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First published online February 6, 2009; 10.1104/pp.108.133819 Plant Physiology 149:1917-1928 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
The Short-Rooted Phenotype of the brevis radix Mutant Partly Reflects Root Abscisic Acid Hypersensitivity1,[C],[W],[OA]Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Plantas, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia-Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, E–46022 Valencia, Spain (A.R., J.S., S.R., A.S., J.G., P.L.R.); and Department of Plant Molecular Biology, University of Lausanne, CH–1015 Lausanne, Switzerland (K.S.O., C.S.H.)
To gain further insight into abscisic acid (ABA) signaling and its role in growth regulation, we have screened for Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutants hypersensitive to ABA-mediated root growth inhibition. As a result, we have identified a loss-of-function allele of BREVIS RADIX (BRX) in the Columbia background, named brx-2, which shows enhanced response to ABA-mediated inhibition of root growth. BRX encodes a key regulator of cell proliferation and elongation in the root, which has been implicated in the brassinosteroid (BR) pathway as well as in the regulation of auxin-responsive gene expression. Mutants affected in BR signaling that are not impaired in root growth, such as bes1-D, bzr1-D, and bsu1-D, also showed enhanced sensitivity to ABA-mediated inhibition of root growth. Triple loss-of-function mutants affected in PP2Cs, which act as negative regulators of ABA signaling, showed impaired root growth in the absence of exogenous ABA, indicating that disturbed regulation of ABA sensitivity impairs root growth. In agreement with this result, diminishing ABA sensitivity of brx-2 by crossing it with a 35S:HAB1 ABA-insensitive line allowed significantly higher recovery of root growth after brassinolide treatment. Finally, transcriptomic analysis revealed that ABA treatment negatively affects auxin signaling in wild-type and brx-2 roots and that ABA response is globally altered in brx-2. Taken together, our results reveal an interaction between BRs, auxin, and ABA in the control of root growth and indicate that altered sensitivity to ABA is partly responsible for the brx short-root phenotype.
Abscisic acid (ABA) is a universal stress hormone of higher plants that also plays a key role as a regulator of growth and meristem function and in different plant developmental processes, such as embryo development, germination, vegetative development, flowering, and organogenesis (Xu et al., 1998
Plant growth and development are controlled by the concerted action of many signaling pathways, which integrate information from the environment with that from developmental and metabolic cues. In the particular case of root development, genetic analysis indicates that hormone signaling pathways functionally intersect with each other for the control of root growth. For instance, auxin controls the growth of roots by modulating cellular responses to the phytohormone gibberellin (Fu and Harberd, 2003
To further extend our knowledge of the ABA signaling pathway and its effect on growth regulation, we have performed a screen for mutants hypersensitive to ABA in growth assays. As a result, we have identified a mutant in the Columbia background, named seedling hypersensitive to ABA1 (sha1), which showed enhanced sensitivity to ABA-mediated inhibition of root growth and was found to be allelic to the previously identified brevis radix (brx) mutant. BRX is a key regulator of cell proliferation and elongation in the root, which is expressed in the phloem vasculature throughout the plant (Mouchel et al., 2006
brx-2 Loss-of-Function Mutant Shows Enhanced Sensitivity to ABA-Mediated Inhibition of Root Growth
A screen for mutants hypersensitive to ABA-mediated growth inhibition was performed using T-DNA lines generated with the activation-tagging vector pSKI15 in the Columbia background. Seeds were germinated vertically in the absence of ABA, and then 5-d-old seedlings were transferred to plates supplemented with 30 µM ABA. Potential ABA-hypersensitive mutants were initially identified on the basis of impaired growth compared with the wild type. After screening of approximately 20,000 lines, several candidates were selected and initially named sha mutants. In the absence of ABA, the sha1 mutant showed a slight decrease in root growth at 5 d compared with the wild type, which was notably increased at further stages of development (Fig. 1A
). As discussed below, sha1 was found to be allelic to brx; accordingly, we renamed it brx-2. The presence of 10 µM ABA in the medium exacerbated the root growth defect in brx-2 compared with the wild type (73% and 45% inhibition, respectively; Fig. 1, A and B). Interestingly, the double hy5 hyh mutant, which displays reduced root growth because of reduced cell proliferation in the meristem (Sibout et al., 2006
The mutation was recessive because F1 seedlings showed similar root growth to the wild type both in the absence and in the presence of ABA (data not shown). The segregation ratio in the F2 progeny was consistent with a single, recessive mutation (132 wild type to 46 short-root phenotype; 2 = 0.067, P = 0.79). Homozygous sha1 individuals were selected from the F2 generation and scored for phosphinothricin resistance. All F2 sha1 seedlings showed cosegregation of the sha1 phenotype and phosphinothricin resistance. Plant T-DNA-flanking sequences were isolated from the mutant by thermal asymmetric interlaced PCR, and sequence analysis revealed that the pSKI15 T-DNA was inserted at nucleotide 553 of the BRX (At1g31880) gene (Fig. 1D). A natural loss-of-function allele of BRX in the Arabidopsis accession Umkirch-1 (Uk-1) had been reported previously (Mouchel et al., 2004
In the brx-1 mutant, exogenous application of BL partially rescued the root growth defect, whereas introduction of a 35S:BRX transgene fully restored root growth (Mouchel et al., 2006
Although the biochemical function of BRX has not been elucidated yet, the fact that it can localize to the nucleus and its ability to activate transcription in a heterologous yeast system have led to the suggestion that BRX might represent a novel class of transcriptional regulator (Mouchel et al., 2004
Triple pp2c Loss-of-Function Mutants Show Extreme ABA Hypersensitivity and Impaired Root Growth
Root sensitivity to ABA must be finely tuned to properly respond to changing environmental conditions and to prevent negative effects of ABA on root growth under well-watered conditions. As brx-2 shows both a defect in root growth and enhanced sensitivity to ABA, we wondered whether mutants showing a hypersensitive response to ABA might be impaired in root growth. To answer this question, we have generated mutants that present different degrees of ABA hypersensitivity through combination (single, double, and triple) of loss-of-function mutations in the PP2Cs that act as negative regulators of ABA signaling (Saez et al., 2004
Introduction of ABA Insensitivity into brx-2 Improves Root Growth Rescue by BL Treatment
Exogenous application of BL partially rescued the root growth defect of both brx-1 and brx-2 (Mouchel et al., 2006
Transcriptomic Analysis of ABA Response in Roots of brx-2 Compared with the Wild Type and the cpd Mutant
To further investigate the role of BRX in the modulation of root sensitivity to ABA, transcriptomic profiles of the wild type and brx-2 were obtained from mock- or ABA-treated roots. Whole-genome long-oligonucleotide microarrays were used to compare ABA-mediated up-regulation/down-regulation of gene expression in the wild type and brx-2 (Fig. 5A
). The overlap of ABA up-regulated genes (ratio of expression >2-fold, false discovery rate P < 0.05) in the wild type and brx-2 was approximately 75%. Among these genes, 507 of 1,727 were identified as differentially expressed in the wild type and brx-2 (Fig. 5B; Supplemental Table S1): 250 genes were up-regulated by ABA to a greater extent in the brx-2 mutant than in the wild type, whereas 257 genes showed higher induction by ABA in the wild type than in brx-2 (Fig. 5B; Supplemental Table S1). With respect to ABA down-regulated genes (ratio of expression <0.5-fold, false discovery rate P < 0.05), brx-2 showed a higher number of affected genes, 1,836, than the wild type, 1,396, and the overlap between those gene sets was 996 (Fig. 5A; Supplemental Table S1). Among them, 309 of 996 genes showed differential expression between the wild type and brx-2: 165 genes were down-regulated by ABA to a greater extent in brx-2 than in the wild type, whereas 144 genes were more down-regulated in the wild type than in brx-2 (Fig. 5B; Supplemental Table S1). Therefore, approximately 30% of genes that were ABA responsive (up-regulated or down-regulated) in both the wild type and brx-2 showed differential expression between the two genotypes. Taken together, these data reveal a globally altered transcriptional response to ABA in brx-2 compared with the wild type. Specifically, 250 and 166 genes showed enhanced ABA-mediated up-regulation and down-regulation, respectively, in brx-2 compared with the wild type. However, some of these changes might be due to impaired expression of CPD in the brx background, and hence reduced BR biosynthesis (Mouchel et al., 2006
The ABA treatment of roots led to the up-regulation of genes involved in stress response: oxidative, osmotic, salt, heat shock, and cold stress as well as LEA proteins (Supplemental Table S1). ABA-mediated up-regulation of genes involved in the hyperosmotic stress response might be beneficial under low-water-potential conditions, as ABA promotes growth under those conditions (Sharp et al., 2004
In this work, starting from the isolation of brx-2 as an ABA-hypersensitive mutant in root growth assays, we provide evidence for a role of BRX as a modulator of ABA sensitivity in roots. Importantly, the enhanced ABA response of brx-2 was specific for the root, as ABA-mediated inhibition of seed germination and water loss kinetics were similar to those of the wild type. Thus, it appears likely that BRX mediates a root-specific branch of the ABA signaling pathway. Alternatively, it is conceivable that other BRX-like genes (BRXLs) might have a role in ABA response that is masked by functional redundancy in the brx-2 mutant. BRX is expressed in the columella and the phloem vasculature throughout root and shoot (Mouchel et al., 2006
As BRX has been implicated previously in connecting the auxin and BR pathways, our results suggest an interaction between the auxin and/or BR and ABA pathways in root development. For the BR pathway, we tested this notion directly by investigating whether other mutants affected in BR action show altered sensitivity to ABA in root growth assays. Indeed, sax1 (Ephritikhine et al., 1999
Conversely, one might expect that impairment of the ABA signaling pathway would yield a root growth phenotype. Indeed, the fact that enhanced sensitivity to ABA impairs root growth appeared to be masked by genetic redundancy, as demonstrated by the phenotype of triple knockouts impaired in some of the PP2Cs that act as negative regulators of ABA signaling (Saez et al., 2006
With respect to regulation of root growth, it has been suggested that BR biosynthesis and auxin signaling are connected through a feedback mechanism that involves BRX. Transcriptomic analysis showed that impaired auxin-responsive gene expression in the brx-1 mutant could be restored by BL application, indicating feedback between BR levels and auxin signaling in root growth (Mouchel et al., 2006 Finally, our analyses of BR biosynthesis and signaling mutants suggest that enhanced ABA and thus stress perception might significantly contribute to the root phenotypes of various hormone pathway mutants. Such perturbation of ABA sensitivity might be variable depending on the context and the level at which a given pathway is interrupted, but it could explain the seemingly disparate root growth phenotypes of signaling mutants that have been shown to reside in the same pathway. Future analyses using the transgenic approach described here might help to clarify whether this is indeed the case.
Plant Material and Growth Conditions Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants were routinely grown under greenhouse conditions in pots containing a 1:3 vermiculite:soil mixture. For in vitro culture, seeds were surface sterilized by treatment with 70% ethanol containing 0.1% Triton X-100 for 20 min, followed by four washes with sterile distilled water. After stratification in the dark at 4°C for 2 d, seeds were sowed on plates containing Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium with 0.1% MES, 1% agar, and 1% Suc. The pH was adjusted to 5.7 with potassium hydroxide before autoclaving. Plates were sealed and incubated in a controlled-environment growth chamber at 22°C under a 16-h-light/8-h-dark photoperiod at 80 to 100 µE m–2 s–1.
T-DNA lines were constructed in D. Weigel's and C. Somerville's laboratories using the pSKI15 vector, which encodes a phosphinothricin resistance gene (BAR driven by 5'pMAS). Approximately 86,000 independent lines (stock nos. N21995, N21991, N23153, and N31100) were provided by the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center. After surface sterilization, seeds were sown and grown on vertically oriented plates containing MS medium. After 5 d, seedlings were transferred to plates containing MS medium supplemented with 30 µM ABA. Potential ABA-hypersensitive mutants were selected after 5 d and left for 2 d in MS medium for recovery; finally they were transferred to soil.
The backcross of the sha1 mutant to the Columbia wild type was performed by transferring pollen to the stigmas of emasculated flowers. F1 and F2 seedlings were scored for root growth in the absence or presence of exogenous ABA. From the segregating F2 generation, homozygous brx-2 individuals were selected and DNA was individually extracted to perform a cosegregation analysis between the BRX T-DNA insertion and the short-root phenotype. To this end, the following primers were used: F417 (5'-GTCAGTGTTTGCTTCCTCTCTATG-3'), R650 (5'-TATTTCCTTGTCTAGGTAAGAATCC-3'), and SKI3 (5'-TGATCCATGTAGATTTCCCGGACATGAA-3'). Additionally, the analysis of F2 sha1 seedlings revealed cosegregation between the sha1 phenotype and phosphinothricin resistance.
The double hab1-1 abi1-2 mutant has been described previously (Saez et al., 2006
DNA was obtained either through a cetyl-trimethyl-ammonium bromide-based isolation procedure or using the DNAeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen). DNA samples were treated with RNase, extracted with phenol-chloroform-isoamyl alcohol, and ethanol-sodium acetate precipitated. Plant T-DNA-flanking sequences were amplified by PCR according to the protocols of Liu et al. (2005)
BRX cDNA was ordered from RIKEN (RAFL15-04-H19) and amplified using the following primers: FATG (5'-ATGTTTTCTTGCATAGCTTGTAC-3') and Rstop (5'-TTAGAGGTACTGTGTTTGTATTC-3'). The PCR product was cloned into the pCR8/GW/TOPO entry vector (Invitrogen) and recombined by LR reaction into the pMDC32 destination vector (Curtis and Grossniklaus, 2003
To determine sensitivity to inhibition of germination by ABA, the medium was supplemented with 0.5 or 0.8 µM ABA. To score seed germination, the percentage of seeds that had germinated and developed fully green expanded cotyledons was determined. Approximately 200 seeds of each genotype were sown in each medium and scored for germination and early growth 10 d later. For root growth assays, seedlings were grown on vertically oriented MS medium plates for 4 to 5 d. Afterward, 20 plants were transferred to new plates containing MS medium lacking or supplemented with the indicated concentrations of ABA or BL. After the indicated period of time, the plates were scanned on a flat-bed scanner to produce image files suitable for quantitative analysis using the NIH Image software (ImageJ version 1.37).
Root tissue was collected from 2-week-old plants that were either mock treated or treated for 3 h with 10 µM ABA and frozen in liquid nitrogen. Total RNA was extracted using a Qiagen RNeasy Plant Mini Kit, and 1 µg of the RNA solution obtained was reverse transcribed using 0.1 µg of oligo(dT)15 primer and M-MLV reverse transcriptase (Roche), to finally obtain a 40-µL cDNA solution. RT-qPCR amplifications and measurements were performed using an ABI PRISM 7000 Sequence Detection System (Perkin-Elmer Applied Biosystems). The sequences of the primers used for PCR amplifications were as follows: for BRX, forward, 5'-AGTCAGATTCAGCCGGGAACG-3', and Rstop; for HAB1 (At1g72770), forward, 5'-AACTGCTGTTGTTGCCTTG-3', and reverse, 5'-GGTTCTGGTCTTGAACTTTCT-3'; for ABI1 (At4g26080), forward, 5'-ATGATCAGCAGAACAGAGAGT-3', and reverse, 5'-TCAGTTCAAGGGTTTGCT-3'; for ABI2 (At5g57050), forward, 5'-AGTGACTTCAGTGCGGCGAGT-3', and reverse, 5'-CCTTCTTTTTCAATTCAAGGAT-3'; for PP2CA (At3g11410), forward, 5'-CTTTGTCGTAACGGTGTAGC-3', and reverse, 5'-TTGCTCTAGACATGGCAAGA-3'; and for β-actin-8 (At1g49420), forward, 5'-AGTGGTCGTACAACCGGTATTGT-3', and reverse, 5'-GAGGATAGCATGTGGAAGTGAGAA-3'.
RT-qPCR amplifications were monitored using the Eva-Green fluorescent stain (Biotium). Relative quantification of gene expression data was carried out using the 2–
Total RNA (1.25 µg) from three independent biological replicates was amplified and amino allyl labeled using the MessageAmp II aRNA kit (Ambion; http://www.ambion.com) and 5-(3-aminoallyl)-2'-deoxyuridine-5'-triphosphate (Ambion), according to the manufacturer's instructions. Approximately 80 to 90 µg of amplified amino allyl RNA (aRNA) was obtained. For each sample, 7.5 µg of aRNA was resuspended in the coupling buffer and labeled with either Cy3 or Cy5 Mono NHS Ester (Cy Dye Post-labeling Reactive Dye Pack; Amersham). The samples were purified with Megaclear (Ambion) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Incorporation of Cy3 and Cy5 was measured using 1 µL of the probe in a Nanodrop spectrophotometer (Nanodrop Technologies; http://www.nanodrop.com/). For each hybridization, 200 pmol of Cy3 and Cy5 probes was mixed and volume reduced to 5 µL in a Speed-Vac. A total of 20 µg of poly(A) and 20 µg of yeast tRNA (Sigma-Aldrich) were added. Each mixed probe was fragmented by adding 1 µL of 10x fragmentation buffer (Ambion) and incubating at 70°C for 15 min. The reaction was stopped with 1 µL of stop solution (Ambion). The 11-µL final volume of each mixed probe was diluted in 90 µL of hybridization solution.
Three biological replicates were independently hybridized for each transcriptomic comparison. Microarray slides were composed of synthetic 70-mer oligonucleotides from the Operon Arabidopsis Genome Oligo Set version 3.0 (Qiagen; http://www.qiagen.com/) spotted on aminosilane-coated slides (TeleChem; http://www.arrayit.com) by the University of Arizona. Slides were rehydrated and UV cross-linked according to the details on the supplier's Web site (http://ag.arizona.edu/microarray/ methods.html). The slides were then washed twice for 2 min in 0.1% SDS, in sterile water for 30 s, and dipped in ethanol for 3 min with shaking. Arrays were drained with a 2,000g spin for 10 min. Slides were prehybridized in 6x SSC (Sigma), 0.5% (w/v) SDS (Sigma), and 1% (w/v) BSA at 42°C for 1 h, followed by two washes with milliQ water for 1 min and one rinse with isopropanol. Excess water was drained with a 2,000g spin for 10 min. For the hybridization, equal amounts of dye of each aRNA labeled with either Cy3 or Cy5, ranging from 200 to 300 pmol, were mixed with 20 µg of poly(A) and 20 µg of yeast tRNA (Sigma-Aldrich) in a volume of 9 µL. To this volume, 1 µL of RNA fragmentation buffer was added (RNA Fragmentation Reagents; Ambion), and after 15 min at 70°C, 1 µL of stop solution was added. Fragmented labeled RNA was directly mixed with hybridization solution containing 50 µL of deionized formamide (Sigma), 30 µL of 20x SSC, 5 µL of 100x Denhardt's solution (Sigma), and 5 µL of 10% SDS in a final volume of 100 µL. The hybridization mixture was denatured at 95°C for 5 min, spun briefly, and applied by capillary between a pretreated slide (see above) and a 60- x 42-mm coverslip LifterSlip (Erie Scientific). Slides were incubated overnight at 42°C in a microarray hybridization chamber (ArrayIt Hybridization Cassette; TeleChem). The next morning, the slides were washed sequentially once in 1x SSC, 0.1% SDS for 5 min at 30°C; once in 0.2x SSC, 0.1% SDS for 5 min at 30°C; twice in 0.1x SSC for 2 min each at 30°C; and finally six times at 0.01x SSC for 2 min at 25°C. Slides were dried by centrifugation at 2,000g for 10 min at room temperature. Hybridized microarray slides were scanned right after at 532 nm for Cy3 and 635 nm for Cy5 with a GenePix 4000B scanner (Axon Molecular Devices; http://www.moleculardevices.com) at 10-nm resolution and 100% laser power. Photomultiplier tube voltages were adjusted manually to equal the overall signal intensity for each channel, to increase the signal-to-noise ratio, and to reduce the number of spots with saturated pixels. Spot intensities were quantified using GenePix Pro 6.0 microarray analysis software (Axon Molecular Devices). Data were normalized by mean global intensity and with Lowess (locally weighted scatterplot) correction (Yang et al., 2001
Significance analysis of microarrays (SAM; Tusher et al., 2001
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank the D. Weigel, C. Somerville, and J. Ecker laboratories for providing the Arabidopsis T-DNA insertion lines/mutants and the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center/Nottingham Arabidopsis Stock Centre for distributing these seeds. We thank D. Alabadi for many helpful suggestions during the course of this work. We thank J. Chory, A. Caño, S. Mora-Garcia, and G. Vert for providing BR biosynthetic and signaling mutants. Received December 9, 2008; accepted February 3, 2009; published February 6, 2009.
1 This work was supported by the Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia and Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (grant nos. BIO2005–01760 and BIO2008–00221) and the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (fellowship to S.R. and J.S.).
2 These authors contributed equally to the article. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Pedro L. Rodriguez (prodriguez{at}ibmcp.upv.es).
[C] Some figures in this article are displayed in color online but in black and white in the print edition.
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.133819 * Corresponding author; e-mail prodriguez{at}ibmcp.upv.es.
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