene containing pBI121 vector from which the 35S promoter was eliminated using the restriction enzymes HindIII and BamHI. This construct was transformed into Arabidopsis by the floral-dip method (Clough and Bent, 1998
For pollen staining, grains were released from anthers and incubated in different histochemical stains as described previously (Regan and Moffatt, 1990
To visualize nuclei, pollen grains were processed essentially as described by Park et al. (1998)
In vitro pollen germination and pollen tube growth were analyzed as described previously (Li et al., 1999
For microscopic observation, anthers from wild-type and heterozygous plants were fixed in a solution containing 2.5% glutaraldehyde and 4% paraformaldehyde in a 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) at 4°C for 4 h. Anthers were rinsed in the phosphate buffer and fixed further in 1% (w/v) osmium tetroxide for 4 h at 4°C. The samples were then dehydrated in an alcohol series (final dehydration was done in absolute alcohol) and embedded in LR White resin (London Resin Company). One-micrometer and 40- to 50-nm sections for light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy, respectively, were prepared with an ultramicrotome (Bromma 2088; LKB). The thin sections (40–50 nm) were collected on a nickel grid (1-GN, 150 mesh) and stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate. Observations were made with a transmission electron microscope (JEM-100CX-1). Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession number U10669.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Sujin Kim and Sujeong Kim for technical assistance with electron microscopy. We are grateful to the Salk Institute Genomic Analysis Laboratory and to GABI-Kat for kindly providing the Arabidopsis mutant seeds. Received April 22, 2008; accepted May 2, 2008; published May 30, 2008.
1 This work was supported by grants awarded to Yo.L. from the Ministry of Science and Technology/Korea Science and Engineering Foundation to the Environmental Biotechnology National Core Research Center (grant no. R15–2003–012–02003–0) and the Global Research Program of the Ministry of Science and Technology (grant no. 4.0001795.01), a grant to Y.Y.C. from the Plant Signal Network Research Center funded by the Ministry of Science, a grant to I.H. from Biogreen21 (grant no. 20070401–034–026–007–04 00), and a grant to C.J.S. from the U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Biosciences Division (grant no. DE–FG02–04ER15526). 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: Youngsook Lee (ylee{at}postech.ac.kr).
[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.108.121590 * Corresponding author; e-mail ylee{at}postech.ac.kr.
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