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First published online April 10, 2009; 10.1104/pp.109.135368 Plant Physiology 150:636-645 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Arabidopsis CHLI2 Can Substitute for CHLI11,[C],[W],[OA]Graduate Institute of Life Sciences, National Defense Medical Center, Taipei 114, Taiwan (Y.-S.H.); and Institute of Molecular Biology, Academia Sinica, Taipei 115, Taiwan (Y.-S.H., H.-m.L.)
The I subunit of magnesium-chelatase (CHLI) is encoded by two genes in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), CHLI1 and CHLI2. Conflicting results have been reported concerning the functions of the two proteins. We show here that the chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2 double knockout mutant was albino. Comparison with the pale-green phenotype of a chli1/chli1 single knockout mutant indicates that CHLI2 could support some chlorophyll biosynthesis in the complete absence of CHLI1. Real-time quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction showed that CHLI2 was expressed at a much lower level than CHLI1. The chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2 double mutant could be fully rescued by expressing a transgene of CHLI2 driven by the CHLI1 promoter. These results suggest that differences between CHLI1 and CHLI2 lie mostly in their expression levels. Furthermore, both the chli1/chli1 and chli2/chli2 single knockout mutants had lower survival rates during de-etiolation than the wild type, suggesting that both genes are required for optimal growth during de-etiolation. In addition, we show that a semidominant chli1 mutant allele and the chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2 double mutant accumulated Lhcb1 transcripts when treated with the herbicide norflurazon, indicating that knocking out the CHLI activity causes the genome-uncoupled phenotype.
Magnesium (Mg)-chelatase catalyzes the first committed step toward chlorophyll synthesis in the tetrapyrrole biosynthesis pathway. The enzyme inserts Mg2+ into protoporphyrin IX and produces Mg-protoporphyrin IX. The enzyme is composed of three subunits: CHLH, CHLD, and CHLI (corresponding to BchH, BchD, and BchI in Rhodobacter and XAN-F, XAN-G, and XAN-H in barley [Hordeum vulgare], respectively). Both in vitro and in vivo evidence has shown that all three subunits are essential for the Mg-chelatase activity (Gibson et al., 1995
CHLI belongs to the AAA+ (ATPases associated with various cellular activities) family of ATPases. It forms a ring-shaped homohexamer. Many semidominant and recessive alleles of chli mutants have been isolated from various species (Kjemtrup et al., 1998
CHLI isoforms in Arabidopsis are encoded by two genes: CHLI1 (At4g18480) and CHLI2 (At5g45930). CHLI1 seems to be the major functional form, since chlorophyll levels in chli1-null mutants are reduced to 10% to 17% of the wild-type level (Rissler et al., 2002
The tetrapyrrole biosynthesis pathway also seems to be important for retrograde signaling from plastids to the nucleus. One frequently used method for studying the signaling pathway is to treat plants with the herbicide norflurazon (Nf), which inhibits carotenoid biosynthesis and causes photo-oxidative damage to plastids. This treatment results in repressed expression of nucleus-encoded photosynthetic genes like Lhcb1 in response to signals sent by the damaged plastids. Arabidopsis mutants that still express Lhcb1 in the presence of Nf have been identified and are named genome uncoupled (gun) mutants (Susek et al., 1993 During our search for Arabidopsis mutants defective in protein import into chloroplasts, several pale-green or albino mutants were collected from various sources. One of the mutants from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center (ABRC), cs215, although not defective in protein import (data not shown), showed an interesting semidominant phenotype. Homozygous cs215 mutants were albino, while heterozygous plants were pale green. Positional cloning of the cs215 locus revealed that cs215 is a new allele of chli1 mutants. To compare cs215 with other chli mutants, we obtained T-DNA or Ds insertion alleles of chli1 and chli2 mutants and generated various double mutants. Our results indicated that the low functionality of CHLI2 was mostly due to its low expression level compared with that of CHLI1. We further tested the homozygous cs215 mutant and the chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2 double mutant for the gun phenotype. When treated with Nf, the chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2 double mutant accumulated Lhcb1 to a level similar to that observed in a chld-knockout mutant and the cs215 homozygous mutant accumulated an even higher level of Lhcb1, similar to that observed in a chlh-knockout mutant, suggesting that knocking out the CHLI activity also caused the gun phenotype.
Identification of the cs215 Locus
Homozygous cs215 (cs215/cs215) mutants were albino, while heterozygous (cs215/+) plants were pale green (Fig. 1
). To identify the cs215 locus, we crossed the cs215/+ mutant with Columbia (Col) and Landsberg erecta (Ler) wild-type plants because the cs215 mutant is in the ecotype Enkheim (Enk). We identified PCR-based polymorphic markers that distinguish between the Enk and Col/Ler ecotypes (see "Materials and Methods"). Initial mapping placed the cs215 locus between markers AG and SGCSNP43 on chromosome IV (Fig. 2A
). Data from three recombinant plants delimited the cs215 locus to the region encompassed by bacterial artificial chromosomes F28J12 and F28A21. One of the genes in this region, At4g18480 encoding CHLI1, has been shown to have mutant alleles with semidominant pale-green phenotypes (Kjemtrup et al., 1998
CHLI2 Supports Some Chlorophyll Biosynthesis in the Absence of CHLI1
To compare the phenotype of c215 with those of other chli1 mutants, a mutant line with a T-DNA insertion in the third exon of the CHLI1 gene (SAIL_230_D11; Fig. 3A
) was obtained from the ABRC. This mutant produced a truncated CHLI1 mRNA but no full-length transcripts or transcripts behind the T-DNA insertion site (Fig. 3B, lanes 4–6). It was yellow in appearance (Fig. 1A) and had less than 10% of the wild-type level of chlorophylls (Fig. 1B), similar to the levels reported for other chli1-null mutants (Rissler et al., 2002
Comparison of chli1/chli1 with cs215/cs215 revealed that chli1/chli1 had more chlorophylls than cs215/cs215 (Fig. 1B). Arabidopsis has two genes encoding CHLI: CHLI1 and CHLI2. It is possible that in the chli1/chli1 mutant, CHLI2 can still support some chlorophyll biosynthesis. In the cs215/cs215 mutant, the presence of the cs215 mutant protein might prevent CHLI2 from functioning, resulting in the phenotype difference between cs215/cs215 and chli1/chli1. To verify this, we obtained two mutant lines, GT13937 (Kobayashi et al., 2008
We crossed cs215/+ and CHLI1/chli1 with chli2-1/chli2-1 and chli2-2/chli2-2 to generate various double mutants. Results from crosses to chli2-1/chli2-1 and to chli2-2/chli2-2 were identical, and data from chli2-1 are presented unless specified. Double mutants of chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2 were albino (Fig. 1A) with no detectable chlorophylls (Fig. 1B). Compared with the chli1/chli1 single mutant, the albino phenotype of the double mutant indicated that the CHLI2 protein must be stable enough to provide some Mg-chelatase activity even in the absence of CHLI1. Furthermore, double mutants of cs215/cs215 chli2/chli2 were indistinguishable from the cs215 single (cs215/cs215 CHLI2/CHLI2) mutant (Fig. 1). Therefore, it is likely that the presence of the cs215 mutant protein had prevented CHLI2 from functioning. This may be because the expression level of CHLI1 is much higher than that of CHLI2, as shown previously by Matsumoto et al. (2004)
To clarify the role of CHLI2, we compared the expression levels of CHLI1 and CHLI2 using real-time quantitative RT-PCR. Amounts of CHLI1 and CHLI2 RNA were determined by comparing with standard curves generated from known quantities of CHLI1 and CHLI2 plasmid DNA. The results showed that in 14-d-old seedlings, the ratio of CHLI1 to CHLI2 RNA was 5.86 ± 1.31 (n = 5). This result agrees with the reported miniarray data (Matsumoto et al., 2004
CHLI2 Driven by the CHLI1 Promoter Can Rescue the chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2 Double Mutant
It has been suggested that CHLI2 is defective in hexameric ring assembly due to changes in its C terminus (Apchelimov et al., 2007 The pCHLI1::CHLI2 (chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2) transgenic plants had phenotypes that ranged from fully green to slightly yellow in younger leaves (Fig. 5A , Green and Yellow, respectively). The Green transgenic plants had chlorophyll levels similar to those of CHLI1/chli1 chli2/chli2 plants (Fig. 5B). This result indicated that CHLI2 could substitute for CHLI1 if expressed at a sufficient level. The Yellow transgenic plants had chlorophyll and CHLI2 transcript levels about half of those in the Green transgenic plants (Fig. 5, B and C). This result further demonstrated that the expression level of CHLI2 was correlated with the level of chlorophyll biosynthesis activity observed.
The chli Mutants Have Lower Survival Rates during De-Etiolation To investigate if CHLI2 contributes to plant fitness, we compared the chli mutants with the wild type in de-etiolation experiments. Seeds were imbibed at 4°C in the dark for 3 d, exposed to light at 24°C for 1 d, and then moved to the dark to germinate at 24°C for 7 d. Etiolated seedlings were then transferred to a regular 16-h-light/8-h-dark cycle, and seedling survival rates were scored 6 d later. Seedlings that failed to expand their cotyledons (i.e. the two cotyledons had a combined length less than 0.25 cm) were scored as dead (Fig. 6A ). As shown in Figure 6B, the chli1/chli1 mutant had a 14% survival rate and the two alleles of chli2/chli2 mutants had a 40% survival rate. Both rates were significantly lower than that of their corresponding wild type. This result suggested that both genes contributed to increase the seedling survival rate upon de-etiolation. We then analyzed the CHLI1 and CHLI2 RNA levels during de-etiolation, comparing with the CHLI1 and CHLI2 RNA levels in seedlings that were grown under a regular 16-h-light/8-h-dark cycle after cold stratification (Fig. 6C). The results indicated that the expression of both genes was induced by light upon de-etiolation. When the RNA levels of the two genes were directly compared, CHLI1 was still severalfold higher than CHLI2, agreeing with the result that the survival rate of the chli1 mutant was more severely affected than that of the chli2 mutants. However, CHLI2 contributed to about 27% of total CHLI RNA in the dark and only about 16% of total CHLI after de-etiolation (Fig. 6D), suggesting that CHLI2 might have slightly more contribution in the dark. This might be the reason that chli2 mutants had no clear phenotype when directly grown under the light but had a lower survival rate in transitions from dark to light.
The chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2 Double Mutant and the cs215/cs215 Mutant Are gun Mutants
Mutants in the H and D subunits of Mg-chelatase are gun mutants (Strand et al., 2003
Absence of CHLI Causes Instability of CHLD
It has been shown that changes in the level of one Mg-chelatase subunit causes instability in other subunits (Hansson et al., 1999
The expression level of CHLI2 was much lower than that of CHLI1. When driven by the CHLI1 promoter, expression of CHLI2 alone rescued the chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2 double mutant. These data indicate that CHLI2 can be functionally equivalent to CHLI1 if expressed at a sufficient level. This result also agrees with results from Kobayashi et al. (2008)
The chli2/chli2 mutants had no clear phenotype when grown in the light but had a lower survival rate during de-etiolation, suggesting that the presence of a second copy of CHLI may contribute to plant fitness under certain growth conditions. Although CHLI1 was the major isoform in both light and dark, CHLI2 contributed to about 27% of total CHLI RNA in the dark and only about 16% of total CHLI after de-etiolation. These results agreed with the miniarray data showing that CHLI1 RNA was almost 3-fold of CHLI2 in 3-week-old light-grown seedling but only 2-fold of CHLI2 in 3-d-old etiolated seedlings (Matsumoto et al., 2004
It has been suggested that, because the N terminus of CHLD has some sequence similarity to CHLI, CHLD may interact with CHLH in the absence of CHLI and provide a low level of Mg-chelatase activity (Rissler et al., 2002
We showed that the chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2 double mutant and the cs215/cs215 mutant showed the gun phenotype. Our data help remove doubts that knocking out the Mg-chelatase activity causes the gun phenotype. Indeed, mutants in all three subunits in barley have been shown to be gun mutants (Gadjieva et al., 2005
Positional Cloning of the cs215 Locus The cs215 mutant of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) is in the Enk ecotype. Heterozygous cs215 plants were crossed with wild-type Col and Ler plants. DNA from F2 seedlings with the cs215/cs215 phenotype was isolated for mapping. Simple sequence length polymorphism and cleaved-amplified polymorphic sequence markers between the Col and Ler ecotypes (http://www.Arabidopsis.org) were tested on Enk DNA to identify markers that could distinguish Enk versus Col or Enk versus Ler ecotypes.
The cs215 (Enk ecotype) and chli1, chld, and chlh (Col ecotype) mutants were obtained from the ABRC (http://www.Arabidopsis.org/abrc/). The chli2 mutants GT13937 and GT18178 (Ler ecotype) were obtained from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (http://genetrap.cshl.org). The T-DNA or Ds insertion positions in the mutants were confirmed by PCR and direct sequencing of the PCR products (for primer sequences, see Supplemental Table S1). Mutants were backcrossed to their corresponding wild type, and lines with single T-DNA or Ds insertion were selected based on the kanamycin or BASTA (glufosinate ammonium) resistance segregation ratio.
Sterilized seeds were plated on Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium containing 0.3% Gelrite, 1x Murashige and Skoog salts, Gamborg's B5 vitamin, and 2% Suc. After a 3-d cold stratification, seeds were grown in growth chambers under a 16-h photoperiod with a light intensity of approximately 60 µmol m–2 s–1 at 22°C. Total chlorophyll and carotenoid contents were determined as described (Lichtenthaler, 1987 For the chli1/chli1 de-etiolation experiment, because the chli1/chli1 mutant was sterile and could only be sown from seeds of CHLI1/chli1 heterozygous plants, seeds from CHLI1/chli1 heterozygous plants were first grown in the light to confirm the segregation ratio of the chli1/chli1 mutant, which was almost always around 1:4. The same batch of seeds was then used for the de-etiolation experiments. When calculating survival rate, the theoretical number of chli1/chli1 seedlings was deduced using the segregation ratio from light-grown seedlings. The number of survived chli1/chli1 seedlings was then counted using the yellow cotyledons of the chli1/chli1 mutant as an indication. For Nf treatment experiments, seeds (from heterozygous plants of the albino and pale-green mutant lines and from homozygous plants of others) were sterilized and plated on MS medium. After a 3-d cold stratification, plates were moved to a growth chamber for 5 d. Albino (cs215/cs215, chli1/chli1 chli2/chli2, chld/chld, and chlh/chlh) and pale-green (chli1/chli1) mutants were selected and, together with chli2-1/chli2-1 and wild-type seedlings, were transferred to new MS medium containing 5 µM Nf or the same volume of dimethyl sulfoxide and grown for another 5.5 d under strong continuous light (100 µmol m–2 s–1).
Total RNA was isolated from Arabidopsis shoots with TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen) and treated with RQ1 RNase-Free DNase (Promega). Template cDNA was prepared using 1 µg of total RNA and the Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcription system (Promega). Real-time quantitative RT-PCR was performed using the LightCycler system (Roche Applied Science) and the Lightcycler-FastStart DNA Master SYBR Green I kit (Roche Diagnostics). Each PCR contained 10 to 50 ng of cDNA and 0.5 µM of each of the primer pairs. The initial denaturing step of 10 min was followed by 40 PCR cycles of 95°C for 10 s, 60°C for 5 s, and 72°C for 1 s per 25 bp of the expected product. After the PCR, the melting temperature was tested. Quantification was performed using LightCycler Relative Quantification software version 1.0. Normalization was done using the transcript level of H3G and confirmed by the transcript level of ubiquitin10.
Total proteins from leaves of 14-d-old plants were extracted with SDS sample buffer (300 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.5, 1 mM EDTA, pH 8.0, 8% SDS, and 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride). Forty micrograms of total proteins was separated by SDS-PAGE and transferred to Immobilon-P membrane (Millipore). Immunostaining was performed with antisera to soybean (Glycine max) CHLI and CHLH and Plectonema boryanum CHLD at a 1:1,000 dilution followed by secondary staining with an alkaline phosphatase-conjugated goat anti-rabbit serum at a 1:1,000 dilution. Colorimetric development with 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate and nitroblue tetrazolium was used to visualize protein bands.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Wei-Ning Hwang, Ming-D Yang, and Dr. Chi-Chou Chiu for initial mapping of the cs215 locus. We thank the ABRC for the cs215, chld, and chlh mutants and Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory for the chli2 mutants GT13937 and GT18178. We thank Dr. Tatsuru Masuda for providing the CHLI, CHLD, and CHLH antibodies. We thank Dr. Harry Wilson of Academia Sinica for English editing. Received January 7, 2009; accepted April 6, 2009; published April 10, 2009.
1 This work was supported by the National Science Council (grant no. NSC–97–2321–B–001–001 to H.-m.L.) and the Academia Sinica of Taiwan. 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: Hsou-min Li (mbhmli{at}gate.sinica.edu.tw).
[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.109.135368 * Corresponding author; e-mail mbhmli{at}gate.sinica.edu.tw.
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