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First published online December 16, 2009; 10.1104/pp.109.151746 Plant Physiology 152:762-773 (2010) © 2010 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Stimulation of Nonselective Amino Acid Export by Glutamine Dumper Proteins1,[C],[W],[OA]Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Plant Biology, Stanford, California, 94305 (R.P., W.B.F., G.P.); and Lehrstuhl für Biochemie, Institut für Biologie, Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, 91058 Erlangen, Germany (L.M.V., R.J.H.)
Phloem and xylem transport of amino acids involves two steps: export from one cell type to the apoplasm, and subsequent import into adjacent cells. High-affinity import is mediated by proton/amino acid cotransporters, while the mechanism of export remains unclear. Enhanced expression of the plant-specific type I membrane protein Glutamine Dumper1 (GDU1) has previously been shown to induce the secretion of glutamine from hydathodes and increased amino acid content in leaf apoplasm and xylem sap. In this work, tolerance to low concentrations of amino acids and transport analyses using radiolabeled amino acids demonstrate that net amino acid uptake is reduced in the glutamine-secreting GDU1 overexpressor gdu1-1D. The net uptake rate of phenylalanine decreased over time, and amino acid net efflux was increased in gdu1-1D compared with the wild type, indicating increased amino acid export from cells. Independence of the export from proton gradients and ATP suggests that overexpression of GDU1 affects a passive export system. Each of the seven Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) GDU genes led to similar phenotypes, including increased efflux of a wide spectrum of amino acids. Differences in expression profiles and functional properties suggested that the GDU genes fulfill different roles in roots, vasculature, and reproductive organs. Taken together, the GDUs appear to stimulate amino acid export by activating nonselective amino acid facilitators.
Minerals and organic solutes cycle through the vascular conduits of higher plants (Marschner et al., 1996
Transport of metabolites across membranes is typically mediated by membrane proteins specific for a solute or a class of solutes. During the past two decades, numerous transporters of amino acids belonging to the amino acid transporter family 1 (ATF1) and amino acid-polyamine-organocation (APC) family have been isolated from plants. Several ATF1 members were shown to function as amino acid/proton cotransporters that are characterized by low amino acid selectivity (Rentsch et al., 2007
Previous work had shown that the activation-tagged glutamine dumper1 mutant gdu1-1D secretes Gln from the hydathodes and is characterized by increased amino acid content in apoplasm and xylem sap (Pilot et al., 2004 The work presented here aimed at testing the hypothesis of GDU1 being an activator of amino acid efflux as well as evaluating the functional role of the GDU paralogs. Amino acid transport in gdu1-1D was studied by uptake and efflux analyses using radiolabeled compounds. The effects of the overexpression of the GDU paralogs on amino acid content and transport were examined. The results show that the seven GDU proteins are able to increase amino acid export by plant cells.
Increased Tolerance of gdu1-1D to Amino Acids
A sensitive, quantitative assay was developed to assess the tolerance of plants to toxic levels of amino acids. In contrast to previous systems that determined survival of seedlings at high external amino acid supply (10 mmol L–1; Pratelli and Pilot, 2007a
Reduced Net Amino Acid Accumulation in gdu1-1D Uptake capacities of various radiolabeled compounds were compared in gdu1-1D and the wild type. Phe uptake was reduced by 55%, while Glc and methyl ammonium uptakes were unaffected or slightly increased. Uptake of other amino acids was also reduced in gdu1-1D: 50% to 60% for Arg, Pro, and Gly and 20% for His and Glu (Fig. 2, A and B ). Reduced uptake of Phe, Arg, His, and Gly correlated with the tolerance of gdu1-1D to these toxic amino acids (Pro and Glu were not toxic to the wild type; Fig. 1).
Based on the large reduction of uptake and its effect in the tolerance assay, Phe was chosen for more detailed analyses. The uptake rate of radiolabeled Phe by wild-type plants followed a biphasic curve over the range 0.01 to 5 mmol L–1. Treatment with the protonophore carbonyl cyanide 3-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) inhibited the high-affinity component (hyperbolic curve), revealing the activity of the low-affinity component (linear curve; Fig. 2C). Phe uptake was analyzed at three concentrations, each concentration revealing a different contribution of the high-affinity transport to the total uptake (80%, 60%, or 40%). After 2 min, Phe accumulated at the same level in gdu1-1D as in the wild type (Fig. 2D), suggesting that the initial import capacity of Phe is similar. Phe uptake in the wild type followed linear kinetics, corresponding to a constant uptake rate, as described for other amino acids (Schobert and Komor, 1987 A decrease in uptake rates over time could result from (1) feedback inhibition of the uptake by accumulation of Phe or (2) increased amino acid export in gdu1-1D. When plants were pretreated with 1 mM Phe prior to uptake analyses, little difference in the time course of Phe accumulation for both the wild type and mutant was observed (Fig. 2E). This finding argues against a contribution of cytosolic Phe accumulation in inhibiting its own uptake. The unchanged initial Phe uptake, together with the unchanged uptake kinetics after Phe pretreatment, favors the second hypothesis (i.e. an increase in amino export as a result of GDU1 overexpression).
To further resolve Phe export capacity, seedlings were preloaded with [14C]Phe and the net efflux (i.e. export minus import) of radiotracer into the medium was measured. Thin-layer chromatography analysis of the medium proved that the radiolabeled compound released by the plants was Phe (Supplemental Fig. S1A). The amount of Phe released into the medium was higher in gdu1-1D than in wild-type plants (150 and 64 nmol mg–1 dry weight, respectively; Table I ). In gdu1-1D, released Phe amount corresponded also to a higher fraction of the total radioactivity taken up, defined as the sum of Phe amounts left in the plant and released into the medium (approximately 60% in gdu1-1D versus approximately 15% in the wild type). Similar experiments showed that efflux of radiolabeled His and Glu was also increased in gdu1-1D, but the efflux of radiolabeled Glc was not (Supplemental Fig. S1B).
It has been proposed that a fraction of the amino acids exported from roots is reimported by high-affinity transporters, controlling amino acid net efflux (Schobert and Komor, 1987 To evaluate the selectivity of amino acid efflux, amino acid content in plants and conditioned medium (medium from plants grown for 2 d) was analyzed. Amino acid content was nearly identical or even decreased in gdu1-1D plants compared with wild-type plants (e.g. Pro, Tyr, Val, Met, Ile, Lys, and Leu; Table II ). In contrast, gdu1-1D growth medium contained about four times as much amino acids as for the wild type (Table II). The content of most amino acids was increased in the medium, and Asn and Gln accounted for about 75% of the total increase, suggesting that the export mechanism stimulated by GDU1 overexpression is nonselective but shows a preference for Asn and Gln.
Inhibitors as Tools for Dissecting GDU1-Mediated Efflux
One may speculate that import and export may be differentially sensitive to inhibitors, specifically to protonophores. Net Phe efflux was thus measured in the presence of uncouplers (CCCP and 2,4-dinitrophenol [DNP]) or inhibitors of ATP hydrolysis (orthovanadate [VO4]) and proton pumps (diethylstilbestrol [DES]), shown to inhibit proton-coupled high-affinity amino acid import (Jones and Darrah, 1993
Overexpression of GDU Paralogs
The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) genome encodes six GDU1-like proteins (hereafter called GDUs) that may share functions similar to that of GDU1. Five T-DNA insertions in the GDU genes caused more than 95% reduction in the content of the corresponding mRNA. Homozygous plants did not present any morphological abnormality when grown on soil, and no change in Phe uptake or efflux was observed (data not shown). Sequence conservation among the GDUs (Pratelli and Pilot, 2006 To test whether all GDUs elicit amino acid efflux, each of the seven genes was expressed under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter (35Sp), leading to a 100- to 50,000-fold increase in mRNA levels relative to their endogenous levels in the wild type. For each construct, six to eight transformant lines were selected that segregated 3:1 for the kanamycin resistance marker and whose kanamycin-resistant offspring were phenotypically identical. GDU mRNA accumulation, rosette diameter, and amino acid content were determined. Several lines containing the 35Sp-GDU2, 35Sp-GDU3, and 35Sp-GDU4 constructs also overaccumulated GDU1, GDU3, or GDU6 mRNA (circled symbols in Supplemental Figs. S2 and S3). No other GDU gene was overexpressed in the GDU1, GDU5, GDU6, and GDU7 overexpressors. The reason for the induction of other GDU genes is not clear at present, but it probably hints at complex regulations of the expression of the GDUs. Lines showing overaccumulation of the targeted GDU mRNA and not any other GDU were used for further characterization and were named GDU1-OE to GDU7-OE (Supplemental Table S1).
Except for GDU4 and GDU7, plant size decreased with mRNA accumulation of the GDU genes (Fig. 4A
; Supplemental Fig. S2), and free amino acid content of all the GDU-OEs increased in correlation with the intensity of the overexpression (Supplemental Fig. S3), similar to what was observed with GDU1 overexpression in gdu1-1D (Pilot et al., 2004
GDU Expression Affects Amino Acid Export Amino acid tolerance of one GDU-OE line per gene was assessed using the root growth assay described previously. Root length was almost identical for the overexpressors and the wild type grown on Cys (Fig. 5 ), Met, and Trp (data not shown). Except for GDU7, the overexpression of the GDUs led to a tolerance to most of the toxic amino acids (Fig. 5, top), similar to what was found in the case of gdu1-1D.
Phe net uptake was reduced for all GDU-OEs compared with the control (Fig. 6A ). Phe accumulation kinetics in two GDU7-OE lines was nearly linear, with an uptake rate approximately 10% lower than the control. Radioactivity accumulation kinetics measured for two lines overexpressing the five other genes was characterized by a decrease in the uptake rate over time, as observed for gdu1-1D (Supplemental Fig. S4). Amino acid efflux analyses showed that a higher fraction of the incorporated radioactivity is exported by the GDU-OEs (approximately 35%–50%) compared with the control (approximately 12%), except for GDU7-OE (approximately 17%; Fig. 6B), indicating that Phe export is increased in almost all GDU-OEs.
The culture medium in which the GDU-OEs had been grown for 2 d contained two to 60 times more amino acids compared with control plants grown in the same conditions. Gln and Asn accounted for approximately 50% to 70% of the increase (Supplemental Table S3). The amino acid profiles were similar for all GDU-OEs and different from the control, especially concerning the amino acids Asp, Glu, Asn, and Gln (Supplemental Fig. S5). Amino acid contents of the plants employed for this in vitro assay were slightly increased (by approximately 30%–50%) for GDU3-, GDU4-, GDU5-, GDU6-, and GDU7-OEs but not for GDU1-OE and GDU2-OE (Supplemental Table S4), while all GDU-OEs exhibited elevated amino acid contents when grown on soil (Fig. 4B). The increased release of amino acids into the growth medium suggested that similar nonselective amino acid export systems are stimulated by overexpression of any of the seven GDUs.
Different roles of the GDUs in the plant could be revealed by specific expression patterns for each of the genes. Analysis of the expression of the GDU genes showed that the mRNA accumulation levels varied greatly, from 12 ng of genomic DNA equivalent (see "Materials and Methods") for GDU6 to 1.9 µg of genomic DNA equivalent for GDU3, in agreement with an analysis of Arabidopsis gene expression using tiling arrays (Table III
; Laubinger et al., 2008
Overexpression of the GDU Genes Stimulates Amino Acid Efflux
Plant cell growth is sensitive to high levels of exogenously supplied amino acids (Heremans and Jacobs, 1994
Phe, Arg, Pro, Gly, Glu, and His net uptake was lower in gdu1-1D compared with the wild type, while time-course analyses indicated that the high-affinity uptake capacity of Phe was identical in gdu1-1D and the wild type (Fig. 2D). Direct determination of amino acid efflux and analysis of amino acid content in the growth medium showed that amino acid export is enhanced in gdu1-1D. The observed decrease in Phe uptake rate shown in Figure 2D can then be explained as follows. At the beginning of the uptake experiment, Phe is more concentrated in the medium than in the cytosol (1 mM Phe in the medium and less than 0.5 mM Phe in the cytosol; Farré et al., 2001
The overexpression of the GDU genes using the CaMV 35S promoter led to plants that were phenotypically similar to the activation-tagged mutant gdu1-1D. The GDU-OEs displayed increased free leaf amino acid content when grown on soil (Fig. 4B), enhanced amino acid tolerance, decreased Phe uptake rate over time, and increased amino acid export into the medium. All the GDU-OEs exported a similar set of amino acids, different from the wild type (Supplemental Fig. S5). All GDUs have similar functional properties and are able to increase amino acid export upon overexpression. The weaker phenotype of the GDU7-OEs (Figs. 4 and 6) is possibly related to the sequence divergence of GDU7 from the other genes (Pratelli and Pilot, 2007b
Tolerance of gdu1-1D to 11 out of 14 toxic amino acids (Fig. 1; Pratelli and Pilot, 2007a The GDU1-stimulated amino acid export mechanism was not dependent on the proton gradient or ATP hydrolysis (Fig. 3). Consequently, vesicular trafficking and ATP-binding cassette transporters, requiring ATP for energization, and putative amino acid/proton antiporters are not candidates for the export mechanism. Another possibility would be a facilitator, which allows passive transport of amino acids along the concentration gradient. The increased activity of a facilitator in gdu1-1D is expected to lead to increased Phe uptake when external Phe concentration is higher than in the cytosol (e.g. 5 mmol L–1; Fig. 3A, CCCP), which was not observed. The GDU1-stimulated amino acid export then appears to be mediated by a system able to transport amino acids only toward the outside of the cell. Such a system and the corresponding export mechanism still remain to be identified in plants.
Amino acid exporters from other organisms have been found to be (1) highly selective, like the vesicular
Because of its expression and functional properties, BAT1 would be a candidate for the export system stimulated by GDU1 overexpression. By analogy to the effects of subunits of animal transporters, GDU1 would modulate the trafficking and/or the functional properties of BAT1. Mammalian heteromeric amino acid transporters require the activity of a single-transmembrane domain protein for correct targeting to the plasma membrane (Palacin and Kanai, 2004
The absence of an apparent phenotype of the GDU knockout mutants, the overlapping expression patterns, and the overall similar phenotypes of the GDU overexpressors suggest functional redundancy among the GDU proteins. GDUs are expressed in regions where amino acid transport is known to occur. Phloem has been shown to unload in seeds at the chalaza/funiculus region (Stadler et al., 2005 The phenotypes of the GDU-OEs are not identical in every respect. Several differences were noted for the amount of secretion crystals on the leaves (Fig. 4A) and the magnitude of the size reduction and amino acid content upon overaccumulation of the GDU mRNAs (Supplemental Figs. S2 and S3). In addition to the specificities of expression patterns (Supplemental Fig. S6; Supplemental Table S5), the phenotypical differences suggest that the GDUs play different roles in the plant and are endowed with similar but not identical functional properties.
Uptake of radiolabeled amino acids by gdu1-1D was reduced and gdu1-1D plants excreted more amino acids in the growth medium than the wild type, indicating an increased amino acid export. The overexpression of the GDU1-like proteins from Arabidopsis led to amino acid tolerance and increased amino acid export, suggesting that the GDU proteins have a similar function. Differential expression of the seven GDU genes suggests specific roles in amino acid export in different cell types. The data presented here provide direct evidence that the overexpression of the GDU genes specifically stimulates amino acid export and that they potentially act as regulators of amino acid exporters. It is expected that the study of the GDUs and interacting proteins will shed light on the poorly understood export mechanisms in plants.
Plant Growth and Transformation Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana ecotype Columbia-7) plants were grown in soil (Floragard type B without clay from Floradur) in the greenhouse or in a growth room (16 h of light, 120 µmol m–2 s–1, at 23°C) and were watered from below. Fertilizer was applied once at the time of bolting.
Constructs were introduced into plants using Agrobacterium tumefaciens GV3101 (pMP90) and the floral dip method (Clough and Bent, 1998 For amino acid tolerance experiments, surface-sterilized seeds were sown using 0.1% (w/v) agar on half-strength MS medium containing 0.5% (w/v) Suc, 0.5 g L–1 MES, pH 5.7, 0.8% (w/v) agar, and various concentrations of amino acids. Plants were grown vertically for 10 d in a growth cabinet (16 h of light, 80 µmol m–2 s–1, at 22°C). Plates were scanned and root lengths were calculated using ImageJ (http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/).
Total RNA extraction and northern blotting were performed as described previously (Pratelli and Pilot, 2006 For real-time RT-PCR, RNA (10 µg) was treated with DNAse I (Invitrogen) for 30 min at room temperature and precipitated in the presence of ethanol. After solubilization in 10 µL of water, 2.5 µg of RNA was reverse transcribed using SuperScript III Reverse Transcriptase (Invitrogen) in a 10-µL reaction. Real-time PCR was performed on 5 µL of a 50-fold dilution of the RT product using the Lightcycler 480 SYBR Green I Master Mix and detected with a Roche 480 Lightcycler (Roche Applied Science). Threshold cycle values were determined by the Roche Lightcycler 480 SW 1.5 software. Amplification efficiencies were determined using amounts from 2.5 pg to 2.5 ng of genomic DNA as template and used for absolute quantitation of mRNA levels. Absolute quantities of mRNA are given in genomic DNA equivalents, corresponding to the amount of genomic DNA that would be needed as template to get the same threshold cycle as the RT template. Sequences of the oligonucleotides used as primers for quantitative PCR are available upon request.
pPTkan3 and pUTkan binary vectors are derivatives of pJHA212K (Yoo et al., 2005
Histochemical staining of GUS activity was performed on in vitro- and soil-grown plants as described (Lagarde et al., 1996
Tissues were frozen in liquid nitrogen, freeze dried, and ground with a 5-mm steel ball in a Tissue-lyzer (Qiagen). Amino acids were extracted from the dry powder by 500 µL of 80% (v/v) ethanol at 80°C for 30 min. The pellets obtained by centrifugation at 16,000g were extracted a second time in the same way. The supernatants were pooled and dried under vacuum. Chlorophyll content was estimated by spectrophotometry of a 5-fold dilution of the extracts in 80% ethanol according to Lichtenthaler (1987) Total amino acid content was determined by reaction with ninhydrin. Dried samples were solubilized in 250 µL of 20% ethanol. After centrifugation, 30 µL of the supernatant was mixed with 200 µL of ninhydrin reagent (3.34 M propionic acid, 2.1 N NaOH, 50% [v/v] 2-ethoxy-ethanol, and 2% [w/v] ninhydrin) and 100 µL of 0.1% (w/v) ascorbic acid. The mixture was heated for 10 min at 95°C and cooled for 5 min on ice, and the optical density at 570 nm was determined after addition of 500 µL of 60% (v/v) ethanol. Reactions with increasing amounts of Gly were used to establish a standard curve.
For determination of amino acid content in plants, extracts were prepared as above. For determination of amino acids present in the medium, growth solutions were filtered (0.2-µm pore size) and dried under vacuum. Amino acids were then derivatized with fluorophore 6-aminoquinolyl-N-hydroxysuccimidyl carbamate (AccQ Taq; Waters), and the amino acid derivatives were separated at a flow rate of 1 mL min–1 at 37°C on a Dionex Summit HPLC system essentially as described (van Wandelen and Cohen, 1997
Arabidopsis plantlets were grown for 7 d (16 of h light, 80–120 µmol m–2 s–1, at 21°C) on solid (0.7% agar) half-strength MS medium containing 1% (w/v) Suc, pH 5.7. Plates contained 50 µg mL–1 kanamycin for the selection of plants harboring the 35Sp-GDU constructs or the 35Sp-GFP construct, used as a control. About six plants were immersed into 3 mL of half-strength MS medium containing 1% (w/v) Suc, pH 5.7, and grown on a 12-well plate under gentle shaking (40 rpm) for 4 to 5 d with the same light regime. One hour before transport analyses, plants were transferred to a 24-well plate, into 1 mL of the same medium, and shaken for 1 h at room temperature under incandescent light for acclimatization to the uptake conditions. The solution was replaced with fresh medium containing between 3.7 and 7.4 kBq U-14C-radiolabeled substrate (GE Healthcare) and unlabeled substrate supplied at the concentrations indicated in the figures. Plantlets were washed three times with 5 mL of 0.2 mM CaSO4. For efflux analyses, plants were allowed to take up the radiolabeled substrate for 10 min, then rinsed three times with 0.2 mM CaSO4 and transferred to 1 mL of half-strength MS medium without Suc, pH 5.7. Radioactivity released in the medium was quantitated by scintillation counting of the solution, after addition of 5 mL of scintillation cocktail (Ultima Gold XR; Perkin-Elmer). Plants were then dried for 3 h at 70°C, weighed, and digested overnight in 1 mL of 7% NaClO. Radioactivity in the samples was measured by scintillation counting several hours after the addition of 5 mL of scintillation cocktail. For treatments with proton gradient and ATP hydrolysis inhibitors, preincubation (40 min), uptake, and efflux were performed in the presence of 100 µM CCCP, DNP, or DES (stock solutions at 40 mmol L–1 in dimethyl sulfoxide) or 1 mM VO4 (stock solution at 100 mmol L–1 in water). For thin-layer chromatography analyses of amino acid extracts, the efflux medium (half-strength MS medium, pH 5.7, without any Suc) was dried under vacuum. Metabolites were solubilized in 30 µL of 70% ethanol, and 15 µL was loaded on thin-layer chromatography silica plates (GF; Analtech), 1 µL at a time. The plates were developed for 2 h at room temperature with a 1-butanol:acetic acid:water (3:1:1) mix. After drying under air flow, the plates were placed for 7 d against a storage phosphor screen. The screen was then scanned by a Typhoon 9400 scanner. The locus numbers of the GDU genes are as follows: GDU1, At4g31730; GDU2, At4g25760; GDU3, At5g57685; GDU4, At2g24762; GDU5, At5g24920; GDU6, At3g30725; GDU7, At5g38770.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Prof. Uwe Sonnewald (Friedrich-Alexander University, Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany) for providing HPLC facilities for amino acid analysis. Received November 29, 2009; accepted December 14, 2009; published December 16, 2009.
1 This work was supported by the National Science Foundation ("Arabidopsis 2010" grant no. 0618402 to W.B.F.) and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant nos. PI 607/2–1 to G.P. and VO 985/1–1 to L.M.V.).
2 Present address: Department of Plant Pathology, Physiology, and Weed Science, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061. 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: Guillaume Pilot (gpilot{at}vt.edu).
[C] Some figures in this article are displayed in color online but in black and white in the print edition.
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.109.151746 * Corresponding author; e-mail gpilot{at}vt.edu.
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