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First published online April 29, 2009; 10.1104/pp.109.138222 Plant Physiology 150:1072-1082 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Regulation of a Chemical Defense against Herbivory Produced by Symbiotic Fungi in Grass Plants1,2,[W],[OA]Department of Plant Pathology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40146–0312
Neotyphodium uncinatum and Neotyphodium siegelii are fungal symbionts (endophytes) of meadow fescue (MF; Lolium pratense), which they protect from insects by producing loline alkaloids. High levels of lolines are produced following insect damage or mock herbivory (clipping). Although loline alkaloid levels were greatly elevated in regrowth after clipping, loline-alkaloid biosynthesis (LOL) gene expression in regrowth and basal tissues was similar to unclipped controls. The dramatic increase of lolines in regrowth reflected the much higher concentrations in young (center) versus older (outer) leaf blades, so LOL gene expression was compared in these tissues. In MF-N. siegelii, LOL gene expression was similar in younger and older leaf blades, whereas expression of N. uncinatum LOL genes and some associated biosynthesis genes was higher in younger than older leaf blades. Because lolines are derived from amino acids that are mobilized to new growth, we tested the amino acid levels in center and outer leaf blades. Younger leaf blades of aposymbiotic plants (no endophyte present) had significantly higher levels of asparagine and sometimes glutamine compared to older leaf blades. The amino acid levels were much lower in MF-N. siegelii and MF-N. uncinatum compared to aposymbiotic plants and MF with Epichloë festucae (a closely related symbiont), which lacked lolines. We conclude that loline alkaloid production in young tissue depleted these amino acid pools and was apparently regulated by availability of the amino acid substrates. As a result, lolines maximally protect young host tissues in a fashion similar to endogenous plant metabolites that conform to optimal defense theory.
Loline alkaloids (LAs; Hofmeister, 1892
The loline-alkaloid biosynthesis (LOL) gene cluster contains nine genes likely to direct LA production (Spiering et al., 2005
LA production in symbio may be influenced by physiological differences among plant tissues and developmental stages, as well as differences in nutritional status and environmental stresses (Kennedy and Bush, 1983
Prevailing concepts about how plants deploy chemical defenses include the optimal defense theory (ODT; McKey, 1979
LAs in Regrowth and Center and Outer Leaf Blades To assess the distribution of lolines in MF-N. siegelii and MF-N. uncinatum, plants were clipped approximately at the junction between the pseudostems and leaf blades, and this "initial harvest" was separated into outer (older) and center (younger) leaf blades (Fig. 1 ). To assess the effect of clipping on LA accumulation, newly emerging leaf blades (regrowth) as well as the basal portions (between soil level and the tops of leaf sheathes) were sampled every 3 d until day 15 postclipping (PC).
In MF-N. siegelii, LA concentrations in the basal tissues throughout the 15-d time course ranged between 20 and 34 µmol/g dry weight and showed no significant differences from basal tissues of unclipped control plants (P > 0.05; t test, two tailed, equal variance; data not shown). Regrowth tissues at day 3 had slightly higher LA levels compared to the center leaves from the initial harvest and much higher levels compared to the outer leaves, which constituted the bulk of tissue from the initial harvest (Fig. 2A ). Similarly, LA levels in regrowth at day 3 were 3.6- to 6.1-fold higher than the combined upper tissue of unclipped control plants harvested throughout the time course (data not shown). At day 6 PC, LA levels in regrowth were similar to levels in the center leaf blades of unclipped plants (Fig. 2A). By days 12 and 15 PC, levels had declined and were approaching the LA levels in outer leaf blades of the initial harvest. Thus, the high LA levels in young regrowth tissue reflected the high LA content of young leaves of unclipped plants.
Similar results were obtained with the MF-N. uncinatum symbiota. The basal pseudostem tissue at all time points PC had an LA content of 22 to 38 µmol/g dry weight, which was not significantly different from that in basal tissues of unclipped control plants (data not shown). In the initial harvest, LA levels in the center leaf blades were approximately 3-fold higher than in the outer leaf blades. In the regrowth tissues at days 3 and 6 PC, levels of LA were 44 to 68 µmol/g dry weight, slightly higher than the LA level in center leaf blades (Fig. 2B). From day 9 to 15 PC, as the regrowth tissue matured, the concentration of LA decreased gradually, whereas unclipped control plants showed no significant changes in LA concentrations. Thus, younger leaf blades contained higher LA than older leaf blades; clipping did not change LA levels in basal tissues, and the high LA levels in young regrowth reflected the high LA content of younger leaf blades of unclipped plants.
Expression levels of five LOL genes were compared in basal tissues between unclipped control and clipped plants over the time course. Gene expression of lolC, lolO, lolA, lolE, and lolT in basal tissues suggested no trends in response to clipping (Supplemental Fig. S1A). Expression of the LOL genes was also assayed in regrowth leaf blades over the 15-d time course and compared to expression in upper tissue of unclipped control plants (Supplemental Fig. S1B). Also assayed were fungal genes for biosynthesis of the proximal LA precursors, Pro (proC, encoding pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase) and O-acetylhomoserine (metE, encoding homoserine O-acetyl transferase), and the housekeeping gene, tubB (encoding β-tubulin; Supplemental Fig. S1C). Expression profiles of the LOL genes and other genes lacked definite trends, and overall changes in gene expression were minor, within a range of 0.5- to 2.0-fold difference from their respective median mRNA levels. Thus, in the MF-N. siegelii symbiotum, high LA in early regrowth tissues was not reflected in LOL gene expression levels. Comparisons of center and outer leaf blades from the same plants provided strictly controlled comparisons of younger and older tissues. Expression of eight LOL genes, metE, proC, and tubB were assayed for the outer and center tissues of MF-N. siegelii symbiota. A trend of slightly higher LOL gene expression in the outer leaf blades than in center leaf blades was observed (Fig. 3A ); however, this difference was <0.5-fold for most of the genes and was not significant (P > 0.05, two tailed, pairwise t tests). The slightly higher expression of the LOL genes in the outer leaf blade was in contrast to the much higher (approximately 5-fold) LA concentrations in the center leaf blades (Fig. 3B).
Gene Expression in MF-N. uncinatum Similar studies of gene expression were conducted for N. uncinatum in MF, for which assays included LOL genes, proC, metE, and a gene designated C2H2, predicted to encode a transcription factor that preliminary tests suggested may affect LOL gene expression in N. uncinatum cultures (D.-X. Zhang and C.L. Schardl, unpublished data). Expression of LOL genes, proC, metE, and C2H2 in regrowth tissues of the MF-N. uncinatum symbiota did not exhibit significant differences compared to their expression in upper parts of unclipped controls (t tests, homoscedastic, P > 0.05; Supplemental Fig. S2). Thus, as in MF-N. siegelii, the higher LA concentrations in early regrowth tissues were not reflected in gene expression levels in MF-N. uncinatum. In contrast to N. siegelii, N. uncinatum exhibited significantly higher (t tests, pairwise, P < 0.05) expression of LOL genes as well as amino acid biosynthesis genes that corresponded to the higher LA concentrations in center than outer leaf blades (Fig. 4 ).
Fungal Biomass Estimation Based on Housekeeping Gene Expression
The relative metabolically active fungal biomass in different tissues was estimated by measuring fungal housekeeping gene mRNA levels, with the plant translation elongation factor 1-
Since the LAs are water-soluble compounds and the LA concentrations were calculated based on tissue dry weight, the possible effect of water content differences on LA concentrations was considered. In MF-N. siegelii, the dry-to-fresh weight ratio was 0.129 in center leaf blades and 0.174 in outer leaf blades; in MF-N. uncinatum, the average ratio of dry-to-fresh weight in center leaf blades was 0.184 and in the outer leaf blades was 0.208. Therefore, the water content ratio between center and outer leaf blades was 1.05 for MF-N. siegelii symbiotum and 1.03 for MF-N. uncinatum. These ratios were very low compared to LA concentration differences between these two tissue types, which were approximately 5-fold for MF-N. siegelii (Fig. 3) and 2-fold for MF-N. uncinatum (Fig. 4).
The two LA precursor amino acids, Pro and Hse, are metabolically linked to two groups of amino acids. One group, hereafter called the Gln group, includes various interconvertible amino acids, Pro, Glu, Gln, Arg, Orn, and citrulline. Of these, levels of Orn and citrulline were consistently low or undetectable, and the other amino acids were quantified. The other group, hereafter called the Asn group, includes interconvertible amino acids Asn and Asp, the Asp derivatives Lys and Hse, and the Hse derivatives Thr, Met, and Ile. Of these, Hse, Met, Ile, and Lys were consistently low or undetectable, so Asn, Asp, and Thr were quantified. In center leaf blades of the MF-N. siegelii symbiotum, levels of the Gln-group and Asn-group amino acids were significantly lower than in aposymbiotic plants (E–, no endophyte present; Fig. 5A ). In contrast, in outer leaf blades (Fig. 5B), there was much less difference in amino acid levels between MF-N. siegelii and E– control leaf blades, and although some comparisons were significant (Gln, Asn, and the Asn group), the differences were much less than in the center leaf blades. In the E– plants, center leaf blades had significantly higher levels of Gln, Gln-group, Asn, and Asn-group amino acids than in outer leaf blades (Fig. 5C). The differences for Asn and the Asn-group amino acids were most pronounced with levels in center leaves approximately 8- and 4-fold higher, respectively, than in outer leaves.
Interestingly, in center leaf blades of MF-N. siegelii, the concentration of LA was much higher than the concentrations of precursor amino acids, yet was comparable to the concentrations of Gln-group and Asn-group amino acids in the E– controls (Fig. 5A). Similarly to MF-N. siegelii, MF-N. uncinatum symbiota had significantly lower Gln-group and Asn-group amino acids in center leaf blades than did E– MF controls (Fig. 6A ). These were also compared to MF-E. festucae symbiota, which had endophyte strains that lack LOL genes and produce no lolines (LA–). Although MF-E. festucae LA– tended to have lower amino acid levels than E– plants, the difference was not significant except for the combined Gln-group levels. Compared to MF-N. uncinatum, center leaf blades of MF-E. festucae LA– had significantly higher Gln-group and Asn-group amino acid levels. Comparisons of amino acid levels in outer leaves indicated a similar trend in that MF-E. festucae LA– averaged higher amino acid levels than MF-N. uncinatum (Fig. 6B). This difference was significant for the Asn group but not for the Gln group amino acids. In the E– control plants, center leaf blades averaged higher levels of Gln, Gln-group, Asn, and Asn-group amino acids than in outer leaf blades, but the differences were significant only for Asn and Asn-group amino acids (Fig. 6C).
The average molar concentration of lolines in center leaves of MF-N. uncinatum was 16- and 32-fold higher than those of the Gln-group and Asn-group amino acids, respectively (Fig. 6A). This LA concentration even exceeded the amino acid concentrations in E– controls by approximately 2-fold and those in MF-E. festucae LA– by approximately 4-fold.
Elevated LA levels have been characterized as an induced antiherbivore response to wounding and insect damage in grass-endophyte symbiota (Craven et al., 2001
The lolines are well suited as protective metabolites in grass-epichloë symbiota because their expression in host tissues appears to fit ODT predictions. The lolines provide protection to younger tissues that clearly lack the level of physical defense of the older leaf blades, so greater abundance of lolines in the younger leaves is expected. Such was the case in our study, as well as in a study of TF-N. coenophialum (Eichenseer et al., 1991
ODT and GDBH can be reconciled if the older tissues produce the defensive compounds, which are then translocated to younger tissues (Cronin and Hay, 1996 It is tempting to attribute most of the reduction in amino acids in center leaf blades to diversion into the LA pathway, but other metabolic processes and growth of the endophytes probably also contributed to the effect. Indeed, the presence of LA– E. festucae was associated with lower amino acid levels compared to E– plants. Nevertheless, MF-N. uncinatum had significantly and dramatically lower amino acid levels in the center leaf blades than did MF-E. festucae LA–. This result strongly supports the possibility that LA production is a major sink for free amino acids, even in the actively growing young leaf blades.
Dynamic correlations among amino acids and alkaloids have been reported in plants. High levels of quinolizidine alkaloids in bitter lupin (Lupinus spp.) seeds are accompanied with low basic amino acid levels, whereas sweet seeds have a low level of quinolizidine alkaloids and high amino acid levels (Aniszewski et al., 2001
Asn and Gln are considered to be especially important in mobilization of fixed N from older to younger plant tissues, where their amide N is incorporated into other amino acids and nitrogenous metabolites (Nakano et al., 2000
Although N. siegelii exhibits a dramatically higher level of LA production in younger than older leaf blades, there is no indication that gene regulation plays a role. It appears more likely that substrate levels exert primary control on LA production. In E– plants, Asn-group and, to a lesser extent, Gln-group amino acids are significantly higher in the center than outer leaf blades. In symbiota, the dramatically higher flux of Asn-group amino acids may, by mass action, promote higher LA production rates in those tissues. Considering that the result is a greater protection of young tissues, in keeping with ODT predictions, we speculate that in evolution of metabolic capabilities of epichloae, the lolines were selectively favored because of the availability of precursors in the young plant tissues.
We further speculate that regulation of LA production was originally based on substrate availability alone, but in some endophytes, such as N. uncinatum, transcriptional regulation also evolved. For appropriate transcriptional regulation, the fungus needs somehow to respond to the physiological state of the plant. The nature of plant-to-endophyte communication is unknown and well worth exploring. One possibility is that relative amino acid levels available to the endophyte are crucial signals affecting transcriptional responses. In support of this possibility, differences in LA production and LOL gene expression by N. uncinatum have been demonstrated in different culture conditions, including minimal media with different N sources (Blankenship et al., 2001
MF (L. pratense) and many related grass species typically host symbiotic epichloae (Epichloë and Neotyphodium species) that produce alkaloids with anti-insect properties. Indications that N. uncinatum and N. siegelii are mutualistic endophytes include their dependence on vertical transmission in host seeds, the absence of any apparent symptoms in host plants infected with these endophytes, and the high levels of the potently insecticidal LAs in these symbiota (Craven et al., 2001
Biological Materials and Sampling
The MF-Neotyphodium uncinatum symbiota were derived from cv Predix seedlings inoculated with N. uncinatum CBS 102646 by the method of Latch and Christensen (1985) The MF-N. siegelii symbiotum, plant 955, and the E– control plant number 953 were derived from a different seed lot and exhibited different morphologies from the MF-N. uncinatum and MF-E. festucae symbiota. Therefore, the MF-N. siegelii symbiotum was compared only to E– plant 953. The MF-N. uncinatum and MF-E. festucae symbiota, plus a set of E– MF plants, were derived from a common seed lot and exhibited similar morphologies, so comparisons between them were considered valid. All plants were grown in the greenhouse with heating and supplemental lighting to provide stable environmental conditions. Conditions were 14 h light at 24°C and 10 h dark at 21°C, with watering as needed. Fertilization was biweekly with 20-10-20 Peat-Lite fertilizer (J.R. Peters) at 150 ppm. To test effects of clipping on LA levels, 16 MF-N. siegelii plants were randomly allocated to treatments, and 10 plants were clipped on day 0, whereas six plants were unclipped controls. Similarly, nine MF-N. uncinatum plants were clipped on day 0, and four plants served as unclipped controls. Plants were clipped at the base of the leaf blades directly above the pseudostems, giving the initial harvest of "upper" tissue (Fig. 1). The remaining pseudostems above the soil were the "basal" tissue, and "regrowth" tissue refers to emerging leaf blades above the initial cutting site from the clipped plants. For the unclipped control plants, upper and basal tissues were harvested simultaneously from each of two plants on days 0 and 6 (for MF-N. siegelii) or days 0, 6, and 12 (for MF-N. uncinatum), corresponding to the days PC of the clipped plants. The regrowth and basal tissues of clipped plants were sampled from two plants per day on days 3, 6, 9, 12, and 15 PC (except that MF-N. uncinatum only had one clipped-plant sample on day 9). The upper tissue collected from these plants when clipped (initial harvest) was separated into outer and center leaf blades (Fig. 1). All samples were flash-frozen in liquid nitrogen immediately after collection and stored at –80°C until further analysis.
LA were extracted from 40 to 100 mg freeze-dried plant tissues and quantified by gas chromatography (GC) as described by Blankenship et al. (2001)
Approximately 100 mg fresh weight of flash-frozen plant material was ground in liquid nitrogen to a fine powder with mortar and pestle, and total RNA was extracted with the RNeasy Plant Minikit (Qiagen). Removal of contaminating DNA by DNase treatment was performed as described by Spiering et al. (2002)
Primers and probes for lolC1, lolC2, and tubB were the same as used by Spiering et al. (2005)
For quantification of mRNA of N. uncinatum tefA, encoding translation elongation factor 1- , and C2H2 (NCBI GenBank accessions AF308131 and AY789054, respectively), a similar approach as described above was applied to design TQM primers and probes. Since the sequences of N. uncinatum proC (encoding pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase) and metE (encoding homoserine O-acetyl transferase) were unknown, the exons of gene orthologs identified in the E. festucae E2368 genome (http://www.endophyte.uky.edu/) were used to design primers (Table I) for amplification and sequencing of proC (ProC Efes forward and ProC Efes reverse) and metE (MetE Efes forward and MetE Efes reverse) cDNA fragments from N. uncinatum RNA. PCR (95°C for 9 min, followed by 40 cycles of 95°C for 25 s, 62°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 1 min) was performed in reaction conditions as described above. PCR products were sequenced with the BigDye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Kit (Applied Biosystems), and reaction products were analyzed on an Applied Biosystems model 3730xl. Primer and probe sets for quantitative RT-PCR of proC and metE were then designed based on these cDNA sequences.
A primer and probe set for the plant housekeeping gene EF1-
Specificities of the primer and probe sets for N. uncinatum LOL2 genes were tested on RNA from the MF-N. siegelii symbiotum. The LOL gene sequences from N. siegelii are expected to be most similar to LOL1 genes of N. uncinatum, based on comparisons of lolC1 sequences (Spiering et al., 2002
LOL1 and LOL2 genes have shown similar expression patterns in N. uncinatum culture (Zhang et al., 2009
Real-time quantitative RT-PCR was carried out using the TaqMan One-Step RT-PCR Master Mix reagents kit (Applied Biosystems) in 96-well PCR plates on a PRISM 7900HT instrument (Applied Biosystems) with cycling conditions as previously described (Spiering et al., 2005 Levels of target gene and the endogenous control gene (tefA) transcripts were analyzed on the same plate to control for plate-to-plate variation. Ct (cycle threshold) values were automatically calculated by SDS 2.3 software of the PRISM 7900HT, and the default baseline setting (cycles 3–15) was used.
Expression of all tested genes was calculated with the relative comparative Ct method (
The method was validated for the LOL and other genes based on the values of slope and R2 from the standard curves of quantitative RT-PCR. Most gene standard curves had R2 > 0.98 and within 0.1 slope difference from that of the reference gene, tefA. Standard curve slopes for several genes, namely, lolC2, lolA2, and lolE2 from MF-N. uncinatum, and lolA and lolU from MF-N. siegelii, differed by 0.2 to 0.3 from that of the reference gene. This range is still acceptable for a relative comparative method according to error estimation (Zhang et al., 2009
Specificity tests of N. uncinatum LOL1 and LOL2 primer and probe sets were conducted by using them in quantitative RT-PCR for RNA from MF-N. siegelii and TF-N. coenophialum because the N. siegelii LOL cluster is similar to N. uncinatum LOL1, and the N. coenophialum LOL cluster is similar to LOL2 (Kutil et al., 2007
Water content was measured for the freshly clipped outer and center leaf blades. A portion of each frozen ground sample was weighed as fresh weight, then freeze-dried, and the dry weight was recorded.
Plant tissues were freeze-dried and processed for amino acid analysis. Regrowth tissues, uncut control upper tissues, center leaf blades, and outer leaf blades were sampled as described above from MF-N. siegelii and MF-N. uncinatum. Center and outer leaf blades were also collected from aposymbiotic (E–) control plants for each symbiotum and from MF with E. festucae strains previously determined to lack LOL genes and to be non-LA producers (LA–; Wilkinson et al., 2000 Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession numbers FJ480953, FJ480952, FJ480951, FJ464778, FJ464780, and FJ664515.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
Received March 12, 2009; accepted April 20, 2009; published April 29, 2009.
1 This work was supported by U.S. Department of Agriculture Grants 200506271031 and 200710021743. The Epichloë festucae genome sequence was determined with support of National Science Foundation Grant EF–0523661, and meadow fescue cDNA sequences were obtained with support of U.S. Department of Agriculture National Research Initiative Grant 20053531916141.
2 Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station publication number 09–12–048 published with the approval of the director.
3 Present address: Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics, College of Life Sciences, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742. 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: Christopher L. Schardl (schardl{at}uky.edu).
[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.109.138222 * Corresponding author; e-mail schardl{at}uky.edu.
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