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First published online October 3, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.128454 Plant Physiology 148:1857-1867 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Characterization of Cytokinin and Adenine Transport in Arabidopsis Cell Cultures1,[OA]Center for Plant Molecular Biology, University of Tuebingen, D–72071 Tuebingen, Germany (A.C., H.S.); Institute of Plant Physiology and Biotechnology, University of Hohenheim, D–70593 Stuttgart, Germany (A.C.); Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907–201 (B.S.); and Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution for Science, Stanford, California 94305 (W.B.F.)
Cytokinins are distributed through the vascular system and trigger responses of target cells via receptor-mediated signal transduction. Perception and transduction of the signal can occur at the plasma membrane or in the cytosol. The signal is terminated by the action of extra- or intracellular cytokinin oxidases. While radiotracer studies have been used to study transport and metabolism of cytokinins in plants, little is known about the kinetic properties of cytokinin transport. To provide a reference dataset, radiolabeled trans-zeatin (tZ) was used for uptake studies in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) cell culture. Uptake kinetics of tZ are multiphasic, indicating the presence of both low- and high-affinity transport systems. The protonophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone is an effective inhibitor of cytokinin uptake, consistent with H+-mediated uptake. Other physiological cytokinins, such as isopentenyl adenine and benzylaminopurine, are effective competitors of tZ uptake, whereas allantoin has no inhibitory effect. Adenine competes for zeatin uptake, indicating that the degradation product of cytokinin oxidases is transported by the same systems. Comparison of adenine and tZ uptake in Arabidopsis seedlings reveals similar uptake kinetics. Kinetic properties, as well as substrate specificity determined in cell cultures, are compatible with the hypothesis that members of the plant-specific purine permease family play a role in adenine transport for scavenging extracellular adenine and may, in addition, be involved in low-affinity cytokinin uptake.
Due to their immobile nature, plants require highly efficient mechanisms for acclimation to rapidly changing environmental conditions and for communication between the distal organs of the plant. Besides classical hormones, such as steroids, oligopeptides, and eicosanoid-like compounds, plants have developed a specific set of phytohormones. Most phytohormones are synthesized by few conversions from common metabolic intermediates. The phytohormone cytokinin is mainly generated by isopentylation of AMP, ADP, or ATP by adenosine-phosphate-isopentenyl transferase (IPT), resulting in the production of corresponding isopentenyl adenosine-5'-phosphates. These isopentenyl adenine (iP) nucleotides are converted to trans-zeatin (tZ) derivatives by trans-hydroxylases CYP735A1 and CYP735A2 (Takei et al., 2004b
The level of cytokinins in plants is controlled by de novo biosynthesis, conversion between free bases, nucleosides, and nucleotides, inactivation, degradation, and translocation. The irreversible degradation of cytokinins is catalyzed by cytokinin oxidase/dehydrogenase (CKX). Analysis of the entire Arabidopsis genome identified seven CKX genes (AtCKX1–AtCKX7; Schmülling et al., 2003
The distinct sites of expression of genes for cytokinin biosynthesis (Miyawaki et al., 2004
Cellular uptake and turnover of cytokinin appear to be highly controlled because a local supply of cytokinins by microorganisms on senescing leaves leads to delay of senescence. Furthermore, grafts of wild-type shoots onto root stocks of transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), overproducing cytokinins due to ectopic expression of the Agrobacterium tumefaciens ipt gene, did not lead to release of lateral shoot buds from suppression or to accelerated senescence (Faiss et al., 1997
Recently, low-affinity transporters for cytokinin nucleobases belonging to the purine permease (PUP) family in Arabidopsis (Gillissen et al., 2000 This study describes the properties of adenine and tZ transport in cultured Arabidopsis cells. The uptake of tZ is inhibited by other cytokinins, as well as adenine.
Stability of Radiolabeled tZ in Arabidopsis Cell Culture Supernatant
Cytokinins are irreversibly degraded by cytokinin oxidases to produce the structurally related adenine. The presence of signal sequences and the accumulation of extracellular cytokinin oxidase activity in yeast indicate that some of the enzymes may be secreted (Werner et al., 2001
Low-Affinity Transport System for tZ in Arabidopsis Cell Culture The presence of a low-affinity transport system for tZ in Arabidopsis cell culture was analyzed by direct uptake measurements with radiolabeled 3H-tZ. The uptake rate at a substrate concentration of 20 µM was linear for at least 3 min and sensitive to the protonophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), potentially suggesting that energization is necessary for the transport (Fig. 2, A and B ). At 20 µM substrate concentration, the uptake rates were in the range of 0.4 pmol tZ mg–1 min–1 fresh weight (Fig. 2A), or an estimated 0.09 fmol tZ cell–1 min–1 corresponding to 741 fmol tZ cm–2 membrane surface of an average culture cell (diameter 31.05 ± 7.33 µm; n = 36). Uptake rates were concentration dependent; however, they did not show clear Michaelis-Menten saturation (Fig. 2C). Using an Eadie-Hofstee plot of the data, two kinetic components with Km values of 4 µM and approximately 100 µM were determined (Fig. 2C, inset), suggesting the presence of at least two transport systems with different affinity.
Competition experiments with a 10-fold excess of unlabeled tZ, adenine, iP, and benzylaminopurine reduced the uptake rate, indicating that adenine and cytokinins may be taken up by a common transport system (Fig. 2D). The uptake was significantly inhibited by tZ riboside. Allantoin had no inhibitory effect, properties similar to that of the Arabidopsis transporter PUP1 when expressed heterologously in yeast (Gillissen et al., 2000
The presence of nanomolar concentrations of cytokinin in phloem and xylem sap (Beck and Wagner, 1994
The uptake rates were concentration dependent and displayed saturation kinetics (Fig. 3C) with a Km value of 211 nM (Fig. 3C, inset). Surprisingly also, the high-affinity import of 3H-tZ into Arabidopsis cells was strongly inhibited by an excess of unlabeled adenine. Other cytokinins, such as iP, benzylaminopurine, and tZ riboside, significantly reduced the uptake rates, whereas allantoin did not compete (Fig. 3D). Together, the results indicate that the high-affinity transport system recognizes both cytokinins and adenine as substrates.
Because transport studies in cultured cells and yeast transformed with PUP1 or PUP2 indicate that adenine and cytokinins use the same low-affinity transport system (this article; Gillissen et al., 2000
Uptake of Adenine and tZ by Arabidopsis Seedlings The presence of a transport system for adenine and cytokinins was also demonstrated in 8-d-old Arabidopsis seedlings by direct uptake studies with radiolabeled tZ and adenine. Adenine and tZ are both taken up by Arabidopsis seedlings (Fig. 5A ). The uptake is sensitive to the protonophore CCCP, suggesting that transport is energy dependent. Similarly, as in the case of the cell culture, the uptake rates are higher for 14C-adenine compared to 3H-tZ.
Arabidopsis PUP1 and PUP2 may contribute to the observed accumulation of adenine and cytokinins because reverse transcription (RT)-PCR analysis with gene-specific primers demonstrated high expression in Arabidopsis seedling tissue (Fig. 5B). As shown in Figure 5C, reporter gene activity was detectable at the tip of cotyledons in PUP1-GUS seedlings at a similar developmental stage as used for the uptake studies, and in the vascular tissue of PUP2-GUS cotyledons. For PUP3, no RT-PCR signal and no GUS activity was obtained in Arabidopsis seedlings, consistent with its pollen-restricted expression pattern described previously (Bürkle et al., 2003
Nucleobases deriving from deteriorating biological material are present at low levels in soil. Whereas Arabidopsis germination is unaffected on medium containing up to 2 mM cytosine, thymine, or uracil, seedling development was severely affected on medium supplemented with 2 mM adenine (Fig. 6 ). Guanine was not tested due to its low solubility in water. Lower adenine concentrations affected seedling growth as well and led to chlorosis. Growth arrest in roots was detectable at concentrations above 0.5 mM adenine (Fig. 5N). As expected, based on the hypothesis that adenine competes for cytokinin, the observed phenotype is apparently different from growth inhibition by iP (Fig. 6, N–P). Lateral root formation was inhibited even at the lowest cytokinin concentrations, whereas it was less affected by adenine.
Previous studies had shown that cell suspension cultures of Chenobium rubrum and tobacco are able to take up and metabolize cytokinins (Laloue et al., 1981
Moreover, cytokinin uptake into cell cultures was competitively inhibited by adenine, lending support to the hypothesis of the existence of a common transport system for adenine and cytokinins. Such systems may either contribute to retrieval of cytokinin oxidase-derived adenine from the apoplasm or they may serve functions in retrieval of adenine derived from other biological processes. As a consequence, one would expect that transport rates of cytokinins will be influenced whenever adenine is present due to the higher capacity for adenine transport. However, in general, adenine levels appear to be very low (Ashihara et al., 1990
Previous studies had suggested a diffusion mechanism for cytokinin uptake based on the high permeability of cell membranes to free cytokinin bases and ribosides (Laloue et al., 1981
The molecular nature of the cytokinin transport systems described here is still unknown. Using suppression cloning in yeast, a new family of plant-specific transporters had been identified, members of which mediate protonophore-sensitive uptake of both adenine and cytokinins (Gillissen et al., 2000
Interestingly, the adenine uptake into Arabidopsis cells was also not competed by tZ riboside, possibly indicating that the transport of this compound occurs via transporters with selectivity for other cytokinins but not to adenine. Potential candidates for such function could be the newly identified and characterized plant ENTs (Möhlmann et al., 2001 In summary, this article provides evidence for the presence of proton-coupled high-, medium-, and low-affinity cytokinin transport systems in Arabidopsis culture cells. The transport systems share some properties with PUP1 and PUP2, the so-far only functionally characterized members of this large gene family with 21 members. The characterization of other PUP family members, the characterization of cell cultures from insertional mutants, RNAi-repressed or overexpressor Arabidopsis plants, and cloning of new transporters different from PUPs may help to obtain further information regarding the cytokinin and purine transport and its function in planta.
Transport Measurements in Arabidopsis Suspension Cells
The suspension cell culture from Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) ecotype Landsberg erecta (May et al., 1998
The Arabidopsis suspension cells were harvested by centrifugation, washed, and diluted as described above. After 6-h incubation in fresh medium, an aliquot of 850 µL cells was mixed with 50 µL 3H-tZ-containing medium to the final concentration of 500 nM and incubated for further 5 min. The sample was than centrifuged for 3 min at 500 rpm and filtered. Twenty microliters of the obtained supernatant was analyzed by HPLC using the LB 507B radiodetector (Berthold). Adenine (Sigma) and tZ (Sigma) were used as standards for estimation of the retention time.
Arabidopsis seeds (ecotype Columbia-0) were plated on Murashige and Skoog medium supplemented with 2% Suc. Uptake measurements were performed with 10 8-d-old seedlings in Murashige and Skoog medium supplemented with 2% Suc containing 2-3H-tZ (final concentration 43.2 Bq/µL) or 14C-adenine (final concentration 12.3 Bq/µL) and the unlabeled analog to the final concentration of 5 µM. Seedlings were floated in the medium containing the radiotracer. After 45 min, the seedlings were washed twice with 5 mM adenine solution and incubated overnight in p-diisobutyl-cresoxyethoxyethyl dimethylbenzylammonium hydroxide to solubilize the tissue. Radioactivity was quantified by scintillation counting.
RNA for RT-PCR analysis was extracted from 8-d-old Arabidopsis seedlings grown on Murashige and Skoog medium supplemented with 2% Suc according to the SDS-phenol method. Aliquots of 2 µg RNA were used as template for first-strand synthesis using RETROscript kit (Ambion). Two microliters of the first-strand cDNA or 150 ng RNA (as negative control) were used for PCR with gene-specific primers. To avoid amplification of genomic DNA, reverse primers were positioned on intron/exon borders. A 524-bp PUP1 fragment was amplified by 32 PCR cycles using the oligonucleotides 5'-CTAACAACGCGGAAAACAAGC-3' and 5'-CTCTTGCTATCACCTTAAAATCTC-3'. A 619-bp PUP2 transcript was obtained by 32 PCR cycles with specific primers: 5'-TATCTTGGTACCAAAGGATCTGGTTTCCAAGC-3' and 5'-TCCTGCTATCACCTTGAAATCG-3'. The primers 5'-ACAATGTGGGTGATAGTACAAG-3' and 5'-CTTTGGTAAGGCCTTGAAAATC-3' were used to analyze the expression of PUP3 amplifying a 515-bp region. Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession numbers At1g28230 (PUP1), At2g33750 (PUP2), and At1g28220 (PUP3).
We would like to thank Bettina Stadelhofer and Gabi Fiene for excellent technical assistance. Received August 26, 2008; accepted September 26, 2008; published October 3, 2008.
1 This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant no. DE–FG02–04ER15542 to W.B.F.) and the U.S. Department of Energy (grant no. DE–FG02–04ER15542 to W.B.F.). 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: Wolf B. Frommer (wfrommer{at}stanford.edu).
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.128454 * Corresponding author; e-mail wfrommer{at}stanford.edu.
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