|
|
||||||||
|
First published online April 22, 2009; 10.1104/pp.109.135780 Plant Physiology 150:904-923 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Chloroplast Photooxidation-Induced Transcriptome Reprogramming in Arabidopsis immutans White Leaf Sectors1,[W],[OA]Department of Genetics, Development, and Cell Biology (M.R.A., A.F., S.R.R.) and Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (J.Z.), Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011
Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) immutans (im) has green and white sectoring due to the action of a nuclear recessive gene, IMMUTANS. The green sectors contain normal-appearing chloroplasts, whereas the white sectors contain abnormal chloroplasts that lack colored carotenoids due to a defect in phytoene desaturase activity. Previous biochemical and molecular characterizations of the green leaf sectors revealed alterations suggestive of a source-sink relationship between the green and white sectors of im. In this study, we use an Affymetrix ATH1 oligoarray to further explore the nature of sink metabolism in im white tissues. We show that lack of colored carotenoids in the im white tissues elicits a differential response from a large number of genes involved in various cellular processes and stress responses. Gene expression patterns correlate with the repression of photosynthesis and photosynthesis-related processes in im white tissues, with an induction of Suc catabolism and transport, and with mitochondrial electron transport and fermentation. These results suggest that energy is derived via aerobic and anaerobic metabolism of imported sugar in im white tissues for growth and development. We also show that oxidative stress responses are largely induced in im white tissues; however, im green sectors develop additional energy-dissipating mechanisms that perhaps allow for the formation of green sectors. Furthermore, a comparison of the transcriptomes of im white and norflurazon-treated white leaf tissues reveals global as well as tissue-specific responses to photooxidation. We conclude that the differences in the mechanism of phytoene desaturase inhibition play an important role in differentiating these two white tissues.
Green-white variegation in the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) immutans (im) mutant is induced by a nuclear recessive gene, IMMUTANS (IM). The green sectors contain cells with morphologically normal chloroplasts, whereas plastids in cells of the white sectors lack pigments and organized lamellar structures (Wetzel et al., 1994
Early biochemical experiments showed that white sectors of im accumulate phytoene, indicating that the phytoene desaturase (PDS) step of carotenogenesis is blocked in the mutant (Wetzel et al., 1994
One process where IM acts as a terminal oxidase is during the desaturation reactions of carotenogenesis: electrons from phytoene are transferred to the plastoquinone pool via PDS and then to molecular oxygen via IM (Josse et al., 2000
Green and white cells of im have the same genotype (im/im), and an important question of our research is, how do the green sectors form? To gain insight into this question, we have characterized im green (imG) sectors by morphological, biochemical, and global gene expression studies (Aluru et al., 2001
As a first approach to address this question, we performed global transcript profiling of white im leaf sectors using the 22K ATH1 Arabidopsis array. To our knowledge, a comprehensive transcriptome analysis of the metabolic adaptations occurring in mature white leaf tissues has not yet been reported. In fact, only one other study detailing genome-wide changes relating to metabolism and transport in sink tissues has been published (Deeken et al., 2006
To gain further insight into the molecular phenotype of imW tissues, we compared the transcriptomes of imW and imG and the transcriptomes of imW and NF-treated white Arabidopsis leaf tissues. Because the two white tissue types have many morphological, biochemical, and molecular similarities (Brown et al., 2001
Transcript Profiling of imW Leaf Sectors As a first approach to characterize imW sectors, we performed global transcript profiling using the Affymetrix ATH1 oligoarray containing approximately 22,500 genes. The experiments were conducted in triplicate (three different biological replicates) using total cell RNAs from imW sectors of rosette leaves; wild-type leaves of similar developmental stages served as controls. To assess the quality of the microarray data, scatterplots were generated to compare the expression values of all chips in a pairwise fashion (e.g. chip im-1 versus chip WT-1). Linear relationships were observed in the different comparisons; the three biological replicates displayed an especially strong linearity (e.g. chips im-1, im-2, and im-3; Supplemental Fig. S1).
We used the software packages R and Bioconductor and Microarray Suite 5.0 to extract expression values from GeneChips and to normalize the raw probe values (Bolstad et al., 2003
Functional Classification of im-Responsive Genes To ascertain the biological significance of the microarray data, the 1,434 differentially regulated genes were placed into functional groups using the Arabidopsis Munich Information Center for Protein Sequences (MIPS) classification scheme (http://mips.gsf.de/proj/thal/db/) and gene ontology searches (http://www.arabidopsis.org/; see Supplemental Table S1 for a complete list). Figure 3 summarizes the data and shows that all classes of genes are represented; most classes contain induced genes as well as repressed genes. However, it is notable that nearly all of the differentially regulated genes for photosynthesis are repressed in imW, while nearly all of those for electron transport, secondary metabolism, and plant development are induced.
Major Metabolic Pathways Affected in imW Tissues
To obtain a better understanding of the functional significance of the 1,434 differentially regulated genes, we focused on those that play a role in well-characterized biochemical pathways of photosynthetic cells using MapMan, a bioinformatics tool commonly used for microarray data visualization (Thimm et al., 2004
Photosynthesis Consistent with the data in Figure 3, one of the most striking alterations in the transcriptome of imW tissues involves the repression of genes for proteins that function in photosynthesis. Many of the genes (approximately 47 of 120) that mediate the light reactions of photosynthesis are repressed in imW. An exception is cytochrome c6 (AT5G45040), which transfers electrons to PSI and is thought to prevent overoxidation of PSI at its lumenal side and overreduction at its stromal side (Howe et al., 2006
Taken together, the repression of genes involved in the light and dark reactions of photosynthesis, photorespiration, and pigment biosynthesis is consistent with the fact that imW tissues do not undergo photosynthesis. It is worth pointing out that down-regulation of rbcS (for Rubisco small subunit) is often used as diagnostic of retrograde signaling (repression in the presence of NF; Nott et al., 2006
Carbohydrate Metabolism
In stark contrast to the repression of the Suc biosynthesis gene, our data show a strong induction of several genes for proteins involved in Suc degradation, such as a Suc synthase (AT5G20830), fructokinases (AT5G51830, AT3G54090, and AT1G69200), and invertase(s), including neutral (AT3G06500 and AT1G35580), vacuolar (BFRUCT4), and a cell wall invertase (BFRUCT1; 4-fold). Expression of the gene for a plastid-localized Glc-6-P/phosphate transporter (GPT2; 15-fold) and several sugar transporters (STP1; AT5G26340, AT2G43330, AT1G77210, and AT5G27350) is also strongly induced in imW tissues (Supplemental Table S1). Suc synthase, fructokinases, and invertases are major enzymes that metabolize imported Suc in sink tissues and play crucial roles in sink metabolism (Roitsch, 1999
Energy Production
Fermentation.
Oxidative Pentose-P Pathway.
TCA Cycle.
Mitochondrial Electron Transport.
Gluconeogenesis/Glyoxylate Cycle. In summary, relatively few genes involved in energy production show 2-fold or more differential regulation in imW tissues; fermentation is a notable exception where genes involved in all steps of this process are induced. Nevertheless, alterations in the expression of genes for key enzymes in the oxidative pentose-P pathway, the gluconeogenesis/glyoxylate cycle, and mitochondrial electron transport are consistent with the notion that both aerobic and anaerobic metabolism are up-regulated in imW, perhaps as a way to compensate energetically for a lack of photosynthesis in the white tissues.
Nitrogen Metabolism
Consistent with the idea that imW sectors are perturbed in nitrogen metabolism, transcription from a large number of imW-responsive genes that mediate steps in amino acid biosynthesis is significantly altered. For example, ATCYSD2, ATBCAT-3, ATBCAT-5, AT3G02020, AT5G23010, AT4G23600, and AT1G15410 are repressed, while genes involved in Pro (P5CS1; 4.5-fold), Asn (ASN1; 124-fold), Glu (GDH1 and GDH2; 2- and 13-fold, respectively), and branched-chain amino acid synthesis (ATBCAT-2; 30-fold) are induced. The induction of ASN1 and GDH1 has previously been shown to be a response to carbon limitation and to a change in the ratio of organic nitrogen to carbon in leaf tissues (Lam et al., 1996 Taken together, these data support the notion that nitrogen metabolism is impaired in imW tissues and that this is accompanied by changes in amino acid metabolism, with a general decrease in amino acid biosynthesis and an increase in amino acid catabolism.
Sulfur Metabolism
Lipid and Fatty Acid Metabolism Although these alterations in lipid metabolism are complex, the data are consistent with the idea that lipid metabolism is impaired in imW tissues, with a decrease in lipid biosynthesis and an increase in lipid degradation, while fatty acid metabolism is variably regulated in these tissues.
Plant Defense and Stress Response
General Oxidative Stress Response Genes, Which Are Largely Induced.
Secondary Metabolism Genes, Which Are Largely Induced.
Ascorbate/Glutathione Cycle and Ascorbate Biosynthesis Genes, Some of Which Are Induced.
Pro Biosynthesis and Catabolism Genes, Some of Which Are Induced in imW Tissues.
Alternative Pathway of Electron Transport Genes, Some of Which Are Induced.
Other Plant Defense and Stress-Related Response Genes, Which Are Variably Regulated. Taken together, the differential regulation of a large number of plant defense and stress-related genes is remarkable and signifies that imW tissues are under stress, especially oxidative stress.
Although we hypothesize that sink-source interactions play an important role in determining the molecular phenotype of imW sectors, the above data show that these interactions are likely integrated with oxidative and other stress responses that arise due to the nature of the primary lesion in im (i.e. photooxidation) due to a lack of colored carotenoids. Therefore, to gain further insight into the molecular phenotype of imW, we compared transcript profiles of NF-treated wild-type Arabidopsis leaves and imW leaves. Consistent with the idea that imW and NF-treated leaf tissues have a similar phenotype, previous studies demonstrated that both white tissues (1) have similar levels of PDS mRNA and protein, (2) accumulate phytoene due to inhibition of the PDS step of carotenogenesis, (3) have plastids with similar chloroplast ultrastructure, and (4) have decreased levels of nuclear mRNAs for various photosynthetic proteins (Reiß et al., 1983
Previous global transcript profiling experiments of NF-treated Arabidopsis have been conducted with white cotyledon tissues from seedlings germinated in the presence of NF (Strand et al., 2003 We first compared microarray data from NF-treated and wild-type samples. Like imW in Figure 1, the expression of many genes was similar to that in wild-type Arabidopsis green leaves, but 1,044 genes/probe sets were differentially regulated 2-fold or more in NF-treated white tissues versus the wild type (Supplemental Table S2). Of these, 721 genes were repressed and 323 genes were induced. We next performed cluster analysis of the 2-fold or more differentially regulated genes from the two white tissues (NF versus the wild type [1,044 genes] and imW versus the wild type [1,434 genes]) as a first approach to assess similarities and differences between imW and NF-treated tissues. This analysis resulted in six clusters (Supplemental Fig. S2; Supplemental Table S3). Many genes are regulated similarly in the imW and NF-treated tissues: in cluster 1, 759 genes from both tissues are repressed significantly compared with the wild type, while in cluster 3, 205 genes are induced significantly in both tissues. Clusters 2 and 4, on the other hand, define genes that are induced or repressed uniquely in imW versus the other two tissue types (728 genes), and clusters 5 and 6 define genes that are induced or repressed uniquely in the NF-treated tissues versus imW and wild-type tissues (179 genes). Interestingly, not a single significant gene was induced in one white tissue and repressed in the other.
Functional classification of genes in cluster 2, the largest component of genes uniquely induced in imW versus NF-treated tissues, reveals that several different classes of genes are induced in imW (Supplemental Table S3, sheet 2). However, it is notable that many genes belonging to the plant defense, oxidative stress, and secondary metabolism groups are induced in imW versus NF-treated tissues (Table I
). It is also interesting that the expression of several genes involved in plant development, including DAG, CR88, DRM1, ATPSK4, and UNE6, are induced only in imW. These genes play important roles in chloroplast biogenesis and in promoting germination, plant growth, flowering, and delayed senescence in Arabidopsis (Chatterjee et al., 1996
We next compared the im- and NF-responsive genes using the MapMan tool (Figs. 4 and 6 ). These studies revealed that, in general, the two tissue types have very similar expression profiles, especially with respect to the behavior of genes in pathways that were found to be markedly altered in imW versus the wild type (Fig. 4). These include (1) photosynthesis, photorespiration, Suc and starch metabolism, pigment biosynthesis, amino acid biosynthesis, and nitrate and sulfur assimilation, which are repressed in both tissues; (2) amino acid catabolism and ammonia assimilation, which are largely induced; and (3) other primary metabolic pathways, including glycolysis, fermentation, and TCA cycle, which are variably regulated in both white tissues.
Despite these similarities, our data show distinct differences between the two tissue types. A comparison of NF-treated (Fig. 6) versus imW (Fig. 4) tissues reveals that more genes for the Calvin cycle (11 versus five), photorespiration (six versus three), tetrapyrrole (five versus two) and amino acid (17 versus 12) biosynthesis, and nitrate (four versus three) and sulfur (four versus two) assimilation are repressed in the NF-treated versus imW tissues. In contrast, more genes for the ascorbate/glutathione cycle (four versus one), phenylpropanoid/flavonoid biosynthesis (11 versus three), and Suc (eight versus four) and amino acid (22 versus nine) catabolism are induced in imW versus NF-treated tissues. At the other extreme, our data show that mitochondrial electron transport is reciprocally regulated in these two white tissues. Genes for proteins such as NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I), ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase (complex III), and AT3G46430 are repressed in NF-treated tissues, while other genes of the same pathway are induced in imW. In summary, taking into consideration the large number of genes (Figs. 4 and 6) whose transcripts do not differ significantly in abundance, we conclude that the transcriptomes of imW and NF-treated tissues bear a striking resemblance, yet because there are differences, their molecular phenotypes are not identical.
One possibility to explain these differences is that they could be due to differences in the mechanism of inhibition of PDS in the two tissue types. As a first approach to test this hypothesis, we grew wild-type Arabidopsis plants on Murashige and Skoog medium with varying concentrations of NF. Interestingly, we observed variegation in wild-type Arabidopsis plants at NF concentrations ranging from 0.001 to 0.05 µM (Fig. 5B). Below or above these concentrations, the plants were either visually wild type or albino, respectively. Moreover, the variegated plants appeared to be smaller in size than wild-type Arabidopsis plants grown on plates without NF. This is similar to our previous observations in Arabidopsis im plants, which are also smaller in size when compared with wild-type Arabidopsis plants (Aluru et al., 2001
Because both green and white sectors of im have the same genotype (i.e. im/im), we had previously hypothesized that imG sectors arise from cells that have avoided irreversible photooxidative damage, whereas white sectors form from cells that are photooxidized. Therefore, to further understand photooxidation in imW cells and the nature of compensating mechanisms that allow for the formation of imG, we compared the transcriptomes of imW and imG. Previous global transcript profiling studies have shown that 1,234 genes involved in various cellular processes are 3-fold or more differentially regulated in imG versus the wild type (Aluru et al., 2007
Photosynthesis and Suc and Starch Metabolism
Glycolysis, TCA Cycle, and Mitochondrial Electron Transport
Nitrogen and Sulfur Metabolism
Plant Defense and Oxidative Stress Taken together, these alterations in gene expression are consistent with our previous hypothesis that imG sectors act as source tissues for the white leaf sectors. In addition, the unique induction of a large number of ROS scavengers and other genes involved in dissipating absorbed light energy is indicative of the development of systems for high-light acclimation and/or adaptations to avoid light stress.
We had previously proposed that IM activity is particularly crucial during early chloroplast biogenesis when components of the photosynthetic apparatus are being synthesized and assembled on the thylakoid membrane. During this process, IM might serve as an alternative electron sink (a "safety valve") to regulate thylakoid membrane redox and prevent the generation of toxic oxygen radicals and photooxidation of the nascent photosynthetic apparatus (Aluru et al., 2006
Photooxidized tissues have been shown to have decreased expression of nuclear genes for many photosynthetic proteins (Reiß et al., 1983
Nutrient Import into imW Leaf Sectors
Previous investigations in our laboratory demonstrated that the green leaf sectors of im have increased photosynthetic rates and Suc levels, whereas the white leaf sectors of im have low Suc levels and increased acid invertase activities, thus pointing toward the existence of a source-sink relationship between the two types of tissues (Aluru et al., 2001
Concomitant with the repression of photosynthesis genes, some key nitrate and sulfur assimilatory genes are repressed in imW tissues (Figs. 4 and 7). These results are in agreement with previous reports demonstrating the down-regulation of genes/proteins of nitrogen and sulfur metabolism with a decrease in photosynthetic capacity (Masclaux et al., 2000
Our studies show that genes encoding proteins of complexes II and IV of the mitochondrial electron transport chain and mitochondrial metabolite transporters, including an ATP/ADP translocator, are induced in imW tissues, suggesting an increase in aerobic respiration (Figs. 4 and 7). Furthermore, the induction of Glu dehydrogenases (GDH1 and GDH2) suggests that Glu metabolism plays an active role in mitochondrial oxygen consumption by providing intermediates for the TCA cycle and releasing NH3+ for reassimilation (Lam et al., 1996
The repression of genes for some of the proteins of glycolysis (phosphofructokinase and pyruvate kinase) and the TCA cycle (fumarase) suggests that these pathways might be down-regulated in imW (Figs. 4 and 7). This is in contrast to recent studies showing significant induction of glycolytic genes in Arabidopsis tumors, which represent sink tissues (Deeken et al., 2006
It should be noted that fermentation may not only play a key role in ATP production in imW but may also provide acetate units for the glyoxylate cycle (Fig. 7). The repression of PEP carboxylases, which generate OAA from glycolytic intermediates, also suggests that the glyoxylate cycle may act to replenish the TCA cycle, especially under conditions in which two-carbon compounds such as acetate and ethanol are available for oxidative metabolism. In agreement with this, our data show induction of an aldehyde dehydrogenase and genes mediating fatty acid β-oxidation and the glyoxylate cycle (Figs. 4 and 7). Previous investigations have shown that acetate units generated from pyruvate by aldehyde dehydrogenase and/or from the breakdown of lipids by lipases and β-oxidation genes are utilized via the glyoxylate cycle to provide intermediates for the TCA cycle (Eastmond and Graham, 2001
Our data show that there is an induction in imW of several oxidative stress genes, such as CCS1, CSD2, FSD3, AOX1A, and AOX1D, as well as of genes mediating steps in the ascorbate/glutathione cycle and in phenylpropanoid and flavonoid biosynthesis. Notable exceptions to these are tAPX, FSD1, and CAT3, which are repressed in imW tissues. Repression of tAPX could be due to the lack of proper thylakoid membrane structures in white plastids, whereas repression of FSD1 and CAT3 could be a response to the light environment (Redinbaugh et al., 1990
Several other plant defense and stress response genes were also observed to be differentially regulated in imW tissues (Supplemental Table S1). These include genes for proteins involved in heat, abscisic acid, cold, dehydration, Suc, and salt stresses as well as pathogen-related responses. A similar situation was observed in the barley mutant albostrians, where several stress- and pathogenesis-related genes were induced in the white leaf sectors versus the wild type (Hess et al., 1998
Although transcriptomics studies of NF-treated tissues lacking PDS activity exist, these studies were performed with different plant systems (4- to 6-d-old Arabidopsis seedlings) that consisted mainly of cotyledons and were also focused mostly on the analysis of specific metabolic pathways, not comprehensive analysis of the transcriptome (Strand et al., 2003 Our data reveal that many genes in NF-treated tissues are regulated similar to the wild type. We also observed global responses to photooxidation in NF-treated and imW tissues at the levels of photosynthesis and carbohydrate, amino acid, nitrogen, and sulfur metabolism, indicating several similarities in the metabolic adaptations of these two tissue types (Figs. 4 and 6). Despite these general similarities, we found that 907 genes (48%) are differentially regulated in only one of the two tissue types. Many of these differences are im specific: cluster 2 shows that 602 genes are uniquely induced in imW versus NF-treated tissues (Supplemental Fig. S2). In particular, our data show that several genes involved in oxidative stress and plant development are uniquely induced in imW (Fig. 3; Supplemental Table S3, sheet 2). These changes are perhaps necessary for proper growth and development of the plant and for the formation of green cells during early chloroplast biogenesis.
While many of the primary metabolic pathways are similarly repressed in both tissue types (Figs. 4 and 6), more genes in a particular pathway are repressed in NF-treated tissues versus imW. One instance where this holds true involves the tetrapyrrole biosynthesis pathway. Two of the genes from the chlorophyll branch of the pathway (PORB and PORC) are repressed in imW, whereas five genes from the chlorophyll as well as the heme branches of the pathway are repressed in NF-treated tissues. Although our results are somewhat similar to recent reports from NF-treated tissues, those studies also demonstrated severe repression of several other genes of the tetrapyrrole biosynthesis pathway (Mochizuki et al., 2008
One simple explanation for the differences between imW and NF-treated white tissues could be that genes respond to the same retrograde signal but with different sensitivities in the two white tissues. This may be particularly true in cases where a single gene is differentially regulated 2-fold or more in one white tissue and less than 2-fold but 1-fold or greater in another white tissue (Fig. 4; Supplemental Table S1). A second reason could be that the effect of a mutation in im was manifested early in plant development, whereas NF was applied much later in plant development. Thus, the developmental timing of PDS inhibition could be an important factor contributing to these differences. A third explanation could be due to the fact that imW sectors are randomly interspersed with the photosynthetically active green leaf sectors while NF-treated tissues are not. This could, perhaps, lead to differences in the source-sink interactions between the two tissue types. Therefore, we speculate that a comparison of imW tissues and white tissues from the variegated NF-treated leaf may show fewer differences in gene expression between the two white tissues than those shown in this study. Another reason could be the differences in the mechanism of PDS inhibition: while NF affects PDS activity, directly resulting only in phytoene accumulation, IM affects all reactions that transfer electrons into plastoquinone; thus, the redox status of the plastoquinone pool might be different in these two tissues. Plastoquinone is known to be a potent retrograde signaling molecule (Rodermel, 2001
Plant Material and Growth Conditions Seeds from wild-type Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana ecotype Columbia) were surface sterilized and plated on Murashige and Skoog plates with or without the bleaching herbicide, NF. The seeds were subjected to a dark/cold treatment for 2 d at 4°C before incubating the plates at 150 µmol m–2 s–1 continuous illumination. Plants were grown with varying concentrations of NF (0.1, 0.05, 0.025, 0.01, and 0.005 µM) for 3 weeks before photographing. The experiment was repeated twice, and each experiment was conducted in duplicate to confirm leaf variegation.
For global transcript profiling studies, seeds from wild-type Arabidopsis (Columbia ecotype) and the spotty allele of im (Wetzel et al., 1994
Total RNA was isolated from frozen tissue samples using the TRIzol reagent (GIBCO BRL). Three independent RNA preparations were made from pooled samples of each of the four tissue types (wild type, imW, imG, and NF white). Probes for Arabidopsis oligoarrays were made from 10 µg of total RNA following instructions in the Affymetrix GeneChip Expression Analysis Manual. The probes were then sent to the University of Iowa DNA Facility for hybridization, staining, and scanning of Affymetrix 22K ATH1 oligoarrays.
For quantitative real-time RT-PCR, first-strand cDNA was synthesized from DNase I-treated total RNA using the first-strand cDNA synthesis kit (Invitrogen). Real-time RT-PCR was then performed with the synthesized cDNAs according to the method given by Hewezi et al. (2008)
Expression values were extracted from 12 ATH1 GeneChips (three replicates of each of the four tissue types: wild type, NF-treated white, imG, and imW) using the standard MAS 5.0 algorithm; implementation was provided by the R and Bioconductor packages (Gentleman et al., 2005
Clusters were generated using the CLICK algorithm implemented in the EXPANDER package (Sharan et al., 2003 Differentially regulated genes were functionally classified using the Arabidopsis MIPS classification scheme and gene ontology searches (http://www.arabidopsis.org/). The MapMan (http://gabi.rzpd.de/projects/MapMan/) tool was used to group genes into metabolic pathways.
Samples for light microscopy were obtained from fully expanded leaves. Leaves from wild type, NF-treated, and im plants grown at 22°C under continuous illumination (100 µmol m–2 s–1) were cut into 1-mm pieces, and light microscopy was performed as described by Aluru et al. (2001)
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
Received January 16, 2009; accepted April 16, 2009; published April 22, 2009.
1 This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (Energy Biosciences grant no. DE–FG02–94ER20147 to S.R.R.). 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: Steven R. Rodermel (rodermel{at}iastate.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.109.135780 * Corresponding author; e-mail rodermel{at}iastate.edu.
Aluru MR, Bae H, Wu D, Rodermel SR (2001) The Arabidopsis immutans mutation affects plastid differentiation and the morphogenesis of white and green sectors in variegated plants. Plant Physiol 127: 67–77 Aluru MR, Stessman D, Spalding MH, Rodermel SR (2007) Alterations in photosynthesis in Arabidopsis lacking IMMUTANS, a chloroplast terminal oxidase. Photosynth Res 91: 11–23[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Aluru MR, Yu F, Rodermel S (2006) Arabidopsis variegation mutants: new insights into chloroplast biogenesis. J Exp Bot 57: 1871–1881 Aubert S, Bligny R, Douce R, Gout E, Ratcliff R, Roberts J (2001) Contribution of glutamate dehydrogenase to mitochondrial glutamate metabolism studies by 13C and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance. J Exp Bot 52: 37–45 Baier M, Dietz K (2005) Chloroplasts as a source and target of cellular redox regulation: a discussion on chloroplast redox signals in the context of plant physiology. J Exp Bot 56: 1449–1462 Bolstad BM, Irizarray RA, Speed TP (2003) A comparison of normalization methods for high density oligonucleotide array data based on variance and bias. Bioinformatics 19: 185–193 Brietenbach J, Zhu C, Sandmann G (2001) Bleaching herbicide norflurazon inhibits phytoene desaturase by competition with the cofactors. J Agric Food Chem 49: 5270–5272[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Brown EC, Somanchi A, Mayfield SP (2001) Interorganellar crosstalk: new perspectives on signaling from the chloroplast to the nucleus. Genome Biol 2: 1021.1–1021.4 Busch M, Seuter A, Hain R (2002) Functional analyses of the early steps of carotenoid biosynthesis in tobacco. Plant Physiol 128: 439–453 Cao D, Forehlich JE, Zhang H, Cheng C (2003) The chlorate resistant and photomorphogenesis-defective mutant cr88 encodes a chloroplast-targeted HSP90. Plant J 33: 107–118[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Carol P, Kuntz M (2001) A plastid terminal oxidase comes to light: implications for carotenoid biosynthesis and chlororespiration. Trends Plant Sci 6: 31–36[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Carol P, Stevenson D, Bisanz C, Breitenbach J, Sandmann G, Mache R, Coupland G, Kuntz M (1999) Mutations in the Arabidopsis gene IMMUTANS cause a variegated phenotype by inactivating a chloroplast terminal oxidase associated with phytoene desaturation. Plant Cell 11: 57–68 Caspari T, Will A, Opekarova M, Sauer N, Tanner W (1994) Hexose/H+ symporters in lower and higher plants. J Exp Biol 196: 483–491 Chatterjee M, Sparvoli S, Edmunds C, Garosi P, Findlay K, Martin C (1996) DAG, a gene required for chloroplast differentiation and palisade development in Antirrhinum majus. EMBO J 15: 4194–4207[Web of Science][Medline] Cheong YH, Chang H, Gupta R, Wang X, Zhu T, Luan S (2002) Transcriptional profiling reveals novel interactions between wounding, pathogen, abiotic stress, and hormonal responses in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol 129: 661–677 Chopin F, Orsel M, Dorbe M, Chardon F, Truong H, Miller AJ, Krapp A, Daniel-Vedele F (2007) The Arabidopsis ATNRT2.7 nitrate transporter controls nitrate content in seeds. Plant Cell 19: 1590–1602 Clifton R, Millar AH, Whelan J (2006) Alternative oxidases in Arabidopsis: a comparative analysis of the differential expression in the gene family provides new insights into function of non-phosphorylating bypasses. Biochim Biophys Acta 1757: 730–741[Medline] Cournac L, Redding K, Ravenel J, Rumeau D, Josse EM, Kuntz M, Peltier G (2000) Electron flow between photosystem II and oxygen in chloroplasts of photosystem-deficient algae is mediated by a quinol oxidase involved in chlororespiration. J Biol Chem 275: 17256–17262 Dalla Vecchia F, Barbato R, La Rocca N, Moro I, Rascio N (2001) Responses to bleaching herbicides by leaf chloroplasts of maize plants grown at different temperatures. J Exp Bot 52: 811–820 Deeken R, Engelmann JC, Efetova M, Czirjak T, Muller T, Kaiser WM, Tietz O, Krischke M, Mueller MJ, Palme K, et al (2006) An integrated view of gene expression and solute profiles of Arabidopsis tumors: a genome-wide approach. Plant Cell 18: 3617–3634 Demmig-Adams B, Gilmore AM, Adams WW III (1996) In vivo functions of carotenoids in higher plants. FASEB J 10: 403–412[Abstract] Dixon RA, Paiva NL (1995) Stress-induced phenylpropanoid metabolism. Plant Cell 7: 1085–1097[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Eastmond P, Graham J (2001) Re-examination of the glyoxylate cycle in oil seeds. Trends Plant Sci 6: 72–77[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Eastmond PJ, Germain V, Lange PR, Bryce JH, Smith SM, Graham IA (2000) Postgerminative growth and lipid metabolism in oilseeds lacking the glyoxylate cycle. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 97: 5669–5674 Edreva A (2005) The importance of non-photosynthetic pigments and cinnamic acid derivatives in photoprotection. Agric Ecosyst Environ 106: 135–146[CrossRef] Fernie AR, Carrari F, Sweetlove LJ (2004) Respiratory metabolism: glycolysis, the TCA cycle and the mitochondrial electron transport. Curr Opin Plant Biol 7: 254–261[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Fischer W, Andre B, Rentsch D, Krolkiewicz S, Tegeder M, Brietkreuz K, Frommer W (1998) Amino acid transport in plants. Trends Plant Sci 3: 188–195[CrossRef][Web of Science] Fotopoulos V, Gilbert MJ, Pittman JK, Marvier AC, Buchanan AJ, Sauer N, Hall JL, Williams LE (2003) The monosaccharide transporter gene, AtSTP4, and the cell wall invertase, Atßfruct1, are induced in Arabidopsis during infection with the fungal biotroph Erysiphe cichoracearum. Plant Physiol 132: 821–829 Gentleman R, Carey V, Huber W, Irizarray R, Dudoit S (2005) Bioinformatics and Computational Biology Solutions Using R and Bioconductor. Springer-Verlag, New York Gilbert GA, Gadush MV, Wilson C, Madore MA (1998) Amino acid accumulation in sink and source tissues of Coleus blumei Benth. during salinity stress. J Exp Bot 49: 107–114 Gray JC, Sullivan JA, Wang J, Jerome CA, Maclean D (2002) Coordination of plastid and nuclear gene expression. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 358: 135–145[Web of Science] Hess W, Golz R, Borner T (1998) Analysis of randomly selected cDNA reveals the expression of stress- and defence-related genes in the barley mutant albostrians. Plant Sci 133: 191–201[CrossRef][Web of Science] Hewezi T, Howe P, Maier TR, Hussey R, Mitchum MG, Davis E, Baum T (2008) Cellulose binding protein from the parasitic nematode Heterodera schachtii interacts with Arabidopsis pectin methyltransferase: cooperative cell wall modification during parasitism. Plant Cell 20: 3080–3093 Hihara Y, Kamei A, Kanehisa M, Kaplan A, Ikeuchi M (2001) DNA microarray analysis of cyanobacterial gene expression during acclimation to high light. Plant Cell 13: 793–806 Hirschberg J (2001) Carotenoid biosynthesis in flowering plants. Curr Opin Plant Biol 4: 210–218[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Howe CJ, Schlarb-Ridley BG, Wastl J, Purton S, Bendall DS (2006) The novel cytochrome c6 of chloroplasts: a case of evolutionary bricolage? J Exp Bot 57: 13–22 Irizarray RA, Hobbs B, Collin F, Beazer-Barclay YD, Antonellis KJ, Scherf U, Speed TP (2003) Exploration, normalization and summaries of high density oligonucleotide array probe level data. Biostatistics 4: 249–264[Abstract] Joet T, Genty B, Josse EM, Kuntz M, Cournac L, Peltier G (2002) Involvement of a plastid terminal oxidase in plastoquinone oxidation as evidenced by expression of the Arabidopsis thaliana enzyme in tobacco. J Biol Chem 277: 31623–31630 Josse EM, Simkin AJ, Gaffe J, Laboure AM, Kuntz M, Carol P (2000) A plastid terminal oxidase associated with carotenoid desaturation during chromoplast differentiation. Plant Physiol 123: 1427–1436 Karpinski S, Wingsle G, Karpinska B, Hallgen J (1993) Molecular responses to photoxidative stress in Pinus sylvestris (L). II. Differential expression of Cu Zn-superoxide dismutases and glutathione reductase. Plant Physiol 103: 1385–1391[Abstract] Kerry K, Wiles AM, Sharp JS, Naider FR, Becker JM, Stacey G (2002) An oligopeptide transporter gene family in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol 128: 21–29 Kiyosue T, Yoshiba Y, Yamaguchi-Shinozaki K, Shinozaki K (1996) A nuclear gene encoding mitochondrial proline dehydrogenase, an enzyme involved in proline metabolism, is up-regulated by proline but down-regulated by dehydration in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell 8: 1323–1335[Abstract] Kimura M, Yamamoto YY, Seki M, Sakurai T, Sato M, Abe T, Yoshida S, Manabe K, Shinozaki K, Matsui M (2003) Identification of Arabidopsis genes regulated by high-light stress using cDNA microarray. Photochem Photobiol 77: 226–233[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Kliebenstein DJ, Monde R, Last R (1998) Superoxide dismutase in Arabidopsis: an eclectic enzyme family with disparate regulation and protein localization. Plant Physiol 118: 637–650 Kruger N, von Schaewen A (2003) The oxidative pentose phosphate pathway: structure and organization. Curr Opin Plant Biol 6: 236–246[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Lam H, Wong P, Chan H, Yam K, Chen L, Chow C, Coruzzi GM (2003) Overexpression of the ASN1 gene enhances nitrogen status in seeds of Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol 132: 926–935 Lam HM, Coschigano KT, Oliveira IC, Melo-Oliveira R, Coruzzi GM (1996) The molecular-genetics of nitrogen assimilation into amino acids in higher plants. Annu Rev Plant Physiol Plant Mol Biol 47: 569–593[CrossRef][Web of Science] Lorence A, Chevone B, Mendes P, Nessler C (2004) Myo-inositol oxygenase offers a possible entry point into plant ascorbate biosynthesis. Plant Physiol 134: 1200–1205 Mahalingam R, Gomez-Buitrago A, Eckardt N, Shah N, Guevara-Garcia A, Day P, Raina R, Federoff NV (2003) Characterizing the stress/defense transcriptome of Arabidopsis. Genome Biol 4: R20[CrossRef][Medline] Martin T, Oswald O, Graham IA (2002) Arabidopsis seedling growth, storage lipid mobilization, and photosynthetic gene expression are regulated by carbon:nitrogen availability. Plant Physiol 128: 472–481 Masclaux C, Valadier M, Brugiere N, Morot-Gaudry J, Hirel B (2000) Characterization of the sink/source transition in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L) shoots in relation to nitrogen management and leaf senescence. Planta 211: 510–518[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Masuda T, Fusada N, Oosawa N, Takamatsu K, Yamamoto YY, Ohto M, Nakamura K, Goto K, Shibata D, Shirano Y, et al (2003) Functional analysis of isoforms of NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR), PORB and PORC, in Arabidopsis thaliana. Plant Cell Physiol 44: 963–974 Matsubayashi Y, Ogawa M, Kihara H, Niwa M, Sakagami Y (2006) Disruption and overexpression of Arabidopsis phytosulfokine receptor gene affects cellular longevity and potential for growth. Plant Physiol 142: 45–53 McCormac A, Terry M (2004) The nuclear genes Lhcb and HEMA1 are differentially sensitive to plastid signals and suggest distinct roles for the GUN1 and GUN5 plastid signaling pathways during de-etiolation. Plant J 40: 672–685[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Meehan L, Harkins K, Chory J, Rodermel S (1996) Lhcb transcription is coordinated with cell size and chlorophyll accumulation (studies on fluorescence-activated, cell-sorter-purified single cells from wild-type and immutans Arabidopsis thaliana). Plant Physiol 112: 953–963[Abstract] Meskauskiene R, Nater M, Goslings D, Kessler F, op den Camp R, Apel K (2001) FLU: a negative regulator of chlorophyll biosynthesis in Arabidopsis thaliana. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 98: 12826–12831 Mochizuki N, Tanak R, Tanak A, Masuda T, Nagatani A (2008) The steady state level of Mg-protoporphyrin IX is not a determinant of plastid-to-nucleus signaling in Arabidopsis. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 105: 15184–15189 Moulin M, McCormac A, Terry M, Smith A (2008) Tetrapyrrole profiling in Arabidopsis seedlings reveals that retrograde plastid signaling is not due to Mg-protoporphyrin accumulation. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 105: 15178–15183 Noctor G, De Paepe R, Foyer CH (2007) Mitochondrial redox biology and homeostasis in plants. Trends Plant Sci 12: 125–134[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Nott A, Jung H, Koussevitzky S, Chory J (2006) Plastid-to-nucleus retrograde signaling. Annu Rev Plant Biol 57: 739–759[CrossRef][Medline] Ohlrogge JB, Jaworski JG (1997) Regulation of fatty acid synthesis. Annu Rev Plant Physiol Plant Mol Biol 48: 109–136[CrossRef][Web of Science] Orsel M, Filleur S, Fraisier V, Daniel-Vedele F (2002) Nitrate transport in plants: which gene and which control. J Exp Bot 53: 825–833 Pagnussat GC, Yu H, Ngo QA, Rajani S, Mayalagu S, Johnson CS, Capron A, Xie F, Ye D, Sundaresan V (2005) Genetic and molecular identification of genes required for female gametophyte development and function in Arabidopsis. Development 132: 603–614 Pego JV, Smeekens SCM (2000) Plant fructokinases: a sweet family get-together. Trends Plant Sci 5: 531–536[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Plaxton W (1996) The organization and regulation of plant glycolysis. Annu Rev Plant Physiol Plant Mol Biol 47: 185–214[CrossRef][Web of Science] Redinbaugh MG, Sabre M, Sandalios JG (1990) Expression of the maize Cat3 catalase gene is under the influence of a circadian rhythm. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 87: 6853–6857 Reiß T, Bergfeld R, Link G, Thien W, Mohr H (1983) Photoxidative destruction of chloroplasts and its consequences for cytosolic enzyme levels and plant development. Planta 159: 518–528[CrossRef][Web of Science] Rodermel S (2001) Pathways of plastid-to-nucleus signaling. Trends Plant Sci 6: 471–478[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Roitsch T (1999) Source-sink regulation by sugar and stress. Curr Opin Plant Biol 2: 198–206[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Rossel JB, Wilson IW, Pogson BJ (2002) Global changes in gene expression in response to high light in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol 130: 1109–1120 Rosso D, Ivanov AG, Fu A, Geisler-Lee J, Hendrickson L, Geisler M, Stewart G, Krol M, Hurry V, Rodermel SR, et al (2006) IMMUTANS does not act as a safety valve in the protection of the photosynthetic apparatus of Arabidopsis during steady-state photosynthesis. Plant Physiol 142: 574–585 Saito K (2004) Sulfur assimilatory metabolism: the long and smelling road. Plant Physiol 136: 2443–2450 Sharan R, Maron-Katz A, Shamir R (2003) CLICK and EXPANDER: a system for clustering and visualizing gene expression data. Bioinformatics 19: 1787–1799 Shimada H, Mochizuki M, Ogura K, Froehlich J, Osteryoung KW, Shirano Y, Shibata D, Masuda S, Mori K, Takamiya K (2007) Arabidopsis cotyledon specific chloroplast biogenesis factor CYO1 is a protein disulfide isomerase. Plant Cell 19: 3157–3169 Singletary GW, Doehlert DC, Wilson CM, Muhitch MJ, Below FE (1990) Response of enzymes and storage proteins of maize endosperm to nitrogen supply. Plant Physiol 94: 858–864 Strand A, Asami T, Alonso J, Ecker JR, Chory J (2003) Chloroplast to nucleus communication triggered by accumulation of Mg-protoporphyrinIX. Nature 421: 79–83[CrossRef][Medline] Sullivan JA, Gray JC (2002) Multiple plastid signals regulate the expression of the plastocyanin gene in pea and transgenic tobacco plants. Plant J 32: 763–774[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Surpin M, Larkin RM, Chory J (2002) Signal transduction between the chloroplasts and the nucleus. Plant Cell (Suppl) 14: S327–S338 Susek RE, Chory J (1992) A tale of two genomes: role of chloroplast signal in coordinating nuclear and plastid genome expression. J Plant Physiol 19: 387–399 Thimm O, Blaesing O, Gibon Y, Nagel A, Meyer S, Krüger P, Selbig J, Müller LA, Rhee SY, Stitt M (2004) MAPMAN: a user-driven tool to display genomics data sets onto diagrams of metabolic pathways and other biological processes. Plant J 37: 914–939[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Tonkyn JC, Deng X, Gruissem W (1992) Regulation of plastid gene expression during photooxidative stress. Plant Physiol 99: 1406–1415 Vincentz M, Moureaux T, Leydecker MT, Vaucheret H, Caboche M (1993) Regulation of nitrate and nitrite reductase expression in Nicotiana plumbaginifolia leaves by nitrogen and carbon metabolites. Plant J 3: 315–324[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Wang T, Iyer LM, Pancholy R, Shi X, Hall TC (2005) Assessment of penetrance and expressivity of RNAi-mediated silencing of the Arabidopsis phytoene desaturase gene. New Phytol 167: 751–760[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Wetzel CM, Jiang CZ, Meehan LJ, Voytas DF, Rodermel SR (1994) Nuclear-organelle interactions: the immutans variegation mutant of Arabidopsis is plastid autonomous and impaired in carotenoid biosynthesis. Plant J 6: 161–175[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Wetzel CM, Rodermel SR (1998) Regulation of phytoene desaturase expression is independent of leaf pigment content in Arabidopsis thaliana. Plant Mol Biol 37: 1045–1053[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Winkel-Shirley B (2002) Biosynthesis of flavonoids and effects of stress. Curr Opin Plant Biol 5: 218–223[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Wong H, Chan H, Coruzzi GM, Lam H (2004) Correlation of ASN2 gene expression with ammonium metabolism in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol 134: 332–338 Wu D, Wright DA, Wetzel C, Voytas DF, Rodermel SR (1999) The immutans variegation locus of Arabidopsis defines a mitochondrial alternative oxidase homolog that functions during early chloroplast biogenesis. Plant Cell 11: 43–55 Yu F, Fu A, Aluru M, Park S, Xu Y, Liu H, Liu X, Foudree A, Nambogga M, Rodermel S (2007) Variegation mutants and mechanisms of chloroplast biogenesis. Plant Cell Environ 30: 350–365[CrossRef][Medline] Zhu Y, Zhao H, Ren GD, Yu XF, Cao SQ, Kuai BK (2005) Characterization of a novel developmentally retarded mutant (drm1) associated with the autonomous flowering pathway in Arabidopsis. Cell Res 15: 133–140[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Related articles in Plant Physiol.:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| ASPB Publications | PLANT PHYSIOLOGY® | THE PLANT CELL | |
|---|---|---|---|