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First published online November 26, 2002; 10.1105/tpc.005132 American Society of Plant Biologists Regulation of Axis Determinacy by the Arabidopsis PINHEAD Gene
a Department of Genetics and Program in Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of WisconsinMadison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail barton{at}andrew2.stanford.edu; fax 650-325-6857
Plants produce proximal-distal growth axes with two types of growth potential: they can be indeterminate, in which case growth continues indefinitely, or they can be determinate, in which case growth is limited to the production of a single organ or a discrete set of organs. The indeterminate shoot axes of Arabidopsis pinhead/zwille mutants frequently are transformed to a determinate state. PINHEAD (PNH) is expressed in the central domain of the developing plant: the provascular tissue, the shoot apical meristem, and the adaxial (upper) sides of lateral organ primordia. Here, we show that ectopic expression of PNH on the abaxial (lower) sides of lateral organs results in upward curling of leaf blades. This phenotype correlates with a loss of cell number coordination between the two surfaces of the blade, indicating that ectopic PNH can cause changes in cell division rates. More strikingly, moving PNH expression from the central to the peripheral domain of the embryo causes transformation of the determinate cotyledon axis to an indeterminate state. We propose that growth axes are specified as determinate versus indeterminate in a PNH-mediated step. Our results add to a growing body of evidence that radial positional information is important in meristem formation. These results also indicate that genes regulating cell division and axis determinacy are likely to be among PNH targets.
Numerous proximal-distal growth axes are found in shoot systems of angiosperm plants (Figure 1A) . These include that of the main shoot, each lateral branch, each cotyledon, leaf, floral organ, and so on. Perpendicular to each proximal-distal axis is the radial axis, which runs in the central to peripheral direction (for cylindrical structures) or in the adaxial to abaxial direction (for planar structures; Figure 1B). Proximal-distal axes of plants can exhibit either indeterminate growth, resulting in the formation of an unlimited number of organs, or determinate growth, resulting in the formation of a single organ or a discrete set of organs. In flowering plants, the terms "determinate" and "indeterminate" frequently are applied to inflorescence architectural features characterized by terminal or nonterminal flowers, respectively. Here, we use the terms in their broader developmental sense to indicate growth potential of any proximal-distal axis (not just the inflorescence).
A key requirement of indeterminate growth potential for a shoot axis is the presence of a shoot apical meristem (SAM) at the distal end. The SAM is equipped specifically to give rise to organ primordia on its lateral flanks while maintaining a reservoir of self-replacing totipotent cells at its center. Several mutants have been isolated or engineered that lack or have a nonfunctional SAM. These include shoot meristemless (stm; Barton and Poethig, 1993
At the highest level, genes are responsible for establishing pattern. For instance, the SAM arises from the central, apical region of the globular embryo. Therefore, failure to elaborate central and/or apical identities would be expected to result in failure to form a SAM. Perhaps the best evidence for this is the fact that when the KAN gene (a gene normally expressed in a peripheral, or abaxial, domain of the embryo) is expressed throughout the entire embryo, the result is a lack of central, or adaxial, fates, including central vascular cylinder cells and a SAM (Eshed et al., 2001
The CUC gene also seems to act at the level of pattern formation, specifically in directing the transition from radial symmetry to bilateral symmetry. cuc mutants are largely radially symmetrical, with a single, cup-shaped cotyledon and no SAM (Aida et al., 1997
Downstream of such pattern formation functions are genes that dictate cell fates within the embryo or the SAM. For instance, the STM gene product (a homeodomain-containing protein) is required for cells to act as meristem cells. In the absence of STM, these cells adopt fully differentiated fates according to their positions (Barton and Poethig, 1993
Finally, genes required for cell division and its regulation are essential for SAM function. Such genes may act globally (Cockcroft et al., 2000
Similar to KAN overexpressors and cuc, stm, and wus mutants, pnh mutants frequently lack a functional SAM. Although a SAM is formed during embryogenesis in pnh mutants, the indeterminate shoot axis acts like a determinate axis; these mutants produce only one organ from the first SAM. pnh mutants also exhibit a defect in axillary meristem formation, which is the mechanism by which plants create new indeterminate growth axes after embryogenesis. In addition, pnh mutants make shorter siliques and narrower leaves and petals than wild-type plants and show abnormalities in floral organ number (McConnell and Barton, 1995
Collectively, the PNH expression domain comprises the central and adaxial cells of developing tissues. PNH mRNA is found at moderate levels throughout the SAM and in the adaxial domains of organ primordia (Lynn et al., 1999
Recently, Nishimura et al. (2002)
PNH is a member of a small gene family in Arabidopsis whose founding member is the ARGONAUTE (AGO) gene (Bohmert et al., 1998
The Caenorhabditis elegans agl-1 and agl-2 genes encode AGO/PNH-like products required for the accumulation of short RNAs that negatively regulate the translation of genes involved in developmental timing (Grishok et al., 2001 The loss-of-function pnh phenotype is consistent with a role for the PNH gene at several levels in the hierarchy of developmental events in the shoot. It may be involved in pattern formation and/or in the more limited roles of cell division control or the promotion of the undifferentiated state. To better understand the level at which PNH functions in the shoot, we investigated PNH using gain-of-function analysis. Our results support a role for PNH at several levels in the developmental hierarchy of shoot development. Expanding the expression of PNH outside of its normal domain resulted in a cell division control defect that manifested as upward curling of leaf margins. A more dramatic result was found when PNH was moved from its normal domain to a more peripheral domain: such mutants show a conversion of the determinate cotyledon axis to an indeterminate state. Together with the loss-of-function phenotype, this result suggests that PNH regulates the indeterminacy of the proximal-distal shoot axes. Furthermore, this finding highlights the importance of radial positional information in the overall architectural development of the plant body and shows that PNH acts largely cell nonautonomously.
Placing PNH under the Control of the 5' Region of the FIL Gene Causes Its Abaxial Expression In wild-type plants, high levels of PNH mRNA are observed in developing vascular tissue (Moussian et al., 1998
To verify the new expression domain, in situ hybridization experiments were performed on PNH; FIL::PNH transgenic plants using a PNH antisense probe. In addition to the wild-type expression domain, transformants expressed PNH on the abaxial sides of cotyledons and near the margins on the abaxial sides of true leaves at levels resembling those on the adaxial sides (Figures 2E to 2H, arrows). To assess which part of the expanded PNH domain was derived from the FIL::PNH transgene, in situ hybridization using an antisense -glucuronidase (GUS) probe was performed on FIL::GUS transgenic plants (Figure 3). These experiments confirmed that the FIL sequences used in this study drive expression in the abaxial cells of lateral organs (Figures 2I to 2L), which are the same cells in which FIL mRNA was detected under our conditions (data not shown). Note that GUS RNA persisted in medial abaxial portions of the leaf primordia longer than either endogenous FIL RNA (Siegfried et al., 1999
Abaxial Expression of PNH Causes Upward Curling of Lateral Organs As a negative control, 130 independently derived lines expressing the FIL::PNH-FRAMESHIFT (FS) transgene were examined (Figure 3). This transgene is identical to FIL::PNH except for a single nucleotide deletion in the coding sequence that creates a premature stop codon. When this sequence was expressed in Escherichia coli, a truncated protein was produced (data not shown). Thirty-three lines resembled pnh mutants and likely resulted from the cosuppression of PNH. The remaining 97 lines resembled the wild type. Thus, ectopic expression of the wild-type PNH gene product is required for the curling phenotype. The PNH; FIL::PNH plants exhibited upwardly curled blades in rosette leaves (Figures 4A to 4C) , cauline leaves (Figures 4I to 4L), petals, and sepals (Figures 4M and 4N), giving them an involute appearance compared with the wild type. Other lateral organs, such as cotyledons, stamens, and carpels, were normal.
Blade curling results from a differential between the amount of growth on the adaxial and abaxial sides of the leaf blade. This growth can be caused by cell expansion, cell division, or both. To investigate the mechanism of blade curling in PNH; FIL::PNH plants, the ratios of adaxial to abaxial epidermal cell numbers were compared in curled and wild-type rosette leaves. We expected that if abnormal cell expansion caused curling, the ratio of adaxial to abaxial cells would be the same in PNH; FIL::PNH and wild-type blades; if abnormal cell division rates caused curling, we expected this ratio to change. Cells from the youngest curled PNH; FIL::PNH leaves (plastochron 8 [P8] to P10) and similarly staged wild-type leaves were counted using transverse sections of shoot apices (Figures 4E to 4H). The ratio of adaxial to abaxial epidermal blade cells changed from an average of 1.01 ± 0.04 (SE) with a range of 0.9 to 1.11 in wild-type blades to 0.63 ± 0.0095 (SE) with a range of 0.60 to 0.66 in curled PNH; FIL::PNH blades (n = 5 blades for each genotype). Thus, ectopically expressing PNH in the abaxial leaf domain either causes an excess of cell divisions in this domain or represses cell division on the opposite, adaxial, side of the leaf. The latter possibility seems less likely because plants expressing PNH in both leaf domains from the constitutive 35S promoter of Cauliflower mosaic virus did not show a similar degree of leaf curling. Plants carrying the 35S::PNH transgene had round leaf blades with gently ruffled surfaces (Figure 4O). Occasionally, the margins of the leaves curled up, but not to the same extent seen with FIL::PNH. In addition, the leaves frequently were held upright, rather than lying flat against the soil. Sepals and petals resembled those of PNH; FIL::PNH flowers, and carpels often were bumpy in appearance (data not shown). Finally, the leaves of PNH; FIL::PNH plants seemed to be the same width as wild-type leaves rather than narrower, as might have been expected if the transgene repressed cell division. The involute morphology affected leaves from the early stages of blade outgrowth, at approximately the P8 or P9 stage, with the P1 leaf being defined as the youngest primordium that is morphologically distinguishable on the flanks of the SAM. The curling phenotype was seen until just before full expansion of the leaf. At this point, the blades corrected the curling until they nearly resembled wild-type blades (Figures 4I to 4L). This correction likely is permitted by a cessation of ectopic PNH expression in maturing leaves, because plants expressing a FIL::GUS transgene showed GUS activity in young but not maturing leaves (Figure 4D).
pnh; FIL::PNH Plants Make Double Cotyledons When the FIL::PNH transgene was expressed in a pnh mutant background, none of the pnh defects (SAM and axillary meristem formation, floral organ morphology, and number) was rescued. The inability of abaxial PNH to rescue the mutant phenotype shows that normal localization of the PNH transcript is critical. Surprisingly, unlike PNH; FIL::PNH leaves, pnh; FIL::PNH leaves did not curl. Thus, expression of PNH in its normal domain is essential for the transgene to cause leaf curling. pnh; FIL::PNH individuals germinated and grew much more slowly than wild-type individuals. In addition, a novel phenotype was seen in pnh; FIL::PNH cotyledons. The novel phenotype consisted of cotyledon primordia splitting at various points in development to form fused or unfused "double" cotyledons (Figure 5) . This phenotype segregated in four of four independent lines transformed with the FIL::PNH transgene (many other T1 individuals died before setting seed). This phenotype also was seen when the transgene was transformed into wild-type plants and crossed into a pnh background. When the FIL::PNH-FS negative control construct was transformed into homozygous pnh-2 plants, none of the 96 T1 generation plants had the novel phenotype. Furthermore, none of the hygromycin-resistant T2 progeny from 11 of 11 independent lines examined showed the novel cotyledon phenotype (Table 1). These data verify that the novel phenotype is conferred by the ectopic expression of PNH.
We classified double cotyledons according to degree of separation. For example, cotyledons in class A were completely normal, and those in class F were separated completely into two cotyledons (Figure 5G). Eighty-seven percent of hygromycin-resistant seedlings (n = 530 seedlings) showed full or partial doubling of at least one cotyledon (classes B to F). Of the double cotyledons, 80.8% were fused (classes B to E); the remainder were completely separate (class F) (n = 604 half-seedlings). The cotyledons of each seedling were arranged in two opposite groups, just as a wild-type seedling arranges its two cotyledons. For example, individuals with three separate cotyledons (one class-A and one class-F cotyledon) usually held two smaller cotyledons in close proximity, opposite to a larger third cotyledon. We observed no cotyledons that split into unequal parts, nor did we observe multiple sinuses. To observe the early stages of cotyledon doubling, pnh; FIL::PNH embryos were examined. Early and late heart-stage pnh; FIL::PNH embryos were very wide at the top, and their cotyledons were abnormally splayed compared with the wild type (Figures 6A, 6B, 6E, and 6F) . By the early torpedo stage, evidence of cotyledon doubling emerged as a flattening (Figure 6G) or indentation (Figure 6I) of the distal tip of the cotyledon primordium compared with the wild type (Figure 6D).
Together, these observations suggest that each pnh; FIL::PNH embryo originally initiated two cotyledon primordia, as does the wild type, but many of these primordia proceeded to initiate two additional cotyledon primordia. This is consistent with our further observations of two morphological features of cotyledons: vascular patterning and hydathode formation. Wild-type cotyledons exhibited a stereotypical pattern of vascularization, which was similar in pnh mutants (Figures 6J and 6K). Although the patterning of the vasculature was aberrant in continuity and the placement of branch points with respect to the wild type, the overall pattern was duplicated in double cotyledons rather than widened to service both sides (Figures 6L and 6M). The hydathode is a specialized structure for guttation found at the margins of leaves and cotyledons (Esau, 1977
pnh; FIL::PNH Double Cotyledons Produce Ectopic Meristems
Ectopic growths fell into two groups: differentiated outgrowths, which were composed of large differentiated cells, and SAMs, which were defined by the production of at least one leaf-like structure such as a regular pnh SAM would produce. In 2-week-old seedlings, 56.2% of ectopic growths were SAMs (n = 73 half-seedlings), whereas in 3-week-old seedlings, 90.7% of ectopic growths were SAMs (n = 108 half-seedlings). Combined with the observation that SAMs often emerged from differentiated outgrowths, these data suggest that differentiated outgrowths typically lead to SAM formation. Ectopic SAMs occasionally were observed to produce full rosettes and inflorescences; ectopic root growth never was observed.
Consistent with the formation of ectopic SAMs on double cotyledons, the activity of the STM promoter was seen in double cotyledons. An STM::GUS transgene that confers GUS activity in the SAM of wild-type seedlings (McConnell and Barton, 1998
pnh FIL::PNH Cotyledon Primordia Ectopically Express Genes Required for SAM Initiation in the Embryo
Similarly, STM was expressed only in its normal domain at the early and middle stages of embryogenesis, but it was expressed in some cotyledon primordia by the bent-cotyledon stage (Figures 8C and 8D). Unlike CUC2 expression, STM expression in cotyledon primordia was detected only after they were morphologically distinguishable as double cotyledons. The CUC2 and STM genes normally are expressed only at the shoot apex. That they were expressed in the cotyledon primordia in our experiments reveals that these cotyledon primordia had activated at least part of the program normally reserved for the indeterminate axis that forms during embryogenesis.
Through the analysis of ectopic expression phenotypes, we have gained a broader understanding of the role that PNH plays in plant development. Ectopic PNH activity is able to influence development at what appears to be a late stage in the developmental hierarchycell divisionand also at a very early stage in the developmental hierarchythe specification of a growth axis as indeterminate versus determinate. This finding is consistent with the highly pleiotropic nature of the pnh loss-of-function phenotype (Lynn et al., 1999 The ability of ectopic PNH to create such substantial changes in the development of the plant when expressed ectopically suggests a regulatory role for PNH. The PNH gene is involved in the transformation of a normally determinate growth axis into an indeterminate growth axis.
Role of PNH in Cell Division Regulation and Leaf Polarity
The adaxial nature of PNH expression in lateral organs coupled with the abaxialized phenotype seen in some pnh organs (Lynn et al., 1999
PNH Is Necessary and Sufficient for the Indeterminacy of Shoot Axes
The development of the indeterminate pnh; FIL::PNH cotyledon axis is similar, both molecularly and morphologically, to the development of the indeterminate wild-type embryonic axis (Figure 9) . In the wild-type embryo, the formation of the embryonic axis occurs as growth slows at the distal tip at the late globular stage, allowing two outgrowths to form the two cotyledon primordia on either side. This process is mediated by the CUC genes, which are expressed at the site where growth will slow at the globular stage of embryogenesis (Aida et al., 1997
In a similar manner, growth slows at the distal end of pnh; FIL::PNH cotyledon primordia, allowing the outgrowth of two lobes. Expression of the CUC2 gene occurs at this site before the formation of an indentation. Then, a SAM is formed in the region of slowed growth. The STM gene is expressed here as it is in the indeterminate axis of the wild type. This axis also is capable of indeterminate growth, as shown by rosettes and inflorescences that can develop from pnh; FIL::PNH cotyledons.
The following model explains the conversion of the determinate cotyledon axis to an indeterminate axis in pnh; FIL::PNH plants. In the wild type (Figure 9C), PNH expression marks the central domain of the main indeterminate axis of the embryo. At the distal end of this axis is the SAM. Two new axes are specified in the cotyledon primordia; these are determinate organ axes and do not have a SAM at the distal end. In addition, the expression domain of PNH in these axes includes central and adaxial regions. In pnh embryos (Figure 9D), PNH activity is absent or reduced and the indeterminate axis behaves like a determinate axis, with only one organ at the shoot apex. In pnh; FIL::PNH embryos (Figure 9E), PNH activity is decreased or absent in its normal domain, again causing the indeterminate axis to behave like a determinate axis. However, PNH activity has been added back to the cotyledon cells, and the cotyledon primordia take on the role of the indeterminate axis in these individuals. Thus, PNH appears to be necessary and sufficient for the indeterminacy of proximal-distal shoot axes. Although the FIL promoter directs expression in the abaxial cotyledon domain throughout most of cotyledon development, this promoter may be active throughout the cotyledon primordia in their earliest stages of development (Siegfried et al., 1999 It is interesting that the PNH; FIL::PNH plants do not show the double cotyledon and ectopic SAM phenotypes (Figure 9F). Perhaps the main indeterminate axis, which functions normally in PNH; FIL::PNH plants, has an inhibitory effect on other axes, preventing them from becoming indeterminate. A somewhat related possibility is that a contiguous block of PNH-expressing cells can contribute to the formation of only one indeterminate axis.
These experiments underscore a growing body of evidence that indicates that radial pattern in the embryo and in the shoot is important in promoting SAM formation. Gene expression patterns show that the apical half of the embryo is divided into a central and a peripheral portion before a meristem is developed (Long and Barton, 1998
PNH Acts Cell Nonautonomously The new regions of PNH expression are regions in which AGO is expressed: PNH is expressed in a central domain of the developing embryo and shoot and in the presumptive vasculature, whereas the redundantly acting AGO gene is expressed throughout the embryo and the shoot apex. From this finding, we conclude either that the PNH and AGO gene products have overlapping but distinct functions or that the absolute levels of PNH/AGO function are important in development. These are testable hypotheses that have implications for the sets of genes targeted for regulation by the PNH/AGO genes: PNH and AGO may associate with overlapping sets of micro-RNAs, and this causes them to have different but overlapping sets of target genes. Alternatively, the two genes may have identical targets, but high levels of PNH/AGO activity are important for adaxially expressed targets, whereas lower levels are required for abaxially expressed targets.
The notion of distinct roles for PNH and AGO is consistent with the finding that AGO, but not PNH, is required for post-transcriptional gene silencing in Arabidopsis (Morel et al., 2002
Implications for the Molecular Function of PNH
Growth Conditions Arabidopsis thaliana plants were grown at 24°C under continuous cool-white fluorescent light in Metromix 200 (Sierra, Grace, Milpitas, CA) unless noted otherwise. Sterile medium was Murashige and Skoog (1962)
Histology
GUS Staining
Constructs and Plant Transformation Upon request, all novel materials described in this article will be made available in a timely manner for noncommercial research purposes.
We thank John Bowman, John Emery, Yuval Eshed, and Rita Khodosh for sharing the FIL promoter as well as seeds from pRITA II transgenic lines. We are grateful for helpful comments on the manuscript from Pablo Jenik. This work was funded by National Science Foundation Grant IBN-0080853 to M.K.B. and a National Science Foundation predoctoral fellowship to K.L.N.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.005132. Received June 6, 2002; accepted September 17, 2002.
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