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First published online April 10, 2009; 10.1104/pp.108.131607 Plant Physiology 150:722-735 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
PINOID Kinase Regulates Root Gravitropism through Modulation of PIN2-Dependent Basipetal Auxin Transport in Arabidopsis1,[W],[OA]Department of Biology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27109 (P.S., K.S.E., G.K.M.); Cryobiofrontier Research Center, Iwate University, Ueda 020–8550, Japan (A.R.); and Department of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912 (A.D.)
Reversible protein phosphorylation is a key regulatory mechanism governing polar auxin transport. We characterized the auxin transport and gravitropic phenotypes of the pinoid-9 (pid-9) mutant of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and tested the hypothesis that phosphorylation mediated by PID kinase and dephosphorylation regulated by the ROOTS CURL IN NAPHTHYLPHTHALAMIC ACID1 (RCN1) protein might antagonistically regulate root auxin transport and gravity response. Basipetal indole-3-acetic acid transport and gravitropism are reduced in pid-9 seedlings, while acropetal transport and lateral root development are unchanged. Treatment of wild-type seedlings with the protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine phenocopies the reduced auxin transport and gravity response of pid-9, while pid-9 is resistant to inhibition by staurosporine. Staurosporine and the phosphatase inhibitor, cantharidin, delay the asymmetric expression of DR5::revGFP (green fluorescent protein) at the root tip after gravistimulation. Gravity response defects of rcn1 and pid-9 are partially rescued by treatment with staurosporine and cantharidin, respectively. The pid-9 rcn1 double mutant has a more rapid gravitropic response than rcn1. These data are consistent with a reciprocal regulation of gravitropism by RCN1 and PID. Furthermore, the effect of staurosporine is lost in pinformed2 (pin2). Our data suggest that reduced PID kinase function inhibits gravitropism and basipetal indole-3-acetic acid transport. However, in contrast to PID overexpression studies, we observed wild-type asymmetric membrane distribution of the PIN2 protein in both pid-9 and wild-type root tips, although PIN2 accumulates in endomembrane structures in pid-9 roots. Similarly, staurosporine-treated plants expressing a PIN2::GFP fusion exhibit endomembrane accumulation of PIN2::GFP, but no changes in membrane asymmetries were detected. Our data suggest that PID plays a limited role in root development; loss of PID activity alters auxin transport and gravitropism without causing an obvious change in cellular polarity.
A variety of important growth and developmental processes, including gravity response, embryo and vascular development, and the branching of roots and shoots, are controlled by the directional and regulated transport of auxin in higher plants. Reversible protein phosphorylation is an important regulatory strategy that may modulate auxin transport and dependent processes such as root gravitropism, perhaps through action of the PINOID (PID) kinase (for review, see DeLong et al., 2002
In contrast, auxin transport and gravitropism defects of a mutant with reduced protein phosphatase activity have been characterized in detail. The roots curl in naphthylphthalamic acid1 (rcn1) mutation, which ablates the function of a protein phosphatase 2A regulatory subunit, causes reduced PP2A activity in vivo and in vitro (Deruère et al., 1999
In roots, auxin transport is complex, with distinct sets of influx and efflux carriers that define tissue-specific and opposing directional polarities (for review, see Leyser, 2006
Gravitropic curvature of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) roots requires changes in IAA transport at the root tip (for review, see Muday and Rahman, 2008
The available data suggest a model in which PID and RCN1 antagonistically regulate basipetal transport and gravitropic response in root tips (Fig. 1
). In this model, the regions with the highest IAA concentrations in the epidermal and cortical cell layers are indicated by shading, and the arrows indicate the direction and relative amounts of basipetal auxin transport. Our previous work suggests that elevated basipetal IAA transport in rcn1 roots impairs gravitropic response, presumably due to the inability of roots either to form or to perceive a lateral auxin gradient in the context of a stronger polar IAA transport stream (Rashotte et al., 2001
The experiments described here were designed to test this model by examining gravitropism and root basipetal IAA transport in pid and staurosporine-treated seedlings. We investigated the regulation of gravity response by PID kinase and RCN1-dependent PP2A activities and observed antagonistic interactions between the rcn1 and pid-9 loss-of-function phenotypes that are consistent with reciprocal kinase/phosphatase regulation. We found that loss of kinase activity in the pid mutant and in staurosporine-treated wild-type plants inhibits basipetal auxin transport and the dependent physiological process of root gravitropism. Our results suggest that staurosporine acts to regulate these processes through inhibition of PID kinase and that PID effects are PIN2 dependent. In both wild-type and pid-9 roots, we observed polar membrane distribution of the PIN2 protein; unlike wild-type roots, though, pid-9 roots exhibited modest accumulation of PIN2 in endomembrane structures. Similarly, we detected asymmetric distribution and endomembrane accumulation of PIN2::GFP in staurosporine-treated roots. Our data suggest that PID plays a limited role in root development; loss of PID activity alters PIN2 trafficking, auxin transport, and gravitropism without causing an obvious loss of cellular polarity. Together, these experiments provide insight into phosphorylation-mediated control of the gravity response and auxin transport in Arabidopsis roots.
Genetic and Chemical Reductions in Kinase Activity Reduce Root Gravitropism
Gravitropic response is reduced in roots of transgenic plants overexpressing PID (Benjamins et al., 2001
We also used staurosporine, a broad-spectrum protein kinase inhibitor, to ask if this compound produces a phenocopy of the pid gravitropic defect in wild-type roots. Staurosporine treatment causes reductions in gravity response beginning 3 h after gravity stimulation (Fig. 2B). Wild-type seedlings treated with 0.1 µM staurosporine exhibit significantly reduced curvature relative to untreated controls (P < 0.05 at all time points) and show gravitropic bending kinetics similar to those of pid-9 mutant seedlings; at this dose, staurosporine had only a small effect on root elongation (Supplemental Fig. S1). Higher doses of staurosporine have a much more profound effect on the gravity response, particularly at later time points, with 0.2 and 0.3 µM staurosporine having significant effects at all times points (P < 0.005). If the pid mutation and kinase inhibition by staurosporine are affecting the same pathway, then pid-9 seedlings might be insensitive to the effect of staurosporine on root gravitropism. We measured the curvature of wild-type (Col) and pid-9 seedlings 6 h after reorientation in the presence and absence of 0.1 µM staurosporine (Fig. 2C). While staurosporine treatment significantly reduced curvature in wild-type seedlings (P < 0.005), there were no significant changes in curvature in pid-9 with staurosporine treatment (P > 0.05). These results are consistent with PID kinase being a primary target through which low-dose staurosporine treatment inhibits gravitropism.
We also examined the effect of staurosporine on the asymmetric expression of the auxin-responsive reporter, DR5::revGFP, after reorientation of seedlings relative to the gravity vector. DR5::revGFP is expressed in the columella in vertically growing seedlings, with limited expression in the epidermis and lateral root cap beyond the root tip (Fig. 3
). Consistent with previous reports (Ottenschläger et al., 2003
In contrast, staurosporine treatment (performed under conditions identical to those described above) delays the initiation of bending and minimizes the asymmetry in DR5::revGFP expression. Strong asymmetries in DR5::revGFP expression, as defined above, were observed in less than 25% of roots tested (n = 17). Other roots exhibited expression on the upper side and lower flanks of the root, or no detectable expression farther from the root tip. A representative image of the most common DR5::revGFP expression pattern after staurosporine treatment, observed in more than 50% of seedlings, is shown in Figure 3. In this image, the reduction in expression on the upper side of the root tip is not observed, some expression is evident in the upper epidermis, and there is uneven/discontinuous expression along the lower flank of the epidermis, with expression extending a shorter distance than in normal untreated seedlings.
As cantharidin had previously been shown to phenocopy the delayed gravitropic response of rcn1 (Rashotte et al., 2001
One question raised by these experiments is whether PID and a protein phosphatase activity reciprocally regulate gravitropism. Reduction in protein phosphatase activity due to cantharidin treatment or the rcn1 mutation results in decreased gravitropic bending (Rashotte et al., 2001
We also asked whether kinase inhibition could rescue the gravitropic defect of rcn1 roots. Wild-type (ecotype Wassilewskija [Ws]) and rcn1 seedlings were treated with 0.1 µM staurosporine, with identical dose and treatment time as described above, prior to gravity stimulation (as described above for Col and pid-9 seedlings), and root gravitropic curvature and growth were measured after gravity stimulation. As reported previously, rcn1 roots were much slower than wild-type roots in gravitropic bending, with significant reductions in bending at 4 and 8 h after reorientation (P < 0.001; Fig. 4B; Rashotte et al., 2001
To confirm the results of the inhibitor experiments described above, we took a genetic approach and studied the root gravity response in pid-9 rcn1 double mutant seedlings. The inhibitor experiments described above suggested that gravity response defects of the parental single mutants might be suppressed in pid-9 rcn1 double mutant plants. The rcn1 mutation was isolated in the Ws genetic background (Garbers et al., 1996
Kinase-Regulated Root Basipetal Auxin Transport Is PID-PIN2 Dependent Basipetal auxin transport was measured in roots of pid-9 and staurosporine-treated wild-type seedlings to determine if transport, like gravitropism, is altered by reduced kinase activity. Basipetal transport assays were performed by application of an agar line of [3H]IAA directly to the root tips of intact living plants. After 5 h, the amount of [3H]IAA transported basipetally was measured, and the results from multiple pooled experiments are shown in Figure 6A . Both pid-9 plants and seedlings treated with 0.2 µM staurosporine exhibited significant reductions in basipetal IAA transport compared with untreated Col seedlings, as judged by Student's t test (P < 0.0001). The magnitude of the reduction in transport by staurosporine and the pid-9 mutation was similar (31% and 29%, respectively). Similar effects were observed with seedlings treated with 0.1 and 0.3 µM staurosporine (data not shown). Naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) inhibition of transport in both pid-9 and staurosporine-treated roots was equivalent to that observed in wild-type controls in the absence of staurosporine (data not shown). Staurosporine treatment of pid-9 seedlings at the same range of concentrations failed to inhibit basipetal IAA transport. In conjunction with the observed staurosporine insensitivity of the pid-9 gravitropic response (Fig. 2C), this result suggests that the PID kinase is a target of staurosporine inhibition in basipetal transport and gravitropism.
As PIN2 is one of the IAA efflux carriers that mediate basipetal auxin transport (Chen et al., 1998
Root acropetal IAA transport was measured in pid-9 mutant seedlings to determine whether this polarity of IAA transport is sensitive to reduced kinase activity. Acropetal transport assays were performed by applying an agar cylinder of [3H]IAA to the root-shoot junction using methods that have been optimized for measurement of auxin transport in Arabidopsis (Lewis and Muday, 2009
RCN1 and PID Are Expressed in Cells That Mediate Basipetal IAA Transport and Root Gravitropism
We compared the expression patterns of PID and RCN1 with those of genes encoding proteins that are involved in basipetal and acropetal IAA transport in Arabidopsis roots (Supplemental Fig. S2A). The tissue-specific expression patterns of these genes link them to specific transport polarities, with genes expressed at the highest levels in the epidermis, cortex, and stele being tied to acropetal IAA transport, while expression in epidermis and lateral root cap is consistent with proteins mediating basipetal IAA transport. For this comparison, we used the previously published microarray data set in which gene expression was characterized in Arabidopsis root protoplasts isolated from distinct cell populations expressing tissue-specific GFP reporter lines (Birnbaum et al., 2003
We also examined the localization of RCN1::YFP (yellow fluorescent protein) and PIN2::GFP protein fusions in root tips to determine whether RCN1 protein accumulates in appropriate positions to directly regulate the activity of basipetal transport proteins. This RCN1::YFP fusion was previously shown to complement the rcn1 mutation, restoring normal root tip organization and hypocotyl elongation, and exhibits robust accumulation in all cells of the root tip (Blakeslee et al., 2008
To determine if kinase activity modulates IAA transport by altering the abundance or localization of auxin transport proteins, we examined the localization of PIN2 protein by immunofluorescence in wild-type and pid-9 seedling roots (Fig. 7
). The anti-PIN2 antibody is highly specific, as it produces no plasma membrane staining in eir1-1/pin2 mutant roots (Supplemental Fig. S3). In wild-type roots, PIN2 is detected in epidermal and cortical cell files with localization in epidermal and lateral root cap cells on the basal membrane (the side away from the root tip), consistent with the role of PIN2 in directing basipetal IAA transport polarity. The pid-9 mutation does not alter the asymmetric localization of PIN2 protein in any of the 12 roots examined but leads to accumulation of PIN2 protein in endomembrane structures in 77% of the roots examined (Fig. 7). This result suggests that, in contrast to PID overexpression, which reduces/eliminates PIN2 asymmetries (Friml et al., 2004
We also examined the effect of staurosporine treatment on PIN2::GFP localization. To mirror the conditions that alter auxin transport and gravitropism, 5-d-old seedlings were transferred to agar plates containing 0.2 µM staurosporine for 18 h, and the effect on PIN2::GFP localization was determined in epidermal cells in the root tip and in the transition zone (Fig. 8 ). When roots are treated with staurosporine, PIN2::GFP is still membrane associated and has the same directional polarity as in untreated roots (100% of more than 50 roots examined). After staurosporine treatment, 12 out of 17 roots tested (71%) exhibited PIN2::GFP in internal structures similar to those observed for the native PIN2 protein in pid-9 roots. Multiple representative images from this analysis are shown in Figure 8. We examined the PIN2::GFP pattern in untreated seedlings on three different confocal instruments and found GFP fluorescence in endomembranes in less than 10% of the more than 50 untreated roots that were imaged under identical confocal settings to those used in staurosporine treatments. These fluorescent structures are not due to autofluorescence, as staurosporine treatment of nontransformed plants yielded no detectable fluorescence at equivalent confocal settings (data not shown). In contrast, staurosporine treatment of seedlings expressing PIN1::GFP did not alter the PIN1::GFP localization pattern (n > 30; Supplemental Fig. S4). These results are consistent with the effect of the pid-9 mutation on gravitropism and auxin transport and with the lack of a pid-9 effect on acropetal IAA transport and lateral root development, two processes tied to PIN1 (Benkova et al., 2003
Here, we present a detailed analysis of the role of PID kinase in regulating gravitropism and auxin transport in Arabidopsis roots. Inflorescences of pid mutants have reduced auxin transport (Bennett et al., 1995
The pid-9 mutation and low-dose staurosporine treatment reduce basipetal IAA transport and delay root gravitropism and the initiation of asymmetric DR5-revGFP expression across gravity-stimulated roots. Strikingly, auxin transport and gravity response in pid-9 roots are unaffected by staurosporine treatment at the dose that phenocopies the pid-9 mutation. This result is consistent with the hypothesis that PID kinase is a primary target of staurosporine inhibition in basipetal IAA transport and root gravitropism. It is possible that additional kinases are affected by staurosporine treatment, especially at higher doses. PID is part of a clade of AGC kinases that are expressed in roots and have effects on root growth (e.g. WAG1 and WAG2; Santner and Watson, 2006
Second, we tested the hypothesis that gravitropism is reciprocally regulated by PID kinase and RCN1-dependent PP2A activities. Support for this model includes the ability of cantharidin treatment to reduce root gravitropism in the wild type and to enhance gravitropism in pid-9. Similarly, staurosporine reduces root gravitropism in the wild type but enhances curvature in rcn1 roots. Furthermore, pid-9 partially suppresses the gravitropism defect of rcn1 seedlings. This finding parallels the report of Michniewicz et al. (2007)
Previous experiments have shown that inhibition of PP2A activity enhanced basipetal auxin transport, consistent with the model of reciprocal regulation (Rashotte et al., 2001
What are the targets of kinase regulation in gravitropism and auxin transport? Here, we have shown that staurosporine does not further reduce auxin transport in a pin2 mutant, consistent with PIN2 being a major target of staurosporine action. Although pin2 mutants are completely agravitropic, pid-9 mutant seedlings do respond to gravity, exhibiting a delayed response that is statistically significant at all time points. In fact, the gravitropism defect of pid-9 is of greater magnitude than that of some other gravitropic mutants, such as pin3 (Harrison and Masson, 2007
The reciprocal action of PID and RCN1 in the regulation of gravitropism suggests that they might act on the same target. However, we and others had previously asked whether RCN1 enhanced auxin transport by acting through PIN2 and did not find evidence of PIN2 as a target using genetic approaches (Rashotte et al., 2001
Finally, we examined the effect of altered kinase activity on the localization and accumulation of the native PIN2 protein as well as PIN2::GFP and PIN1::GFP fusion proteins. Staurosporine treatment of PIN2::GFP consistently led to altered accumulation of this fusion protein in endomembrane compartments, with the pid-9 mutant leading to similar alterations in accumulation of PIN2 protein as detected by immunofluorescence. Neither staurosporine treatment nor the pid-9 mutation altered the polar localization of PIN2 or PIN2::GFP, respectively. Staurosporine had no effect on the localization of PIN1::GFP and did not cause any endomembrane accumulation of this reporter. In conjunction with the normal acropetal auxin transport and root development observed in pid-9 mutant seedlings (Table I) and the lack of overlap in PID and PIN1 expression patterns (Michniewicz et al., 2007 Together, these results indicate that PID kinase regulates basipetal IAA transport and root gravitropism in Arabidopsis roots. The ability of staurosporine to produce a phenocopy of the pid-9 mutation in wild-type roots and the absence of additional phenotypes in staurosporine-treated pid-9 seedlings support this conclusion. PIN2 is likely to be a phosphorylation target for PID-mediated control of root gravitropism. We also provide evidence for reciprocal regulation of the gravity response by PID kinase and the RCN1-PP2A complex, although the target for PP2A-mediated dephosphorylation remains unclear. Staurosporine and the pid-9 mutation lead to accumulation of PIN2 and PIN2::GFP in endomembrane structures, consistent with a phosphorylation mechanism controlling the membrane targeting of auxin transport proteins, but without a loss or reversal of PIN2 membrane asymmetry.
Chemicals Staurosporine was purchased from Calbiochem or Sigma. NPA was purchased from Chemical Services. Absolute ethanol was purchased from McCormick Distilling. [3H]IAA (26 and 25 Ci mmol–1) was purchased from Amersham or American Radiolabeled Chemicals. Glufosinate ammonium was purchased from Crescent Chemicals. ScintiVerse scintillation fluid and Triton X-100 were purchased from Fisher Scientific. All other chemicals were purchased from Sigma.
Wild-type Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana ecotypes Ws and Col) seeds were obtained from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center (Ohio State University). The pid-9 seeds were generously provided by Sioux Christensen. Transgenic PIN1::GFP seeds were generously provided by Markus Heisler (ecotype Landsberg erecta) and Jiri Friml (ecotype Col; Benkova et al., 2003 Seeds were surface sterilized with 20% bleach and 0.01% Triton X-100 for 5 min and with 95% ethanol for 1 to 5 min. Seeds were then washed five times in sterile distilled water and were sown on 9-cm petri plates containing sterile control medium (0.8% agar [Sigma type M, plant tissue culture], 1x Murashige and Skoog salts, pH 5.8 to 6.0, 1.5% Suc, 1 µg mL–1 thiamine, 1 µg mL–1 pyridoxine HCl, and 0.5 µg mL–1 nicotinic acid). Seeds were usually stratified for 2 d at 4°C in the dark. Plates were then placed vertically in racks in continuous fluorescent light (100 µmol m–2 s–1) at room temperature (22°C). Plates were not wrapped with Parafilm or surgical tape, in order to make sure that ethylene levels were not elevated.
The pid-9 mutant is sterile and therefore must be propagated as a heterozygote. Approximately 5% of homozygous pid-9 mutants will develop as tricots rather than the normal dicots, while very few wild-type seedlings exhibit this phenotype. Selecting tricots served as an effective screen for homozygous pid-9 seedlings. The pid-9 mutant was produced by T-DNA insertion mutagenesis (Christensen et al., 2000
Root gravity response was measured using 5- and 7-d-old seedlings transferred to either control agar or agar supplemented with staurosporine and cantharidin at the indicated concentrations. Staurosporine and cantharidin were dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and were added to 50°C molten agar at 0.1 to 0.3 and 10 µM concentrations, respectively, and poured into petri dishes. The final DMSO concentration was 0.015% or less in agar medium. For each experiment, these compounds were added to agar immediately before use to minimize their breakdown. After 12 to 24 h of vertical growth, plates were reoriented by 90°. Pictures of plants were taken at specific time points after reorientation using a digital camera. The angle of root tip curvature and root elongation after reorientation were measured by Adobe Photoshop (version 10.0).
Root basipetal transport was measured in two ways as described previously (Rashotte et al., 2000
Root acropetal auxin transport was measured as described previously (Reed et al., 1998 To rule out the possibility that [3H]IAA may be transferred to the root tip by diffusion through the agar and not by active transport, an additional control for the acropetal transport assay was performed. For this experiment, seedlings were cut approximately 3 mm below the site of [3H]IAA application immediately after the IAA was applied. The radioactivity reaching the root tip in these seedlings was at background levels, indicating that [3H]IAA does not diffuse through the agar to reach the root tip.
Six-day-old Col and pid-9 seedlings were transferred to agar plates. On day 10 after planting, the length of the primary root was measured and the number of lateral roots that had clearly emerged was counted with a dissecting microscope. The density of lateral roots was estimated by dividing the number of lateral roots by the length of the primary root in centimeters.
Five-day-old DR5::revGFP seedlings were transferred to either control agar plates or plates with 0.2 µM staurosporine or 10 µM cantharidin. Following an 18-h incubation, the plates were reoriented 90° relative to gravity. Four hours after reorientation, DR5::rev GFP was visualized using a Zeiss LSM510 fluorescence laser scanning confocal microscope with fluorescein isothiocyanate for frame filter (500–550 band pass) and an excitation of 488 nm using an argon laser and a 63x water objective. A pinhole setting of 2.5 airy units (AU) and consistent gain were used for all images. Images of the root tip and a second image overlapping with the first were captured. The composites of these two images are shown.
To localize PIN proteins, we used the protocol from Rahman et al. (2007)
The GFP fluorescence from a PIN1::GFP transgenic line was visualized using a Zeiss LSM510 fluorescence laser scanning confocal microscope using the argon laser for excitation at 488 nm. Four- to 6-d-old seedlings were transferred to plates containing 0.3 µM staurosporine or DMSO control for 12 to 18 h. Seedlings were then mounted on slides with 1x Murashige and Skoog salts and were examined immediately. A 63x water-immersion lens with a zoom of 0.7 to 2.3 was used to visualize PIN1::GFP with a fluorescein isothiocyanate narrow band filter (505–530 of 500–550 band pass). A pinhole setting of 1 AU was used for PIN1::GFP. Gain was kept constant for each experiment, with a range of 800 to 1,250 throughout all experiments. PIN2-GFP seedlings were treated by transfer to fresh agar medium with or without addition of 0.2 µM staurosporine for 18 h before visualization. Roots were imaged on a spinning-disc confocal microscope (Olympus BX-61 equipped with Bx-DSU; Olympus; http://www.olympus.com/) equipped with a 60x oil-immersion objective. RCN1-YFP fluorescence was visualized using a Zeiss LSM510 fluorescence laser scanning confocal microscope using an excitation wavelength of 514 nm. Pinhole was set at 1.5 to 2.5 AU, and images were taken using a 63x water immersion lens with a gain setting of 900 to 1,000. Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under the following accession numbers: MDR1/ABCB19 (At3G28860), PIN1 (At1G73590), ABCB4/MDR4 (At2G47000), PIN2 (At5G57090), AUX1 (AtG2G38120), PIN3 (At1G70940), PID (At2G34650), and RCN1 (At1G25490).
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We appreciate the generosity of Sioux Christensen, Jiri Friml, Marcus Heisler, and Jian Xu in sharing seeds, and Patrick Masson for sharing PIN2 antibody. Thoughtful comments on the manuscript by Daniel Lewis, Cassie Mattox, Josh Blakeslee, Kyle Skottke, Sangeeta Negi, and Heather Fairfield are gratefully acknowledged. We appreciate the microscopy assistance of Anita McCauley. Received October 23, 2008; accepted April 7, 2009; published April 10, 2009.
1 This work was supported by the National Aeronautics and Space Agency and the National Research Initiative of the U.S. Department of Agriculture Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service (grant nos. NAG2–1507 and 2006–35304–17311 to G.K.M.) and by the National Science Foundation (grant no. IOB0446039 to A.D.).
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: Gloria K. Muday (muday{at}wfu.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.108.131607 * Corresponding author; e-mail muday{at}wfu.edu.
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