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First published online July 1, 2009; 10.1104/pp.109.142125 Plant Physiology 151:241-252 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
BOBBER1 Is a Noncanonical Arabidopsis Small Heat Shock Protein Required for Both Development and Thermotolerance[W],[OA]Department of Biology, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania 19081 (D.E.P., J.S.H., A.I.J., Z.R.M., N.J.K.); and Department of Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305 (J.L.)
Plants have evolved a range of cellular responses to maintain developmental homeostasis and to survive over a range of temperatures. Here, we describe the in vivo and in vitro functions of BOBBER1 (BOB1), a NudC domain containing Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) small heat shock protein. BOB1 is an essential gene required for the normal partitioning and patterning of the apical domain of the Arabidopsis embryo. Because BOB1 loss-of-function mutants are embryo lethal, we used a partial loss-of-function allele (bob1-3) to demonstrate that BOB1 is required for organismal thermotolerance and postembryonic development. Recombinant BOB1 protein functions as a molecular chaperone and prevents the aggregation of a model protein substrate in vitro. In plants, BOB1 is cytoplasmic at basal temperatures, but forms heat shock granules containing canonical small heat shock proteins at high temperatures. In addition to thermotolerance defects, bob1-3 exhibits pleiotropic development defects during all phases of development. bob1-3 phenotypes include decreased rates of shoot and root growth as well as patterning defects in leaves, flowers, and inflorescence meristems. Most eukaryotic chaperones play important roles in protein folding either during protein synthesis or during cellular responses to denaturing stress. Our results provide, to our knowledge, the first evidence of a plant small heat shock protein that has both developmental and thermotolerance functions and may play a role in both of these folding networks.
Plants are autotrophic sessile organisms that depend on sunlight for their energetic needs. One consequence of this lifestyle is that plants are often subjected to high temperature stress, especially in dry conditions when transpirational cooling is limited. At a cellular level, elevated temperatures result in changes in protein structure that can result in the exposure of normally buried hydrophobic residues. As a consequence of thermal denaturation, proteins may aggregate and cease to function normally. A universal response to temperature-induced protein unfolding in all living organisms is the production of heat shock proteins (HSPs). HSPs are molecular chaperones that provide organismal thermotolerance by preventing the denaturation and aggregation of target proteins as well as facilitating protein refolding. Highly conserved HSPs are found in all organisms and include the small HSP (sHSP) as well as the Hsp60, Hsp70, Hsp90, and Hsp100 families (Baniwal et al., 2004 -crystallin domain (ACD). Plants are unusual in the large number of ACD-containing sHSPs encoded by their genomes: Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) has 19 compared to 10 in humans, four in Drosophila melanogaster, and one or two in bacteria (Haslbeck et al., 2005
Although the biochemical activity of plant sHSPs has been well characterized (Lee et al., 1995
BOBBER1 (BOB1; At5g53400) is an essential gene required for the normal partitioning and patterning of the apical domain of the Arabidopsis embryo. In bob1-1 and bob1-2 null mutants, meristematic identity is expanded into the portion of the embryo that would normally form the seedling leaves (cotyledons), which in turn are never established. Auxin gradients are never established in bob1 mutant embryos. However, since there are multiple feedback loops involved in auxin signaling and transport, it is unclear whether the lack of auxin maxima in bob1 mutants is a direct or indirect result of a lack of BOB1 activity (Jurkuta et al., 2009 Here, we use bob1-3, a partial loss-of-function allele, to show that BOB1 is required for normal development and meristem function after embryogenesis. To determine whether BOB1 functions as a protein chaperone, we characterized the in vitro activity of BOB1 protein. We also investigated the thermotolerance functions of BOB1 using bob1-3 and used a BOB1:GFP line that is biologically active to document that BOB1 protein is incorporated into heat shock granules (HSGs) at high temperatures. All of these data suggest that BOB1 encodes a novel sHSP with dual functions in development and thermotolerance. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of a developmental patterning function for a plant sHSP.
bob1-3 Mutants Exhibit Pleiotropic Postembryonic Developmental Phenotypes
During embryogenesis, BOB1 is required for the establishment of auxin gradients and for patterning the apical domain of the embryo (Jurkuta et al., 2009
bob1-3 mutant plants exhibit general growth defects throughout their life cycle. Mutant plants grow more slowly, flower later, and have smaller rosette diameters at flowering compared to wild-type siblings. All of these phenotypes are stronger in bob1 THs than in bob1-3 homozygotes. In addition to shoot defects, bob1-3 mutants have short roots. As in the shoot, the short root phenotype is more severe in TH plants than in bob1-3 homozygotes. When bob1-3 mutants flower they exhibit reduced fertility, which results in short siliques. THs are completely sterile and have very small siliques that do not contain viable seeds. bob1-3 plants also exhibit reduced apical dominance and produce shorter inflorescences with more axillary branches (Table I ).
bob1-3 leaves are narrower than wild-type leaves and have pronounced serrations on their margins (Fig. 2 , A and B). bob1 TH plants also have serrated leaf margins compared to the wild type (Fig. 2C). Because mutations in bob1 result in misexpression of STM, a Knotted-like homeobox (KNOX) gene, during embryogenesis (Jurkuta et al., 2009
BOB1 Is Required for Normal Inflorescence and Floral Meristem Function
Arabidopsis inflorescences are produced by the sequential activity of two types of meristems: the inflorescence meristem, which produces cauline leaves and floral meristems; and the floral meristems, which produce floral organs. Floral meristems are normally produced in a spiral phyllotactic pattern on the flanks of the inflorescence meristem. bob1-3/bob1-1 TH plants display defects in inflorescence meristem function. The inflorescence meristem and many of the meristems arising from the axils of cauline leaves stop producing flowers and form pin-like structures reminiscent of pin-formed1 (pin1) and pinoid (pid) mutants (Fig. 2, G and H; Okada et al., 1991 Flower development in Arabidopsis is stereotypical and normally results in flowers with four sepals and petals, six stamens, and two fused carpels (Fig. 2, D and E). This consistency requires correct partitioning of the floral meristem into the four concentric whorls of organs. bob1-3 flowers have aberrant numbers of floral organs, with significantly more sepals, petals, and carpels and fewer stamens (Fig. 2, D and F). In addition to the changes in floral organ numbers, 30% of bob1-3 flowers have at least one set of fused stamen filaments (Fig. 2F, inset). These floral defects are completely rescued by the BOB1:GFP transgene (Fig. 2D). In addition to regulating floral organ number, BOB1 is also required for floral organ identity. bob1 TH plants are completely sterile, and reciprocal crosses and observation of the floral organs suggested that the sterility is due to a defect in pollen production. Wild-type and bob1-3 anthers produce pollen (Fig. 2, I and J), while TH anthers do not (Fig. 2K). Instead, TH anther identity is partially converted into carpel identity and stigmatic papillae grow from the flanks of these anthers (Fig. 2, K and L).
In order to gain further insights into the function of BOB1, we analyzed the AtGenExpress abiotic stress microarray data set, which shows that BOB1 mRNA levels are induced up to 12-fold in the shoots of plants exposed to a 37°C heat shock (Fig. 3A
; Kilian et al., 2007
In order to test this hypothesis, we decided to investigate whether BOB1 shares three additional characteristics of plant sHSPs. First, at elevated temperatures, some plant sHSPs have been shown to localize to large cytoplasmic complexes called HSGs (Kirschner et al., 2000
In order to determine the subcellular localization of BOB1, we built a construct containing a translational fusion of a genomic clone of BOB1 with GFP. The genomic clone included the entire 5' intergenic region (2.4 kb) between BOB1 and At5g53390, the next gene upstream of BOB1. BOB1:GFP transgenic plants developed normally and were crossed to BOB1 null alleles (bob1-1 and bob1-2). Multiple independently transformed lines rescued the embryo lethality of both bob1-1 and bob1-2 and the developmental phenotypes in bob1-3, which demonstrates that BOB1:GFP is a biologically functional allele of BOB1. BOB1:GFP is expressed in all seedling tissues (Supplemental Fig. S3) with highest expression levels at the root tip. In roots grown at 22°C, BOB1:GFP is evenly distributed throughout the cytoplasm and can be detected at low levels in the nucleus, although it appears to be excluded from the nucleolus (Fig. 4, A and E ). To determine if BOB1 is incorporated into HSGs similar to other sHSPs, we exposed BOB1:GFP plants to a heat shock. After 1 h at 37°C, BOB1:GFP is incorporated into large (1.5 ± 0.4 µm, n = 31) cytoplasmic granules (Fig. 4, C and F). A control GFP line exhibited an evenly distributed GFP signal in the cytoplasm and nucleus at both 22°C and at 37°C (Fig. 4, B and D), demonstrating that the BOB1:GFP localization is not an artifact caused by the presence of GFP in the BOB1:GFP protein. HSG formation was observed at heat shock temperatures as low as 34°C, and granules could be detected for up to 8 h after plants were returned to 22°C (data not shown).
Although Arabidopsis HSGs have not been described beyond their identification in electron micrographs, in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) protoplasts, HSGs have been shown to consist of protein complexes containing multiple HSPs (Nover et al., 1989
We used bob1-3 to determine whether BOB1 is required for plant survival in response to high temperatures. Germinating plants are often exposed to high soil temperatures, so we investigated if bob1-3 mutant seeds exposed to high temperatures during germination exhibit reduced thermotolerance compared to wild-type seeds. Stratified seeds were incubated for 1 h at temperatures ranging from 42°C to 55°C. The percentage of bob1-3 seeds that germinated at temperatures above 43.5°C was significantly lower than that of wild-type seeds (Fig. 5A
). This thermotolerance defect could be rescued by a BOB1:GFP transgene (Fig. 5B), confirming that the phenotype is due to a reduction in BOB1 function. Thermotolerance without an acclimation period at sublethal but elevated temperatures is known as basal thermotolerance. Basal thermotolerance has been shown to decrease during seedling development (Queitsch et al., 2000
BOB1 Prevents the Aggregation of Heat-Denatured Proteins in Vitro
Most plant sHSPs containing ACDs have been shown to prevent aggregation and assist in refolding of heat-denatured model substrates (Lee et al., 1997
We previously demonstrated that BOB1 is required for partitioning the apical domain of Arabidopsis embryos during embryogenesis. In bob1 mutants, the central meristematic domain is expanded at the expense of the formation of the lateral cotyledons (Jurkuta et al., 2009
Haslbeck et al. (2005)
In addition to the characteristics described above, all sHSPs analyzed to date form large oligomeric complexes in which the subunits rapidly exchange. Subunit exchange and dynamic changes in oligomeric structure seem to be important for sHSP function (Haslbeck et al., 2005
A comparison between BOB1 and homologous genes in animal and fungal systems illustrates that an association with microtubules is not an evolutionarily conserved property of NudC proteins. NudC homologs are often described as microtubule-associated proteins in the literature (Lin et al., 2004
BOB1 protein is expressed throughout growth and development, and this differentiates BOB1 from most other plant sHSPs that are only expressed at elevated temperatures. However, at high temperatures, BOB1 exhibits characteristics similar to canonical sHSPs, such as incorporation into HSG complexes. In order to show that BOB1 HSGs do not define a novel class of granules, we demonstrated that BOB1 colocalizes with Hsp17.6(II). The function(s) and the composition of HSGs (apart from sHSPs, Hsp70s, and HsfA2) is not well understood (Nover et al., 1983
We used the bob1-3 allele to demonstrate that BOB1 is required not only for thermotolerance but also for normal development. bob1-3 is likely to be a partial loss-of-function allele since all of the phenotypes we measured are more severe when bob1-3 is combined with a null allele (bob1-1 or bob1-2) as a transheterozygote (Muller, 1932
bob1 mutants have defects in general growth of the shoot and the root as well as more specific developmental patterning defects. These include narrow serrated leaves, changes in floral organ numbers and identity, and pin-formed inflorescences. These phenotypes could be due to a lack of chaperone activity or due to disruption of an additional uncharacterized activity. If the phenotypes observed in bob1-3 plants grown at normal temperatures are due to decreased BOB1 chaperone activity, it suggests that there is a group of developmentally important proteins that require BOB1 for proper folding during or after protein synthesis in the absence of temperature stress. This would place BOB1 in a small group of protein chaperones with dual roles in de novo protein folding and recovery from denaturing stress (Albanese et al., 2006
Compared to normal flowers, bob1-3 flowers have increased numbers of sepals, petals, and carpels; however, the average number of organs per flower is not significantly different (16.2 in bob1-3 versus 15.9 in the wild type). This suggests that the floral defect is due to a change in meristematic patterning similar to the phenotype observed in bob1 null mutants (Jurkuta et al., 2009
Gray et al. (1998)
BOB1 is unusual for a plant sHSP because unlike most plant sHSPs, which are only expressed in response to heat shock, BOB1 is expressed at normal temperatures. Other developmentally regulated sHSPs are expressed during seed maturation and petal development, and sHSP ESTs have been identified in leaves (Wehmeyer and Vierling, 2000
Single mutants of cytoplasmic Hsp90s do not exhibit developmental phenotypes; however, pharmacological inhibition of multiple Hsp90s in plants using the drug geldanamycin results in a wide range of developmental defects (Queitsch et al., 2002
Hsp90s are ATP-dependent protein chaperones that rely on a variety of cochaperones for their activity (Terasawa et al., 2005 Our results demonstrate that BOB1 is an sHSP with developmental functions at basal temperatures as well as thermotolerance functions at elevated temperatures. Our data in conjunction with previous studies suggest that homologous genes containing NudC domains function as molecular chaperones, and possibly as HSPs, in other organisms. The generation of a functional BOB1:GFP reporter provides a unique opportunity to study the subcellular dynamics of HSGs, which have not been characterized in a live cell system, and the isolation of a partial loss-of-function allele will allow the further characterization of BOB1 functions during plant development. It will be informative to use genetic and biochemical approaches to identify targets of BOB1 chaperone activity with the goal of understanding how this unique sHSP regulates growth and development in plants.
Plant Growth Plants grown on soil were grown under standard long-day greenhouse conditions with supplemental lighting. Plants grown on plates were grown on 0.5x Murashige and Skoog (MS) media at 22°C under continuous light in Percival E-30B growth chambers (Percival Scientific).
All plants are in a Columbia (Col) background. bob1-1 (EMS) and bob1-2 (T-DNA insertion Salk_001125) are null alleles described by Jurkuta et al. (2009)
A BOB1 genomic clone, including 2,413 bp 5' of the start codon (up to the end of the previous gene, At5g53390), was amplified using primers BOB1_attB_F (5'-GGGGACAAGTTTGTACAAAAAAGCAGGCTCCGTCTTCTTGTCTTCACCCATTC-3') and BOB1_attB_R (5'-GGGGACCACTTTGTACAAGAAAGCTGGGTTGTTAAACTTTGCATTTGAGAAGTCCA-3') to remove the stop codon. The PCR product was recombined into pDONR/Zeo (Invitrogen) and subsequently recombined into pGWB4 (Nakagawa et al., 2007
For germination assays, seeds were sterilized and then stratified for 2 to 3 d at 4°C. Stratified seeds were heat shocked for 1 h in thin wall tubes using a PTC-200 gradient PCR machine (MJ Research) and subsequently transferred to 0.5x MS plates for 7 d, at which point germination was scored. Seedling assays were performed by submerging sealed plates in water baths as described by Charng et al. (2006)
Plant images were acquired using a Canon Powershot G9 digital camera (Canon USA) and processed using Photoshop (Adobe). Rosette diameter and root lengths were measured from digital images using ImageJ (http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/).
RNA from seedlings grown in 0.5x MS liquid media was prepared using RNeasy plant mini kits (Qiagen), quantified using a Nanodrop ND-1000 (Thermo Scientific), and reverse transcribed using the ProtoScript II RT-PCR kit (NEB). The following primers were used for 25-cycle PCR reactions: ACTIN-F, 5'-GAAGAACTATGAATTACCCGATGGGC-3'; ACTIN-R, 5'-CCCGGGTTAGAAACATTTTCTGTGAACG-3'; HSP17.6-F, 5'-CGATCCGTTCTCGCTGGATG-3'; HSP17.6-R, 5'-GGGCACGGTAACCGACAACA-3'; BOB2-F, 5'-GGTCCCATCGTTCCTAACAAAG-3'; BOB2-R, 5'-TTGATCAAACATCATCTTCTCAACG-3'; BOB1-F, 5'-TGGGACTAAAGCACGGACTGTTG-3'; and BOB1-R, 5'- AGTTAAACTTTGCATTTGAGAAGTCCA-3'.
In order to add an N-terminal His tag to BOB1, a BOB1 cDNA was cloned into pET15b (Novagen). This construct (pAJ1) was transformed into Escherichia coli strain BL21(DE3). Site-directed mutagenesis was used to introduce the G141E mutation into pAJ1, resulting in pAJ2. Expressed protein was purified using Ni-NTA resin (Qiagen). Protein purity was determined using SDS-PAGE, and protein concentration was determined using calculated extinction coefficients (Pace et al., 1995
Fresh tissue was imaged using low vacuum mode on an FEI Quanta 200 scanning electron microscope equipped with a cooled stage.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Elizabeth Vierling for her generous gift of -Hsp antibodies and hot1-3 seeds. Greenhouse care was provided by Bill Pinder. We also thank Jennifer Pfluger, Damon Lisch, Pablo Jenik, Sarah Hake, and Kathy Barton for helpful discussions and comments on this manuscript. Received May 26, 2009; accepted June 29, 2009; published July 1, 2009.
1 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: Nicholas J. Kaplinsky (nkaplin1{at}swarthmore.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.109.142125 * Corresponding author; e-mail nkaplin1{at}swarthmore.edu.
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