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Constructing Signal Transduction Pathways in ArabidopsisHarry B. SmithThe balance that multicellular organisms must strike between cell proliferation and differentiation is the very focus of developmental biology. From slime molds to humans, developmental programs must direct both the temporal and spatial expression of specific genes despite the exacting exigencies of a DNA replication regime designed to provide each new cell with an identical genome. Unchecked cell proliferation or, equivalently, the failure of cells to differentiate properly, has been hypothesized for decades to account for tumorigenesis and cancer. In more recent years, the discovery of oncogenes and their protein products has deepened our understanding of the molecular biology not only of oncogenesis, but also of programmed cell differentiation, proliferation, and death (apoptosis). Regardless of whether one chooses to study cell growth or apoptosis, the obvious fact of multicellular life is that cells must coordinate their activities with one another. It should not be so surprising, therefore, that some of the transforming proteins described, beginning in the early 1980s, as the products of oncogenes have turned out to be key factors in cellcell communication that, through mutation, have gone awry. The c-erbB family of mammalian proto-oncogenes, capable of undergoing specific mutations so as to transform cells in culture, provides just one example. Indeed, a number of tumors, such as gliomas, engender mutations in one or more members of the c-erbB gene family. But it is the normal biology of proto-oncogenes and the cell regulatory factors that they encode that stands as one of the most hotly pursued areas of biomedical research in recent years. And as the signal transduction pathways in plant cells are currently being elaborated, a familiarity with themes that have arisen in animal systems becomes ever more pertinent to plant biologists. To pursue the example further, therefore, the normal c-erbB products are now recognized as cell receptors that bind a number of ligands, the best studied of which is epidermal growth factor (EGF). The binding of EGF to its receptor thus represents a primary message that subsequently triggers a cascade of signaling events within the targeted cell. Specifically, the binding of EGF to the extracellular domain of the EGF receptor (ErbB-1) activates the intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity of the cytoplasmic domain, resulting in the auto-phosphorylation and homodimerization of ErbB-1 (or heterodimerization of differing ErbB variants). In this way ErbB-1 is typical of a wide variety of receptor kinases.
In response to ErbB-1 receptor activation, a number of other proteins, many of which have long been regarded as proto-oncogene products, are subsequently recruited to effect a net response (e.g., cell proliferation). In this respect the Ras superfamily of proteins represents a particularly important and early "switch," alternating between GDP-bound ("off") and GTP-bound ("on") forms. Its inherent GTPase activity ensures that the given Ras protein does not remain active for extended periods of time in the absence of receptor activation, whereas GDP-displacement factors (Grb2 and SOS) are otherwise activated to supply Ras with GTP (see, e.g.,
Upon activation, Ras proteins propagate a phosphorylation cascade that involves multiple regulatory proteins, the most dynamic participants being protein kinases and phosphatases. A simplified textbook scheme that holds for EGF and many other cell signals is: receptor kinase
Plants, like animals, must also balance the processes of cell proliferation and differentiation, and they manifest many parallels to signal transduction in animals. Ethylene, for instance, one of the primary hormones to regulate growth and development in plants, induces the sequential phosphorylation of several proteins that have counterparts in animal cells. The ethylene receptor itself cannot be directly placed amid the spectrum of animal cell receptor kinases that includes EGF receptors; however, other of the cellular responses to ethylene seem to depend on a number of orthologs of animal signal transducing proteins. In Arabidopsis, for example, kinases of the Raf, MEK, and MAPK types have all been directly implicated in ethylene signaling, albeit as negative regulators (for review, see
Nevertheless, at the cell surface, where extracellular messages must be received and where the phosphorylation cascades that result in cell division or differentiation must be initiated, the mechanisms whereby binding of ligand is realized in the plant cell cytoplasm have yet to be elucidated. Not only are the proteinprotein interactions involved in early signal relay uncertain, but the handful of plant cell receptors implicated in plant development must be subsumed under the single heading of "receptor-like kinases" (RLKs). This somewhat noncommittal moniker reflects the fact that it has been very difficult to experimentally verify ligands for plant receptor kinases, and even the kinase activity of many RLKs (as well as of established receptors, such as the ethylene receptor) has to be assumed on the basis of sequence similarities to nonplant receptor kinases (
One of the more intriguing RLKs is encoded by the Arabidopsis gene CLAVATA1 (CLV1) ( On pages 393405 of this issue, Trotochaud et al. present data that establish a biochemical understanding of how CLV1 functions as an RLK and give a glimpse into the early signaling events that may underlie control of meristem integrity. Signal cascades by definition require that proteins interact, and Trotochaud et al. successfully reveal at least three of the relay partners engaged by CLV1. Specifically, they demonstrate that CLV1, which has a monomeric molecular mass of approximately 105 kD, shows up predictably in either of two distinct complexes that have respective molecular masses of 185 and 450 kD. Both complexes are labile to reducing conditions, which indicates that their construction is mediated by the formation of intermolecular disulfide bridges. Correspondingly, the authors point out that most RLKs include cysteine residues in conserved motifs, so that the specific complexes formed with CLV1 may turn out to be mechanistically representative of multiple signal transduction pathways that involve RLKs. Further mechanistic insight comes from the authors' suggestion that the 185-kD species is intermediate to the formation of the larger complex of 450 kD.
Using an antibody specific for CLV1, the authors have previously established the interaction of the CLV1 protein with KAPP, a kinase-associated protein phosphatase that had been isolated together with an RLK of unknown function (
In view of the molecular weights of CLV1 (105 kD) and KAPP (65 kD), the authors confront the problem of further elucidating the constituency of the 450-kD complex, which genetic experiments define as the active complex (see below). Recalling the simplified scheme worked out for animal systems and outlined above (receptor kinase
The detected interaction of Rop with an RLK such as CLV1 (i.e., CLV1:Rop) is an important step in identifying an early "switch" in plant signal transduction. The identification of the ligand that binds to and activates CLV1 so as to initiate a phosphorylation cascade (i.e., CLV1
Mutations of the CLV3 gene are also instructive with regard to formation of the 450-kD complex. clv3 mutants are similar in phenotype to clv1 mutants, and an epistatic relationship has been established for the two loci such that the CLV1 and CLV3 proteins have been assumed to interact or to be active at a common position in a signaling pathway (see, e.g.,
REFERENCES
Clark, S.E. (1997) Organ formation at the vegetative shoot meristem. Plant Cell 9:1067-1076[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]. Clark, S.E., Williams, R.W., and Meyerowitz, E.M. (1997) The CLAVATA1 gene en-codes a putative receptor kinase that controls shoot and floral meristem size in Arabidopsis. Cell 89:575-585[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline].
Hua, J., Sakai, H., Nourizadeh, S., Chen, Q.G., Bleecker, A.B., Ecker, J.R., and Meyerowitz, E.M. (1998) EIN4 and ERS2 are members of the putative ethylene receptor gene family in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell 10:1321-1332 Lease, K., Ingham, E., and Walker, J.C. (1998) Challenges in understanding RLK function. Curr. Op. Plant Biol. 1:388-392[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]. Ridley, A.J., and Hall, A. (1992) The small GTP-binding protein Rho regulates the assembly of focal adhesions and actin stress fibers in response to growth factors. Cell 70:389-399[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]. Solano, R., and Ecker, J.R. (1998) Ethylene gas: Perception, signaling and response. Curr. Op. Plant Biol. 1:393-398[CrossRef][Medline].
Stone, J.M., Collinge, M.A., Smith, R.D., Horn, M.A., and Walker, J.C. (1994) Interaction of a protein phosphatase with an Arabidopsis serinethreonine receptor kinase. Science 266:793-795
Stone, J.M., Trotochaud, A.E., Walker, J.C., and Clark, S.E. (1998) Control of meristem development by CLAVATA1 receptor kinase and kinase-associated protein phosphatase interactions. Plant Physiol. 117:1217-1225 Tari, A.M., Hung, M.C., Li, K., and Lopez-Berestein, G. (1999) Growth inhibition of breast cancer cells by Grb2 downregulation is correlated with inactivation of mitogen-activated protein kinase in EGFR, but not in ErbB2, cells. Oncogene 18:1325-1332[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline].
Trotochaud, A.E., Hao, T., Wu, G., Yang, Z., and Clark, S.E. (1999) The CLAVATA1 receptor-like kinase requires CLAVATA3 for its assembly into a signaling complex that includes KAPP and a Rho-related protein. Plant Cell 11:393-405
Williams, R.W., Wilson, J.M., and Meyerowitz, E.M. (1997) A possible role for kinase-associated protein phosphatase in the Arabidopsis CLAVATA1 signaling pathway. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94:10467-10472
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