|
|
||||||||
|
First published online November 7, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.126276 Plant Physiology 149:499-514 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Divergent Regulation of Terpenoid Metabolism in the Trichomes of Wild and Cultivated Tomato Species1,[W],[OA]Center for Novel Agricultural Products, Department of Biology, University of York, York YO10 5YW, United Kingdom (K.B., A.H., N.W., I.S., S.S., Y.L., R.A.D., P.B.); and Plant Biology Division, Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Ardmore, Oklahoma 73401 (R.A.D.)
The diversification of chemical production in glandular trichomes is important in the development of resistance against pathogens and pests in two species of tomato. We have used genetic and genomic approaches to uncover some of the biochemical and molecular mechanisms that underlie the divergence in trichome metabolism between the wild species Solanum habrochaites LA1777 and its cultivated relative, Solanum lycopersicum. LA1777 produces high amounts of insecticidal sesquiterpene carboxylic acids (SCAs), whereas cultivated tomatoes lack SCAs and are more susceptible to pests. We show that trichomes of the two species have nearly opposite terpenoid profiles, consisting mainly of monoterpenes and low levels of sesquiterpenes in S. lycopersicum and mainly of SCAs and very low monoterpene levels in LA1777. The accumulation patterns of these terpenoids are different during development, in contrast to the developmental expression profiles of terpenoid pathway genes, which are similar in the two species, but they do not correlate in either case with terpenoid accumulation. However, our data suggest that the accumulation of monoterpenes in S. lycopersicum and major sesquiterpenes in LA1777 are linked both genetically and biochemically. Metabolite analyses after targeted gene silencing, inhibitor treatments, and precursor feeding all show that sesquiterpene biosynthesis relies mainly on products from the plastidic 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol-4-phosphate pathway in LA1777 but less so in the cultivated species. Furthermore, two classes of sesquiterpenes produced by the wild species may be synthesized from distinct pools of precursors via cytosolic and plastidial cyclases. However, highly trichome-expressed sesquiterpene cyclase-like enzymes were ruled out as being involved in the production of major LA1777 sesquiterpenes.
Plants collectively produce a large diversity of secondary metabolites as part of a defense strategy against pests, diseases, and different forms of abiotic stress. Many of these compounds are produced at the surface of the plant by epidermal secretory structures called glandular trichomes. These hair- or gland-like structures typically consist of a unicellular or multicellular stalk capped by one or more secretory cells that accumulate or exude chemicals (McCaskill and Croteau, 1999
On the basis of genetic evidence and heterologous expression, it has been proposed that enzymes related to germacrene C synthase, corresponding to a locus on chromosome 6, mediate the accumulation of a group of structurally similar compounds termed class I sesquiterpenes (cI-Ss) in LA1777 and S. lycopersicum (Colby et al., 1998 -humulene and β-caryophyllene. A distinct but so far unidentified enzyme or group of enzymes, associated with a locus on chromosome 8, has been hypothesized to catalyze the formation of class II sesquiterpenes (cII-Ss) in LA1777 but not in S. lycopersicum (van der Hoeven et al., 2000 -santalene, -bergamotene, and β-bergamotene, which are thought to be further modified to form the sesquiterpene carboxylic acids (SCAs) -santalenoic and - and β-bergamotenoic acid, which have strong insecticidal properties (Coates et al., 1988
Terpenoid production in plants is largely dependent on flux through two pathways that provide isopentenyl diphosphate (IPP) and dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMAPP). Initially, it was suggested that the mevalonate (MVA) pathway, which operates in the cytosol, supplies acetyl CoA-derived precursors for the production of sesquiterpenes and triterpenes, whereas the plastid-localized 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol-4-phosphate (MEP) pathway provides pyruvate-derived IPP and DMAPP for the biosynthesis of hemiterpenes, monoterpenes, diterpenes, and tetraterpenes (Lichtenthaler, 1999
The study of metabolic pathway control in glandular trichomes has been hindered by the lack of tools for the rapid evaluation of gene function. Recently, virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) has emerged as a useful tool for the study of gene function in the Solanaceae species and other species (Burch-Smith et al., 2004 To investigate further the divergence in terpenoid production between S. lycopersicum and S. habrochaites, we have undertaken a comparative study based on a combination of genetic, genomic, and physiological approaches. We show that there is a close relationship between monoterpene and cII-S metabolism at both the genetic and biochemical levels. We also show that cII-Ss in LA1777 are mostly derived from MEP precursors, whereas the MVA pathway contributes more significantly to sesquiterpene production in S. lycopersicum. Our results further suggest that S. habrochaites produces its two classes of sesquiterpenes from distinct precursor pools derived from the MVA and MEP pathways, respectively, which implies the existence of a mechanism for partitioning sesquiterpene production, most likely by a different subcellular localization of the corresponding cyclases.
Divergence in Terpenoid Quantity and Quality in Trichomes of S. lycopersicum and S. habrochaites LA1777
To date, the profiles of monoterpenes, sesquiterpenes, and their carboxylic acids (SCAs) in S. lycopersicum and LA1777 have been obtained in separate experiments (Coates et al., 1988
As shown in Figure 1B, there are two abundant types of glandular trichomes present on stems of LA1777. The type VI trichomes are the second most abundant trichome type after glandular type IV in LA1777 and after nonglandular type V in S. lycopersicum (Figs. 1, A and B, and 2, A and B ). Careful sampling of metabolites from individual glands with a capillary revealed that the composition of terpenoids in type VI trichome heads was nearly identical to that of extracts derived from whole tissue after immersion in chloroform, which suggested that all surface terpenoids measured are accumulated in type VI trichomes in LA1777 (Supplemental Fig. S1). The same result was obtained by sampling type VI glands from S. lycopersicum (data not shown). Although type VI trichome densities on equivalent internodes were slightly lower in LA1777 (Figs. 1, A and B, and 2, A and B), the trichomes of LA1777 accumulated 8-fold higher levels of free terpenoids per surface area of stems of greenhouse-grown plants than those of S. lycopersicum (Table I).
The Developmental Profiles of Terpenoid Accumulation Are Different in S. lycopersicum and LA1777 To determine whether fundamental differences in the developmental pattern of terpenoid accumulation could contribute to the highly divergent metabolite profiles between the wild and cultivated species, terpenoid accumulation was measured in successive internodes of 3-month-old S. lycopersicum and LA1777 plants. Monoterpene accumulation remained fairly constant on an area basis in successive internodes of S. lycopersicum (Fig. 2C). In contrast, sesquiterpene levels were much higher in younger tissue and decreased from one internode to the next in LA1777 (Fig. 2, D and F). As trichome density in the uppermost internodes did not change significantly despite the increase in internode length (Fig. 2, A and B), terpenoid accumulation in trichomes was lower in older stem segments in the wild but not in the cultivated species. Interestingly, sesquiterpene levels likewise decreased from younger to older internodes in S. lycopersicum, especially in the most apical internodes (Fig. 2E). Therefore sesquiterpene and monoterpene accumulation appear to be differentially regulated in tomato, although the accumulation of each compound class may be similarly controlled in LA1777 and S. lycopersicum.
To shed more light on the molecular basis of terpenoid production in the wild species, we examined a collection of 2,435 public ESTs produced from LA1777 trichomes (R.S. van der Hoeven, unpublished data). Cluster analysis produced a total of 1,641 unigenes, suggesting a relatively low level of redundancy among the expressed sequences. Some of the ESTs, however, were disproportionately represented, and interestingly, many of these corresponded to genes that could be associated with terpenoid production. In particular, ESTs for SSTLH1, which has been predicted to encode a cI-S cyclase (van der Hoeven et al., 2000
To determine whether transcriptional regulation is likely to play a role in controlling terpenoid production, we examined the expression of genes encoding different pathway enzymes in trichomes from successive stem internodes. For this experiment, DXS, DXR, HMGS, and HMGR were selected to represent the MEP and MVA pathways, as well as several genes encoding terpenoid cyclases that are represented in the EST collection (MTS1, MTS1-like, and SSTLH1). A similar pattern of transcript accumulation was observed for most genes in the two species, with a strong increase in elongating internodes followed by a gradual decrease in more mature sections of the stem (Fig. 3, A–G ; Supplemental Fig. S3, A–E), which was less pronounced in S. lycopersicum (HMGR, MTS1-like; Fig. 3, D and F). The expression patterns of DXS, DXR, HMGS, and HMGR also closely matched those of the genes encoding the SSTLE1 and SSTLH1 sesquiterpene cyclases (SST1) as well as known (MTS1) and putative (MTS1-like) monoterpene cyclases. This indicated that genes encoding terpenoid pathway enzymes synthesizing isoprenoid precursors and acting farther downstream may be similarly regulated (Fig. 3, A–G). Interestingly, both monoterpene cyclase genes represented in the EST collection were differentially regulated in the two species, a situation that may be relevant to the divergence in monoterpene production between S. lycopersicum and LA1777 (Fig. 3, C and D; Table I).
There was no major difference in the expression of genes encoding MVA versus MEP pathway enzymes in the two species, suggesting that both pathways may be similarly active in S. lycopersicum and LA1777 (Fig. 3, A, B, E, and F). While the selected genes were generally more expressed in trichomes than in underlying tissues in S. lycopersicum (Fig. 3H; Supplemental Fig. S3F) and LA1777 (data not shown), the expression levels of MVA and MEP pathway genes were generally higher in LA1777 in comparison with S. lycopersicum, with a maximum (10-fold) difference for HMGR. Furthermore, the onset of terpenoid accumulation preceded the observed increase in pathway gene expression in both species, and the drop in sesquiterpene production in the first three internodes was not accompanied by a decrease in transcript levels (Figs. 2, C–F, and 3, A–G). Thus, a correlation between transcript and metabolite levels, especially in successive internodes, could not be detected.
Early MEP pathway genes such as DXS and DXR were expressed in LA1777 at comparable levels to those in S. lycopersicum trichomes (Fig. 3, A and B; Supplemental Fig. S3, A and B). As LA1777 in contrast to S. lycopersicum does not accumulate significant levels of monoterpenes, which are classically associated with the MEP pathway, we investigated the roles of the two IPP pathways in the trichome terpenoid metabolism of this species.
VIGS has been used successfully to investigate gene function in tomato (Liu et al., 2002
Targeting the rate-limiting enzyme of the MEP pathway by silencing DXR to down-regulate the synthesis of MEP-derived IPP had a significant impact on trichome terpenoid metabolism in LA1777. Specifically, it led to a strong reduction in the accumulation of SCAs and their cII-S hydrocarbon precursors (t test, P
To verify the above results, we measured the effects of mevinolin (an inhibitor of HMGR) and fosmidomycin (an inhibitor of DXR) on trichome metabolism in LA1777 cuttings by profiling trichome metabolites from tissue that had expanded after inhibitor application (Alberts et al., 1980 0.05 and P 0.01, respectively; Fig. 4, D–F). Fosmidomycin application to cuttings of the cII-S hydrocarbon-producing introgression line LA3935 also caused the near disappearance of the cII-S compounds, such as -cis-bergamotene, -santalene, and -trans-bergamotene. However, accumulation of major cI-S β-caryophyllene was less affected, as was that of other more minor class I compounds (Supplemental Fig. S5A). Consistent with the results of HMGR silencing, mevinolin application had no impact on the accumulation of class II terpenoids in LA1777 but caused a strong decrease in cI-S accumulation (Fig. 4, G–I). To confirm that silencing and inhibitor applications truly target the MEP and MVA pathways, we supplied 14C-labeled pyruvate (a MEP precursor) and [14C]MVA to LA1777 cuttings in the presence or absence of inhibitors. After incubation, trichome metabolites were extracted and separated on thin-layer chromatography (TLC) plates (Supplemental Fig. S6), and label incorporation into sesquiterpene acids and hydrocarbons was measured. Whereas SCAs were strongly labeled at 3 h after [14C]pyruvate feeding, only low levels of incorporation (about 50 times less) were detected from [14C]MVA (Table II ). The cI-S and cII-S hydrocarbons were not resolved under our TLC conditions. However, as a group, sesquiterpene hydrocarbons were strongly labeled by [14C]pyruvate, in agreement with cII-S hydrocarbons acting as intermediates in SCA biosynthesis. Hydrocarbons were also labeled from [14C]MVA, although less strongly, consistent with the low abundance of cI-S accumulation in LA1777 trichomes.
The above data suggest that the MEP pathway directly contributes to cII-S formation and that the contribution of the MVA pathway, if it exists, is negligible. In contrast, the incorporation of 14C label from MVA into sesquiterpene hydrocarbons indicated that other noncarboxylic sesquiterpenes are likely derived from the MVA pathway. To show that 14C incorporation into SCAs from pyruvate depends on DXR and not on HMGR activity, LA1777 cuttings were treated with fosmidomycin or mevinolin prior to labeling. Fosmidomycin significantly inhibited incorporation, whereas mevinolin had little or no effect (Table II). Taken together, the results from VIGS experiments, inhibitor applications, and labeled precursor feeding studies were consistent and suggested that pyruvate, but not MVA, is a direct precursor in the biosynthesis of cII-Ss in LA1777. On the other hand, these data also indicate that cI-Ss are produced mainly from MVA via the MVA pathway in LA1777.
To evaluate the relative contributions of the MVA and MEP pathways to terpenoid biosynthesis in S. lycopersicum trichomes, we performed VIGS and inhibitor studies in cv M82 plants.
Silencing of DXR, leading to the reduction of MEP-derived precursor accumulation, caused a significant drop in monoterpene accumulation (t test, P
To assess further the contributions of the MVA and MEP pathways to the production of different trichome terpenoid classes in S. lycopersicum, cv M82 cuttings were treated independently with mevinolin (MVA) and fosmidomycin (MEP) and trichome metabolites were profiled from the youngest tissue. The phenotypes of inhibitor-treated plants were as observed for LA1777. Consistent with the results of VIGS, fosmidomycin nearly abolished monoterpene accumulation (Fig. 5C) but also caused a strong decline in the production of sesquiterpenes (t test, P 0.01; Fig. 5D). This effect was not obvious from VIGS experiments, which generally show a weaker phenotype than inhibitor applications, as they reduce rather than eliminate transcript levels and show some "patchiness" due to nonuniform spread of the virus (Fig. 5, E and F; Supplemental Fig. S4A). Applying different concentrations of fosmidomycin (from 10 to 100 µM) showed that even the lowest concentration caused the same reduction in monoterpene and sesquiterpene accumulation as described before, although there was no visible bleaching phenotype (Supplemental Fig. S5B). This indicated that the observed changes were not due to secondary effects of the inhibitor on plant health. Application of mevinolin, on the other hand, caused a significant decrease in sesquiterpene (t test, P 0.01) but did not affect monoterpene accumulation, consistent with the HMGR-silencing data (Fig. 5, C and D). Together, the silencing and inhibitor results indicated that the MEP pathway is central to monoterpene metabolism in S. lycopersicum and suggested that the biosynthesis of cI-Ss, in contrast to cII-Ss in LA1777, is dependent on both MVA and MEP pathway-derived precursors.
The coincidence of low monoterpene accumulation with high cII-S production in LA1777 led us to investigate the genetic relationship between the two metabolic traits. For this experiment, we took advantage of nearly isogenic lines (NILs) containing genomic introgressions from LA1777 in a S. lycopersicum background (Monforte and Tanksley, 2000
One cII-S-accumulating NIL (TA517 = LA3935) had previously been identified (van der Hoeven et al., 2000 Three classes of progeny, which shared similar terpenoid profiles, were identified in each population. The first class, which comprised the larger number of progeny in each population, produced monoterpenes that were similar to those found in cv E6203 plants and also accumulated cII-Ss. The second class accumulated cII-Ss but little or no monoterpenes, and the third class produced monoterpenes but no cII-Ss. The proportions of plants in each phenotypic category were similar in the two BC1S1 populations and suggested that cII-S and E6203 monoterpene accumulation are both under the control of single dominant loci (Table III ). The sizes of the phenotypic groups and the lack of a fourth class of progeny, which produced neither cII-Ss nor E6203-type monoterpenes, were more compatible with linkage between these two loci than with independent assortment (Table III).
All plants producing E6203-type monoterpenes accumulated -pinene, verbenene, -2-carene, and β-phellandrene, and these compounds always accumulated in nearly identical proportions (approximately 3%, 5%, 20%, and 72%, respectively). This finding and the segregation ratios of monoterpene accumulation strongly suggest that the accumulation of the different monoterpenes is controlled either by a single gene or by closely linked genes. The cII-S production was lower in plants that produced monoterpenes than in plants that did not. In both populations, cII-S production was only half when accompanied by monoterpenes than that observed in their absence, and monoterpene production appeared to be inversely affected (Table III). This suggests either an effect of semidominant alleles or competition for precursors such as IPP between the cII-S and the monoterpene synthases. Taken together, the above results suggested strong genetic and metabolic associations between cII-S and monoterpene production in the wild and cultivated species.
The molecular mechanisms controlling cII-S accumulation in LA1777 have not been defined, although genetic analysis has ruled out the involvement of the cI-S synthase genes SSTLH1 and SSTLH2 or any gene that is highly similar in sequence to them (van der Hoeven et al., 2000 To examine the possible role of other, more diverged sesquiterpene cyclases in this process, we screened the EST collection and identified eight unigenes with similarity to known terpenoid synthases. Among these, four had highest similarity to sesquiterpene cyclases (Supplemental Table S4). The most highly expressed of these sequences corresponded to SSTLH1 (92 ESTs), and the sequences of two other unigenes matched nonoverlapping sections of SSTLH2 (five and one EST, respectively). A fourth sequence, represented by only one EST (corresponding to GenBank accession no. AW616373) with little to no DNA sequence similarity to either SSTLH1 or SSTLH2, was associated with a predicted product most similar to sesquiterpene synthases, which we termed SSTLH3 (Supplemental Table S4). Using a primer pair that could amplify an insertion in the LA1777 allele of SSTLH3, a smaller fragment diagnostic of the S. lycopersicum allele was found to be present in each introgression line tested, whereas none of the lines contained the fragment for the LA1777 allele (Supplemental Fig. S8A). This pattern is incompatible with the presence of an introgressed fragment at the SSTLH3 locus. In addition, the expression level of SSTLH3 was much higher in S. lycopersicum than in LA1777 trichomes, and its developmental expression pattern was different from those of the other terpenoid pathway genes tested in LA1777 (Fig. 3, A–G; Supplemental Fig. S8, B and C). On the basis of these and previously reported results, we conclude that cII-S production is unlikely to involve a highly trichome-expressed gene encoding a typical sesquiterpene cyclase.
In this report, we have investigated the molecular basis of terpenoid accumulation and the relative contributions of precursor pathways in the glandular trichomes of two related tomato species, S. lycopersicum and its wild relative S. habrochaites LA1777. Both species have greatly diverged in the types and amounts of terpenoids they accumulate in trichomes: S. lycopersicum mainly produces monoterpenes and traces of cI-Ss, whereas LA1777 produces mainly cII-S carboxylic acids, small amounts of cI-Ss, and traces of monoterpenes (Table I). The monoterpenes and cI-Ss and cII-Ss analyzed in this study all derive from type VI trichomes (Supplemental Fig. S1; Frelichowski and Juvik, 2001
Analysis of a public EST collection from LA1777 trichomes showed that most ESTs represent gene products associated with metabolism, and about 9% of the ESTs representing the 100 most highly expressed sequences represent genes involved in terpenoid metabolism. In comparison with the representation of other metabolic pathways in the trichomes of LA1777 (e.g. flavonoid [3%] or lipid [6%] metabolism), the relatively higher EST representation of the terpenoid metabolism reflects its high activity in the glandular trichomes and is consistent with the high level of terpenoid accumulation in LA1777 trichomes. It has been shown that up to 1.2% of leaf fresh weight consists of SCAs in LA1777 (Frelichowski and Juvik, 2001 The comparable EST representation of MEP to MVA pathway genes in the LA1777 trichome library as well as similar (to higher) expression levels of MEP pathway genes in LA1777 compared with S. lycopersicum may hint at the involvement of the MEP pathway in the production of terpenoids in LA1777. Transcript levels of MVA pathway genes appeared to be up to 10-fold higher in LA1777 than in S. lycopersicum, and the cI-S synthase encoding SSTLH1 was the most highly represented gene in the EST collection. This may reflect the clearly higher levels of cI-S accumulation in LA1777 compared with S. lycopersicum but does not correlate with the main components of the terpenoid profile in LA1777, namely the cII-SCAs. This discrepancy could be due to differences in turnover of cI-Ss and cII-Ss and/or in the activity and stability of the enzymes involved in their synthesis.
The expression levels of most of the genes of the MVA or MEP pathway and monoterpene or sesquiterpene synthesis follow the same profile during development, suggesting a coordinated regulation of terpenoid biosynthesis at the gene level. However, although expression of these genes is relatively trichome specific, the expression profiles do not mirror metabolite accumulation during development, suggesting that terpenoid synthesis is not regulated at the transcript level in tomato trichomes but rather involves other (posttranscriptional) regulatory mechanisms. Similarly, only a loose correlation between terpenoid pathway gene expression and enzyme activity has been found in basil (Ocimum basilicum) terpenoid metabolism (Iijima et al., 2004
Our results show that TRV-mediated VIGS can be used as an effective approach to silence trichome-expressed genes in cultivated as well as wild tomato species. By silencing SSTLE1, we have demonstrated, to our knowledge for the first time, the function of this gene, confirming its expected activity in vivo (van der Hoeven et al., 2000
The effectiveness of VIGS in tomato trichomes will facilitate future comparative genomic studies that would otherwise be impractical using stable transformation. The validity of candidate gene approaches has been demonstrated for studying the regulation of epidermal metabolism in Arabidopsis (Broun et al., 2004
Using a combination of strategies from VIGS to inhibitor application and labeled precursor feeding, we have demonstrated that the production of cII-Ss in LA1777 is, similar to monoterpene biosynthesis in S. lycopersicum, very sensitive to fluctuations in the MEP pathway but seemingly insensitive to variations in the supply of MVA. cI-S production, in contrast, is strongly influenced by changes in MVA pathway activity. The large difference in the levels of cI-Ss and cII-Ss in LA1777, therefore, may be as much due to differences in precursor supply through the MEP and MVA pathways as to differences in catalytic activities of cI-S and cII-S cyclases and/or turnover of the compounds. In S. lycopersicum, however, the biosynthesis of cI-Ss appears to rely partially also on non-MVA precursors, since inhibition of DXR activity by fosmidomycin is detrimental to their accumulation. This implies an exchange of precursors between compartments from plastids to the cytosol (Adam et al., 1999 Our findings suggest the existence, in the wild species, of a mechanism controlling the production of two distinct groups of sesquiterpenes from different precursor pools. Such a partition in sesquiterpene biosynthesis could be the result of metabolite channeling, for example through two distinct farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) synthases in the cytoplasm that are associated either with cI-S synthases or with plastidial transporters and the cII-S synthases. However, it seems unlikely that MVA precursors are available for the biosynthesis of other terpenoid classes, such as sterols, but not for cII-Ss, or that MEP precursors exported into the cytoplasm are only available for cII-S synthases but not for other cytosolic enzymes. A physical separation of cI-S and cII-S synthases in different subcellular compartments would be a simpler explanation.
Since terpenoids in the mitochondria are known to derive from the MVA pathway (Disch et al., 1998
cII-S Cyclase
The nature of the cII-S cyclase remains unclear, as cII-S and cI-S cyclases are thought to have substantially diverged in sequence (van der Hoeven et al., 2000
There are two highly expressed terpene synthase homologs other than monoterpene or sesquiterpene synthases represented in the trichome EST database, an ent-kaurene synthase and a prenyl transferase (Supplemental Table S1; TC116365, now TC174632, and TC124549). The close relationship of ent-kaurene synthases with linalool synthases, which appear to have evolved from a recombination event between monoterpene and ent-kaurene synthases (Cseke et al., 1998 The extensive differences in the terpenoid profiles of LA1777 and S. lycopersicum trichomes underline the remarkable metabolic flexibility of glandular trichomes, the highly productive cellular factories that provide the plants with a huge variety of chemicals. Such metabolic shifts also reflect the staggering capacity of plants to evolve in their production of defense-related compounds in a relatively short evolutionary time. Our data suggest that the metabolic divergence from a common ancestor required few evolutionary steps affecting catalytic mechanisms and precursor availability.
Plant Materials and Growth Conditions
Tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum M82, Moneymaker, MicroTom, and E6203 and Solanum habrochaites f. typicum accession LA1777 and backcross recombinant inbred lines [introgression lines] representing the genome of LA1777 in the background of S. lycopersicum E6203 [a core set of 57 NILs, LA3913–LA3969; Monforte and Tanksley, 2000
Conditions for VIGS were adapted from Liu et al. (2002)
For silencing experiments, gene-specific fragments were PCR amplified from S. lycopersicum or S. habrochaites cDNA and verified by sequencing before being cloned in antisense orientation into pTRV2 (pYL156; Liu et al., 2002
Trichome glands were harvested by abrasion of frozen stem tissue (three to four internodes) and represented a mixture of all trichome types. Other tissues (approximately 100 mg) were ground in liquid nitrogen. The resulting powders were dispersed in RNA extraction buffer (50 mM Tris base, pH 9, 0.8 mM NaCl, 10 mM EDTA, 0.5% [w/v] cetyl-trimethyl-ammonium bromide, 2% [w/v] polyvinylpolypyrrolidone, and 1% [v/v] β-mercaptoethanol). Following extractions with phenol:chloroform (1:1, v/v) and chloroform, the RNA was recovered by ethanol precipitation and centrifugation in the cold, before being resuspended in diethyl pyrocarbonate-treated water. After treatment with DNase I (DNA-free; Ambion), cDNA was prepared using SuperScript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's protocol. Three microliters of a diluted reverse transcriptase reaction was used for real-time PCR analysis. Amplification was performed in triplicate reactions using the fluorescent dye SYBR Green (Applied Biosystems) in a thermocycler (AB7000 Sequence Detection System; Applied Biosystems). Expression of a tomato LeACTIN gene (TC116322; http://compbio.dfci.harvard.edu/tgi/) was used for normalization. Calibration curves were produced for each of the primer pairs, and quantification was performed using the AB7000 Sequence Detection Software version 1.2.3 (Applied Biosystems). The following primers were designed from sequences in the Tomato Gene Index databases (http://compbio.dfci.harvard.edu/tgi/) or from GenBank and were used for measuring transcript levels by real-time reverse transcription-PCR: DXR (TC163170): 5'-ACTACCTTTTCGGAGCTGAGTATGA-3' and 5'-CCACCCTAGCTGTGCCAATACT-3'; DXS (TC154799): 5'-CAGAACTAAGAGCAGAAATTGTGTATTCA-3' and 5'-CCACAGTTAAATCCACAACACCTAAA-3'; HMGR (TC155027): 5'-TCCGGTGGCGCTACGA-3' and 5'-TGCGCTGCCGAACCTAA-3'; HMGS (TC153567): 5'-CCTCTTCCCGAACTTGTAGGATT-3' and 5'-CACCGACGACGTTTATTTCCTT-3'; SSTLE1 (TC162858): 5'-AGCAAACCTTAGAACAAACAAGCAA-3' and 5'-CCAAACAGATGGGTGAAAATTAGC-3'; SSTLH1 (TC162148): 5'-GCAAACCTTAGAACAAACAAGCAATGG-3' and 5'-TAATTGTCTCTTTGTACTCATCAACTTCAAC-3'; SSTLH3 (AW616373): 5'-GAACTCATCAACACAATCCAATGTC-3' and 5'-ATAGCATGAAGATCACCAATCGAA-3'; MTS1 (TC166486): 5'-GTAACATAGGGATGATGATTGTCACCTT-3' and 5'-CTGAACGCCTTGTGGTGGAAAT-3'; MTS1-like (AW617523): 5'-CCTCTCCACTGGACAGCCACTT-3' and 5'-CCACATGGTAGGCTCGTAATTCC-3'; ACTIN (TC116322): 5'-AAATTGTCAGGGACGTGAAAGAA-3' and 5'-TCTCAACAGAAGAGCTGGTCTTTG-3'. Each amplicon derived using these primers was cloned from S. lycopersicum and S. habrochaites cDNA and sequenced to confirm amplification of the target sequence. The following primers were used to PCR amplify a diagnostic sequence for SSTLH3 (AW616373) from genomic DNA, which was extracted using standard methods: 5'-CTCCTTGTGAAAATGGAGTTGTGTA-3' and 5'-CCTTGAAATTTCCTTGGTCATTAGT-3'. Amplicons derived from both tomato species were cloned and sequenced to verify amplification of the target.
Trichome essential oils were extracted from target tissues by immersion of the tissue in chloroform for 2 to 3 h at room temperature. Alternatively, the trichomes were first separated by abrasion of frozen tissue before being added to the solvent (200 µL), which gave comparable terpenoid profiles to the previous method (data not shown). The resulting extracts were dried over Na2SO4 and filtered through Whatman paper before being concentrated, if necessary, to approximately 200 µL under nitrogen (a 5-fold concentration). The content of individual type VI glands was collected from leaflets with a capillary containing a small volume of solvent (50 µL) and compared with leaf extracts from the opposite leaflet of the same leaf. Tetradecane (10 ng µL–1; Fluka) was added to the solvent as an internal standard before extractions. For gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analyses of sesquiterpene carboxylic acids, a separate fraction of the chloroform extracts was derivatized in BSTFA-TMCS (99:1; Supelco) at 70°C for 1 h after complete drying of the original extracts under nitrogen. The amount of input material was determined either by weighing or, in the case of stems, by measuring their surface areas. One to 2 µL of extract was used for gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GCQplus; ThermoQuest Finnigan) or gas chromatography-flame ionization detection (GC8000top; ThermoQuest Finnigan). The essential oil constituents were separated on a ZB-1 column (30 m, 0.25 mm i.d., 0.50-µm film thickness; Zebron-Phenomenex) using the following temperature profile: 50°C to 250°C, 5°C min–1; 250°C to 320°C, 70°C min–1; 320°C, 3 min; 320°C to 50°C, 70°C min–1. Temperature of the injector was 250°C, that of the transfer line was 320°C, and that of the ion source was 200°C.
The essential oil constituents were identified by comparing their mass spectra with those of true standards whenever possible. When standards were not available, the mass spectra of the compounds were matched to published information (Coates et al., 1988
Stem segments were mounted on stubs and immersed in liquid nitrogen before examination on the cold stage of a Hitachi S-5000 scanning electron microscope.
Treatments with fosmidomycin (Molecular Probes) and mevinolin (Sigma-Aldrich) were performed on 3-week-old S. lycopersicum seedlings or side shoots of mature S. habrochaites plants after severing them with a razor blade under water. Inhibitor or control solutions were replaced weekly. After 19 to 20 d, the youngest shoot tissue was harvested for metabolite analysis. For radiolabeled precursor feeding experiments, cuttings were placed in 50 mM phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) to which 2.5 µCi of RS-[2-14C]mevalonic acid (dibenzyl ethylenediamine salt, specific activity of 67 mCi mmol–1; Amersham Bioscience) or [2-14C]pyruvic acid (sodium salt, specific activity of 16.4 mCi mmol–1; Perkin-Elmer) had been added, until the solution was taken up. The cuttings were then transferred to water (or inhibitor solutions) and incubated for 3 to 5.5 h at room temperature. When appropriate, cuttings were grown for 3 d in the presence of inhibitor (100 µM) before being fed radiolabeled substrates. Labeled terpenoids were concentrated and run on TLC plates (SILGUR-25 UV254; Macherey-Nagel) using hexane:diethylether:formic acid (80:20:2, v/v/v) as the mobile phase. The plates were then exposed to phosphorimager screens, and incorporation into the different terpenoids was measured using Quantity One software (Bio-Rad).
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Meg Stark for help with scanning electron microscopy analysis, Tony Larson and Stuart Graham for assistance with metabolite profiling, and Savithramma Dinesh-Kumar and Sophia Ekengren for providing pTRV1 and pTRV2 vectors. Received July 14, 2008; accepted November 4, 2008; published November 7, 2008.
1 This work was supported by a grant from the Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation.
2 Present address: School of Biosciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom.
3 Present address: Physiology Laboratory, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EG, United Kingdom.
4 Present address: Nestlé R&D Center Tours, Plant Science and Technology, 101 Avenue Gustave Eiffel, 37390 Notre-Dame D'Oé, France. 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: Pierre Broun (pierre.broun{at}rdto.nestle.com).
[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.108.126276 * Corresponding author; e-mail pierre.broun{at}rdto.nestle.com.
Adam KP, Thiel R, Zapp J (1999) Incorporation of 1-[1-(13)C]deoxy-D-xylulose in chamomile sesquiterpenes. Arch Biochem Biophys 369: 127–132[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Adams RP (2004) Identification of Essential Oil Components by Gas Chromatography/Quadrupole Mass Spectroscopy. Allured Publishing, Carol Stream, IL Akhila A, Sharma PK, Thakur RS (1986) A novel biosynthesis of irregular sesquiterpene artemone in Artemisia pallens. Tetrahedron Lett 27: 5885–5888[CrossRef][Web of Science] Alberts AW, Chen J, Kuron G, Hunt V, Huff J, Hoffman C, Rothrock J, Lopez M, Joshua H, Harris E, et al (1980) Mevinolin: a highly potent competitive inhibitor of hydroxymethylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase and a cholesterol-lowering agent. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 77: 3957–3961 Aubourg S, Lecharny A, Bohlmann J (2002) Genomic analysis of the terpenoid synthase (AtTPS) gene family of Arabidopsis thaliana. Mol Genet Genomics 267: 730–745[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Barlow AJ, Lorimer SD, Morgan ER, Weavers RT (2003) Biosynthesis of the sesquiterpene hodgsonox from the New Zealand liverwort Lepidolaena hodgsoniae. Phytochemistry 63: 25–29[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Bartram S, Jux A, Gleixner G, Boland W (2006) Dynamic pathway allocation in early terpenoid biosynthesis of stress-induced lima bean leaves. Phytochemistry 67: 1661–1672[CrossRef][Medline] Bick JA, Lange BM (2003) Metabolic cross talk between cytosolic and plastidial pathways of isoprenoid biosynthesis: unidirectional transport of intermediates across the chloroplast envelope membrane. Arch Biochem Biophys 415: 146–154[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Broun P, Poindexter P, Osborne E, Jiang CZ, Riechmann JL (2004) WIN1, a transcriptional activator of epidermal wax accumulation in Arabidopsis. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 101: 4706–4711 Burch-Smith TM, Anderson JC, Martin GB, Dinesh-Kumar SP (2004) Applications and advantages of virus-induced gene silencing for gene function studies in plants. Plant J 39: 734–746[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Chen JC, Jiang CZ, Gookin TE, Hunter DA, Clark DG, Reid MS (2004) Chalcone synthase as a reporter in virus-induced gene silencing studies of flower senescence. Plant Mol Biol 55: 521–530[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Coates RM, Denissen JF, Juvik JA, Babka BA (1988) Identification of alpha-santalenoic and endo-beta bergamotenoic acids as moth oviposition stimulants from wild tomato leaves. J Org Chem 53: 2186–2192[CrossRef][Web of Science] Colby SM, Crock J, Dowdle-Rizzo B, Lemaux PG, Croteau R (1998) Germacrene C synthase from Lycopersicon esculentum cv. VFNT cherry tomato: cDNA isolation, characterization, and bacterial expression of the multiple product sesquiterpene cyclase. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 95: 2216–2221 Cseke L, Dudareva N, Pichersky E (1998) Structure and evolution of linalool synthase. Mol Biol Evol 15: 1491–1498 Cutler AJ, Krochko JE (1999) Formation and breakdown of ABA. Trends Plant Sci 4: 472–478[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Disch A, Hemmerlin A, Bach TJ, Rohmer M (1998) Mevalonate-derived isopentenyl diphosphate is the biosynthetic precursor of ubiquinone prenyl side chain in tobacco BY-2 cells. Biochem J 331: 615–621[Web of Science][Medline] Dudareva N, Andersson S, Orlova I, Gatto N, Reichelt M, Rhodes D, Boland W, Gershenzon J (2005) The nonmevalonate pathway supports both monoterpene and sesquiterpene formation in snapdragon flowers. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 102: 933–938 Estévez JM, Cantero A, Romero C, Kawaide H, Jimenez LF, Kuzuyama T, Seto H, Kamiya Y, Leon P (2000) Analysis of the expression of CLA1, a gene that encodes the 1-deoxyxylulose 5-phosphate synthase of the 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol-4-phosphate pathway in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol 124: 95–104 Flügge U-I, Gao W (2005) Transport of isoprenoid intermediates across chloroplast envelope membranes. Plant Biol 7: 91–97[CrossRef][Medline] Frelichowski JE, Juvik JA (2001) Sesquiterpene carboxylic acids from a wild tomato species affect larval feeding behavior and survival of Helicoverpa zea and Spodoptera exigua (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). J Econ Entomol 94: 1249–1259[Web of Science][Medline] Fridman E, Wang J, Iijima Y, Froehlich JE, Gang DR, Ohlrogge J, Pichersky E (2005) Metabolic, genomic, and biochemical analyses of glandular trichomes from the wild tomato species Lycopersicon hirsutum identify a key enzyme in the biosynthesis of methylketones. Plant Cell 17: 1252–1267 Gianfagna TJ, Carter CD, Sacalis JN (1992) Temperature and photoperiod influence trichome density and sesquiterpene content of Lycopersicon hirsutum f. hirsutum. Plant Physiol 100: 1403–1405 Hampel D, Mosandl A, Wust M (2005) Biosynthesis of mono- and sesquiterpenes in carrot roots and leaves (Daucus carota L.): metabolic cross talk of cytosolic mevalonate and plastidial methylerythritol phosphate pathways. Phytochemistry 66: 305–311[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Hampel D, Mosandl A, Wust M (2006) Biosynthesis of mono- and sesquiterpenes in strawberry fruits and foliage: 2H labeling studies. J Agric Food Chem 54: 1473–1478[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Hemmerlin A, Hoeffler JF, Meyer O, Tritsch D, Kagan IA, Grosdemange-Billiard C, Rohmer M, Bach TJ (2003) Cross-talk between the cytosolic mevalonate and the plastidial methylerythritol phosphate pathways in tobacco Bright Yellow-2 cells. J Biol Chem 278: 26666–26676 Iijima Y, Davidovich-Rikanati R, Fridman E, Gang DR, Bar E, Lewinsohn E, Pichersky E (2004) The biochemical and molecular basis for the divergent patterns in the biosynthesis of terpenes and phenylpropenes in the peltate glands of three cultivars of basil. Plant Physiol 136: 3724–3736 Jux A, Gleixner G, Boland W (2001) Classification of terpenoids according to the methylerythritolphosphate or the mevalonate pathway with natural 12C/13C isotope ratios: dynamic allocation of resources in induced plants. Angew Chem Int Ed 40: 2091–2093[CrossRef] Kampranis SC, Ioannidis D, Purvis A, Mahrez W, Ninga E, Katerelos NA, Anssour S, Dunwell JM, Degenhardt J, Makris AM, et al (2007) Rational conversion of substrate and product specificity in a Salvia monoterpene synthase: structural insights into the evolution of terpene synthase function. Plant Cell 19: 1994–2005 Lange BM, Wildung MR, Stauber EJ, Sanchez C, Pouchnik D, Croteau R (2000) Probing essential oil biosynthesis and secretion by functional evaluation of expressed sequence tags from mint glandular trichomes. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 97: 2934–2939 Laule O, Furholz A, Chang HS, Zhu T, Wang X, Heifetz PB, Gruissem W, Lange M (2003) Crosstalk between cytosolic and plastidial pathways of isoprenoid biosynthesis in Arabidopsis thaliana. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 100: 6866–6871 Li L, Zhao Y, McCaig BC, Wingerd BA, Wang J, Whalon ME, Pichersky E, Howe GA (2004) The tomato homolog of CORONATINE-INSENSITIVE1 is required for the maternal control of seed maturation, jasmonate-signaled defense responses, and glandular trichome development. Plant Cell 16: 126–143 Lichtenthaler HK (1999) The 1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate pathway of isoprenoid biosynthesis in plants. Annu Rev Plant Physiol Plant Mol Biol 50: 47–65[CrossRef][Web of Science] Liu Y, Schiff M, Dinesh-Kumar SP (2002) Virus-induced gene silencing in tomato. Plant J 31: 777–786[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Luckwill LC (1943) The genus Lycopersicon. Aberdeen University Studies 120: 5–44 McCaskill D, Croteau R (1995) Monoterpene and sesquiterpene biosynthesis in glandular trichomes of peppermint (Mentha x piperita) rely exclusively on plastid-derived isopentenyl diphosphate. Planta 197: 49–56[Web of Science] McCaskill D, Croteau R (1999) Strategies for bioengineering the development and metabolism of glandular tissues in plants. Nat Biotechnol 17: 31–36[Web of Science][Medline] McConkey ME, Gershenzon J, Croteau RB (2000) Developmental regulation of monoterpene biosynthesis in the glandular trichomes of peppermint. Plant Physiol 122: 215–224 Monforte AJ, Tanksley SD (2000) Development of a set of near isogenic and backcross recombinant inbred lines containing most of the Lycopersicon hirsutum genome in a L. esculentum genetic background: a tool for gene mapping and gene discovery. Genome 43: 803–813[Medline] Mueller C, Schwender J, Zeidler J, Lichtenthaler HK (2000) Properties and inhibition of the first two enzymes of the non-mevalonate pathway of isoprenoid biosynthesis. Biochem Soc Trans 28: 792–793[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Newman JD, Chappell J (1999) Isoprenoid biosynthesis in plants: carbon partitioning within the cytoplasmic pathway. Crit Rev Biochem Mol Biol 34: 95–106[Medline] Page JE, Hause G, Raschke M, Gao W, Schmidt J, Zenk MH, Kutchan TM (2004) Functional analysis of the final steps of the 1-deoxy-D-xylulose 5-phosphate (DXP) pathway to isoprenoids in plants using virus-induced gene silencing. Plant Physiol 134: 1401–1413 Park JA, Kim TW, Kim SK, Kim WT, Pai HS (2005) Silencing of NbECR encoding a putative enoyl-CoA reductase results in disorganized membrane structures and epidermal cell ablation in Nicotiana benthamiana. FEBS Lett 579: 4459–4464[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Piel J, Donath J, Bandemer K, Boland W (1998) Mevalonate-independent biosynthesis of terpenoid volatiles in plants: induced and constitutive emission of volatiles. Angew Chem Int Ed 37: 2478–2481[CrossRef] Robertson D (2004) VIGS vectors for gene silencing: many targets, many tools. Annu Rev Plant Biol 55: 495–519[CrossRef][Medline] Steliopoulos P, Wüst M, Adam K-P, Mosandl A (2002) Biosynthesis of sesquiterpene germacrene D in Solidago canadensis: 13C and 2H labeling studies. Phytochemistry 60: 13–20[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] van der Hoeven RS, Monforte AJ, Breeden D, Tanksley SD, Steffens JC (2000) Genetic control and evolution of sesquiterpene biosynthesis in Lycopersicon esculentum and L. hirsutum. Plant Cell 12: 2283–2294 van Klink J, Becker H, Andersson S, Boland W (2003) Biosynthesis of anthecotuloide, an irregular sesquiterpene lactone from Anthemis cotula L. (Asteraceae) via a non-farnesyl diphosphate route. Org Biomol Chem 1: 1503–1508[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] van Schie CCN, Ament K, Schmidt A, Lange T, Haring MA, Schuurink RC (2007) Geranyl diphosphate synthase is required for biosynthesis of gibberellins. Plant J 52: 752–762[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Wagner GJ (1991) Secreting glandular trichomes: more than just hairs. Plant Physiol 96: 675–679 Werker E (2000) Trichome diversity and development. In DL Hallahan, JC Gray, eds, Advances in Botanical Research. Elsevier Science, Amsterdam, pp 1–35
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| ASPB Publications | PLANT PHYSIOLOGY® | THE PLANT CELL | |
|---|---|---|---|