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First published online September 3, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.125518 Plant Physiology 148:1557-1569 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
The Regulation of Cell Wall Extensibility during Shade Avoidance: A Study Using Two Contrasting Ecotypes of Stellaria longipes1,[C],[OA]Plant Ecophysiology, Institute of Environmental Biology, Utrecht University, 3584 CA Utrecht, The Netherlands (R.S., L.A.C.J.V., R.P.); and Department of Biological Sciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 1N4 (R.S., C.C.C.)
Shade avoidance in plants involves rapid shoot elongation to grow toward the light. Cell wall-modifying mechanisms are vital regulatory points for control of these elongation responses. Two protein families involved in cell wall modification are expansins and xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolases. We used an alpine and a prairie ecotype of Stellaria longipes differing in their response to shade to study the regulation of cell wall extensibility in response to low red to far-red ratio (R/FR), an early neighbor detection signal, and dense canopy shade (green shade: low R/FR, blue, and total light intensity). Alpine plants were nonresponsive to low R/FR, while prairie plants elongated rapidly. These responses reflect adaptation to the dense vegetation of the prairie habitat, unlike the alpine plants, which almost never encounter shade. Under green shade, both ecotypes rapidly elongate, showing that alpine plants can react only to a deep shade treatment. Xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolase activity was strongly regulated by green shade and low blue light conditions but not by low R/FR. Expansin activity, expressed as acid-induced extension, correlated with growth responses to all light changes. Expansin genes cloned from the internodes of the two ecotypes showed differential regulation in response to the light manipulations. This regulation was ecotype and light signal specific and correlated with the growth responses. Our results imply that elongation responses to shade require the regulation of cell wall extensibility via the control of expansin gene expression. Ecotypic differences demonstrate how responses to environmental stimuli are differently regulated to survive a particular habitat.
Plants growing in dense stands often ensure survival by an escape syndrome known as shade avoidance. The imposition of shade by surrounding taller plants causes a change in the spectral composition of light reaching these plants. For plants that are beginning to get shaded, an early warning signal is the lowering of the red to far-red ratio (R/FR). The preferential absorption of red wavelengths by surrounding vegetation causes the reflected/transmitted light to be enriched in FR wavelengths and thus lowers the R/FR. Within a dense canopy, there are further spectral changes involving not just a lowering of R/FR but also a reduction of blue light and the total light intensity. These spectral changes are vital cues for plants to start elongation of their shoots and move their leaves upward. This in turn improves their chances of regaining access to sunlight and thus survival (Franklin and Whitelam, 2005
This is clearly evident in the herbaceous perennial Stellaria longipes, which exhibits a circumpolar distribution and is able to inhabit diverse environmental niches such as alpine, prairie, montane, and sand dune, where, among other characteristics, light conditions vary drastically (Chinnappa et al., 2005
Shoot elongation, which is a primary feature of shade avoidance, mostly involves cellular expansion. This in turn requires an increased extensibility of the cell wall in response to an increased turgor pressure within the cells. Increased cell wall extensibility is made possible by certain proteins that act on the molecular framework of the cell wall and thus allow the walls to stretch out, a process termed "wall loosening" (Cosgrove, 2005
Expansins are currently distinguished into four sequence-specific classes: Expansin A (EXPA), EXPB, Expansin-like A (EXLA), and EXLB (Kende et al., 2004
In addition to expansins, the XTHs are another group of proteins implicated in cell wall modification (Fry et al., 1992 It is obvious, therefore, that the regulation of cell wall extensibility is important during plant adaptation to environmental changes. However, there is currently no such information relating to plant responses during shading or to changes in light quality. In this study, we use the aforementioned two ecotypes of S. longipes as a comparative system to study the molecular basis of plasticity and in doing so also investigate how changes in light quality can regulate cell wall extensibility and consequently growth in the functional context of shade avoidance. Our results present, to our knowledge, the first report on the regulation of expansins and XTHs in response to light signals that act as plant-plant interaction cues.
Shade Signals Induced Different Growth Responses in the Alpine and Prairie Ecotypes of S. longipes
Plants of both ecotypes were grown under spectrally altered light conditions, and the increase in the length of the stem was measured every day for 1 week. We first subjected the plants to low R/FR conditions. This is an early neighbor detection signal, and our results confirmed previous studies of contrasting responses for the two ecotypes (Alokam et al., 2002
XTH Activity in Internodes of Alpine and Prairie Plants Correlated with Observed Growth Trends But Not under Low R/FR Conditions We investigated the activity of XTHs in order to relate growth responses to the regulation of cell wall extensibility and cellular expansion. Internodes from alpine and prairie plants that had been grown under low R/FR and green shade for 3 d were used as the source of a crude enzyme extract that was assayed for xyloglucan-degrading activity. This is a measure of both transglycolytic and hydrolytic activities of XTHs. In both ecotypes, XTH activity in the internodes of control and low-R/FR-treated plants was similar, suggesting a lack of correlation between XTH activity and elongation growth under low R/FR (Fig. 3 ). These results show that XTH activity is not responsive to changes in R/FR. However, XTH activity showed a significant increase in the internodes of plants in green shade relative to controls. Under these conditions, there was an increase in XTH activity relative to controls of approximately 30% and 45% in the prairie and alpine ecotypes, respectively (Fig. 3).
Growth Responses and XTH Activity in Response to Blue Light Depletion Since XTH activity was regulated only under conditions of green shade and not in response to low R/FR, we wanted to investigate whether this response was due to a reduction in blue light, which is the other spectral change in green shade. We measured the growth rates of plants from both ecotypes under low blue light conditions. The growth rates in both alpine and prairie plants were significantly higher than in controls (Fig. 4, A–C ). Furthermore, the growth rates under low blue light were very similar to the growth rates under green shade conditions. We next measured XTH activity in the internodes of plants grown in low blue light and found that there was a significant increase in activity relative to plants grown under control conditions in both ecotypes (Fig. 4, D and E). This suggests that XTH activity is under the control of blue light receptors.
Acid-Induced Extension of Internodes of Both Alpine and Prairie Ecotypes Correlated with Growth under Different Shade Signals
Expansins are considered primary mediators of cell wall loosening, which aid cellular expansion (Cosgrove, 2005
Expansins in the Internodes of Alpine and Prairie Ecotypes of S. longipes
In order to identify expansin genes required for shade-induced growth responses, we cloned expansins from the internodes of both ecotypes. In total, 12 expansin (GenBank accession nos. EU84703–EU84721) sequences were identified in both ecotypes. Of these, seven were chosen for expression analysis, since we were able to design gene-specific primers for these. Amino acid sequence alignment of these
Shade Signals Differentially Regulated Expansin Gene Expression in Both Ecotypes
Figure 7
shows the transcript profiles for five
Shade Avoidance and Cell Wall Extensibility
One of the primary objectives of this study was to examine cell wall-modifying proteins as downstream targets in shade-induced elongation responses and to correlate the regulation of these genes with the magnitude of the growth response. Two candidate protein families that are implicated in increasing cell wall extensibility needed during rapid cellular expansion leading to shoot elongation are the expansins and the XTHs. The control of cell wall extensibility requires the expression of these proteins at the right time and place, and this is a vital regulatory point during growth (Cosgrove, 2005
We found that although XTH activity correlated well with growth under green shade conditions in both ecotypes, the correlation did not hold for low R/FR responses (Fig. 3). Even the prairie plants, which respond to low R/FR with enhanced internodal elongation, showed no measurable increase in XTH activity levels in their youngest internodes compared with plants grown under normal light conditions (Fig. 3, bottom). XTH activity, therefore, does not appear to be regulated by R/FR. However, it could be argued that there is a spatial regulation of XTH activity (Wu et al., 2005 Accordingly, AIE of alpine and prairie internodes was used as a measure of expansin activity. Unlike XTH activity, we found expansin activity to correlate well with growth responses (Fig. 5). Under low R/FR, alpine internodes had similar AIE values as controls, while prairie internodes showed an increase in AIE compared with control values. During green shade conditions, internodes from both ecotypes had much higher AIE levels than controls, reflecting their higher growth rates under these conditions.
We cloned members of the expansin gene family from S. longipes in order to identify specific expansins that are regulated in response to different light signals as well as to find possible ecotypic differences in the regulation of these genes in response to similar light cues. Our focus was on expansins since, first, unlike the XTHs, we found a good correlation between expansin activity (as reflected by AIE values) and growth responses to the light manipulations used. Second, expansins are considered the primary mediators of cell wall loosening (Cosgrove, 2000
Expansins usually exist as large multigene families, and we found the same to be true in S. longipes. We limited our cloning to RNA extracted from internodes in order to improve our chances of finding all possible expansins expressed in this organ. In the alpine ecotype (Fig. 7), in response to low R/FR, none of the five
Our results also demonstrate a possible reason for the existence of expansins as large gene families. Although multigene families can imply either redundancy or specialization, our results suggest that the latter is more important. This study clearly implies that specific expansins are required upon exposure of the plant to different light signals. In response to the same light signal, there is again a difference between ecotypes in the identity of the expansin expressed. Previous studies with the alpine and prairie ecotypes of S. longipes implicated the hormones ethylene and gibberellin in the observed differential responses to shade (Kurepin et al., 2006a,
Different members of a multigene family are not only regulated differently in response to hormones and environmental stimuli, they are also expressed only in certain tissues and organs. In rice (Oryza sativa), for example, expansins are differentially regulated by developmental, hormonal, and environmental signals (Cho and Kende, 1997
Shade avoidance is a good example of adaptive plasticity in plants in response to their environment. The speed and magnitude with which plants are able to sense and respond to their ambient environment is key to their survival. This is demonstrated well in the alpine and prairie ecotypes of S. longipes. Each of these ecotypes has specialized itself in sensing, responding to, and adapting to the changes in its specific habitat, and this is best exhibited by their growth responses to changes in low R/FR. It is surprising, therefore, that the alpine plants, which never encounter shade, still retain their ability to increase their growth rates when exposed to a combination of shade signals. It is possible that the response observed is primarily a vestige of etiolation responses (i.e. mainly mediated by a depletion of blue light). However, it could also imply that the alpine plants simply do not respond to shade or invest resources to deal with this stress until the threat is severe, as would happen in cases of complete canopy closure. An insensitivity to low R/FR would prevent a situation in which shade avoidance phenotypes, which are sensitive to wind damage, develop at the earliest detection of shade. In contrast, the prairie ecotype has probably fine-tuned its shade-sensing mechanism and is able to respond to low R/FR conditions that occur when a plant is beginning to get shaded (Ballaré et al., 1990
Our results also provide support for the concept of multigene families being the molecular basis of phenotypic plasticity (Smith, 1990
Plant Material The two ecotypes of Stellaria longipes were originally collected from the Chain Lakes (prairie; elevation, 1,310 m) and the summit of the Plateau Mountain (alpine; elevation, 2,453 m) in southern Alberta, Canada. Plants were clonally propagated and were potted in 220-mL plastic pots in a mixture of 2:1 (v/v) potting soil and sand with 2.8 g of MgOCaO (Magkal; 17% MgO; Vitasol) per liter of potting mixture. Prior to potting the ramets, each pot received approximately 60 mL of nutrient solution containing 7.5 M (NH4)2SO4, 15 mM KH2PO4, 15 mM KNO3, 3.3 µM MnSO4, 1.8 µM ZnSO4, 0.32 µM CuSO4, 43 µM H3BO3, 0.53 µM Na2MoO4, and 86 µM Fe-EDTA. Freshly potted ramets were allowed to establish for 2 weeks in a climate-controlled growth room (16-h photoperiod, 200 µmol m–2 s–1 photosynthetically active radiation [PAR; Philips Master HPI 400 W], 8 h of dark), after which they were transferred to a short-day (8-h photoperiod), cold (8°C day, 5°C night) growth chamber for at least 60 d to simulate the winter cycle.
Plants that had been in the cold for 60 d were first transferred to a climate-controlled growth chamber (16-h photoperiod, 200 µmol m–2 s–1 PAR [Philips Master HPI 400 W], 8 h of dark) for 1 week, after which the plants were put under specific light treatments. Light quality manipulations took place in a white light background (Philips Master HPI-T Plus 400 W and Philips Plus line Pro 150 W). The R/FR was reduced from 1.2 to 0.25 by supplemental far-red light (730-nm light-emitting diode; Shinto Electronics [http://www.shinkohelecs.com]). Blue light photon fluence rates (400–500 nm) were reduced from 26 to less than 1 µmol m–2 s–1 using two layers of Lee 010 medium yellow filter (Lee Filters; http://www.leefilters.com). PAR for these light treatments was maintained at 140 µmol m–2 s–1. Green shading mimicking light conditions in a dense canopy was achieved using two layers of Lee 122 Fern Green, which reduced the PAR to 65 µmol m–2 s–1, the R/FR to 0.19, and the blue light photon fluence rate to 2 µmol m–2 s–1. Wherever mentioned, "controls" refers to data from plants grown in light conditions with an unaltered spectral composition and PAR of 140 µmol m–2 s–1. All light treatments were started at approximately 10 AM each time the experiments were performed.
In order to measure stem elongation, ramet lengths were measured using a digital caliper every day at the same time to calculate daily growth increments. Care was taken to choose ramets that had similar starting lengths. For each light treatment, a total of at least 30 to 35 ramets were measured. Measurements were made for three independent trials.
AIE was measured using a custom-built constant-load extensometer, modified from the design of Cosgrove (1989)
The top internodes from plants of both ecotypes growing under different light conditions were harvested on the 3rd d after the start of the light treatment. Harvested material was immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at –80°C until they were used. Enzyme extracts were prepared as described (Soga et al., 1999
The top internodes of plants from both ecotypes grown in different light conditions (low R/FR and green shade; see "Light Treatments" above) were harvested at different time points after the start of the light treatments. Total RNA was isolated from all of these tissue samples using the RNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Potential genomic DNA contamination was removed using on-column DNase digestion (Qiagen). The concentration of recovered total RNA was measured using the Nanodrop spectrophotometer (Isogen LifeSciences). cDNA was synthesized from 2 µg of total RNA using oligo(dT) primers. cDNA synthesis was achieved using SuperScript III reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen). The reverse transcriptase reaction was carried out according to the manufacturer's instructions at 50°C, and the 20-µL reaction mixture contained 200 units of reverse transcriptase III, 4 µL of first-strand buffer, 40 units of RNase OUT recombinant RNase inhibiter, and 1 µL of 0.1 M dithiothreitol. Degenerate primers were designed from the conserved regions of known
In Silico Analysis for Predicted Amino Acid Sequences of Expansin Gene Fragments
To determine the phylogenetic relationship between S. longipes
The top internodes of plants were harvested before the start of the treatments and at every day for 3 d after the start of treatments. Harvested material was immediately frozen and stored at –80°C. All of the data shown are means of four biological replicates each consisting of internodes harvested from at least three pots. Total RNA from these samples was extracted using the RNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen). Reverse transcription of total RNA using random hexamers was performed as described above. Real-time reverse transcription (RT)-PCR was performed using 18S rRNA as an internal standard in a 20-µL reaction that contained 11 µL of SYBR Green Supermix (Bio-Rad; no. 170-8882), 50 ng of cDNA (0.1 ng for 18S rRNA), and gene-specific primers (Table I). A Bio-Rad MyiQ single-color real-time PCR detection system was used. The following program was used for all of the genes tested: 3 min at 95°C, followed by 40 cycles of 30 s at 95°C, 30 s at gene-specific annealing temperature, and 60 s at 72°C. For each expansin, a number of primer pairs were designed using the Primer 3 software (http://frodo.wi.mit.edu/primer3/primer3_code.html). Of these, the primer pairs that resulted in no cross-amplification with other expansin sequences (as tested on plasmid sequences) and did not form primer dimers were chosen for the real-time RT-PCR measurements. The annealing temperature was also optimized for each primer pair to result in specific amplification of the transcript of interest. Primer sequences and annealing temperatures are given in Table I. In addition, for every primer combination used, efficiency and melting curves were obtained. PCR products were also resolved on 1% agarose gels in order to confirm single products of the expected size. The Ct value for each gene was normalized relative to the Ct value of 18S rRNA. Relative transcript levels were calculated using the comparative Ct method (Livak and Schmittgen, 2001
For growth rates and real-time RT-PCR measurements, treatments and their respective controls were analyzed using Student's t test. For xyloglucan-degrading activity and AIE values, two-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's b test were performed. Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession numbers EU840703 to EU840714, EU840720, and EU840721.
We thank Ankie Ammerlaan and Rob Welschen for technical assistance and Alex Boonman for help with the figures and helpful comments on the manuscript. Received June 28, 2008; accepted August 26, 2008; published September 3, 2008.
1 This work was supported by the National Science and Engineering Council of Canada (Discovery grant to C.C.C.) and the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (VENI grant no. 86306001 to R.P.). The authors 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) are: Rashmi Sasidharan (r.sasidharan{at}uu.nl) and Ronald Pierik (r.pierik{at}uu.nl).
[C] Some figures in this article are displayed in color online but in black and white in the print edition.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.125518 * Corresponding author; e-mail l.a.c.j.voesenek{at}uu.nl.
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