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American Society of Plant Biologists The Subtilisin-Like Serine Protease SDD1 Mediates Cell-to-Cell Signaling during Arabidopsis Stomatal Development
a Max-Planck-Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology, Am Mühlenberg 1, 14476 Golm, Germany 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail altmann{at}mpimp-golm.mpg.de; fax 49-331-567-8250
Wild-type stomata are distributed nonrandomly, and their density is controlled by endogenous and exogenous factors. In the Arabidopsis mutant stomatal density and distribution1-1 (sdd1-1), the establishment of the stomatal pattern is disrupted, resulting in stomata clustering and twofold to fourfold increases in stomatal density. The SDD1 gene that encodes a subtilisin-like Ser protease is expressed strongly in stomatal precursor cells (meristemoids and guard mother cells), and the SDD1 promoter is controlled negatively by a feedback mechanism. The encoded protein is exported to the apoplast and probably is associated with the plasma membrane. SDD1 overexpression in the wild type leads to a phenotype opposite to that caused by the sdd1-1 mutation, with a twofold to threefold decrease in stomatal density and the formation of arrested stomata. While SDD1 overexpression was effective in the flp mutant, the tmm mutation acted epistatically. Thus, we propose that SDD1 generates an extracellular signal by meristemoids/guard mother cells and demonstrate that the function of SDD1 is dependent on TMM activity.
During growth and development, all terrestrial plants form specialized epidermal structures called stomata. Stomata enable plants to adjust their gas exchange (i.e., H2O release and CO2 uptake) to suit surrounding environmental conditions by modulating the aperture of a pore delimited by two guard cells (GCs). However, regulating the density and distribution of stomata in the epidermis is as important as pore opening and closure in providing optimal gas flow.
Under natural growth conditions, stomata are distributed nonrandomly in almost all plant species (Willmer and Fricker, 1996
In Arabidopsis primary leaves, the bulk of stomatal complexes develop from single precursor cells (stomatal initials, also called meristemoid mother cells) via three rounds of asymmetric cell division (Berger and Altmann, 2000
These findings, in accordance with cell lineage studies using transposon-induced sectors (Larkin et al., 1996
In Brassicaceae, any of the neighboring cells of a primary stoma have the potential to divide asymmetrically to form a satellite meristemoid (SM), producing secondary, tertiary, or even higher order stomatal complexes (Pant and Kidwai, 1967
The mutants stomatal density and distribution1-1 (sdd1-1), too many mouths (tmm), and four lips (flp), all of which are affected in stomatal differentiation and pattern formation, have been isolated in Arabidopsis (Yang and Sack, 1995
Analysis of serial dental resin imprints revealed a role of the SDD1 gene in the regulation of (1) the number of protodermal cells that form stomatal initials, (2) the number of asymmetric divisions of SMs, (3) the frequency with which neighboring cells undergo oriented asymmetric divisions to produce SMs, and (4) the orientation of the (first) asymmetric division of a neighboring cell (Berger and Altmann, 2000
The SDD1 gene has been identified at the DNA level (Berger and Altmann, 2000 To further elucidate the molecular mechanisms that underlie the observed stomatal patterning processes, we describe the cellular and subcellular localization of SDD1, the activity of the SDD1 promoter in the wild type and in sdd1-1, and the effects of SDD1 overexpression in the wild type and in the mutants flp and tmm.
SDD1 Is Expressed Strongly in Meristemoids/GMCs To investigate the cellular location of SDD1 mRNA in developing Arabidopsis seedlings and siliques, we performed RNA in situ hybridization experiments using an SDD1 antisense probe in 3-week-old Arabidopsis cv C24 plants and in developing siliques from mature Arabidopsis plants. The results showed that SDD1 was expressed predominantly in specialized cell types in the epidermis of developing leaves and siliques, whereas no SDD1 mRNA was detected in mature GCs (Figures 2A, 2C, 2D, and 2E) . In paradermal sections of the epidermis, these specialized cell types were identified as meristemoids/GMCs (Ms/GMCs) according to their characteristic shape, as described in Zhao and Sack (1999)
These observations were confirmed through analysis of four independent transgenic Arabidopsis wild-type cv C24 lines that harbored a fusion of the SDD1 promoter to the -glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene (pSDD1-GUS). The SDD1 promoter was particularly active during GC development. The highest level of GUS activity was detected in Ms/GMCs, whereas GUS activity decreased during GC formation and maturation. In fully developed leaves, almost no GUS staining was observed in mature stomata (Figures 3A and 3B) .
The SDD1 Promoter Is Negatively Feedback Controlled To investigate whether the SDD1 promoter is regulated by components of an SDD1-dependent signal transduction pathway, we compared the GUS staining pattern of transgenic Arabidopsis wild-type cv C24 and sdd1-1 mutant plants harboring the pSDD1-GUS construct. We selected four independent transgenic sdd1-1 mutant lines and compared the reporter gene activity with that in the wild type. In both the wild type and the sdd1-1 mutant, the SDD1 promoter was strongly active during GC development. The greatest GUS staining was observed in Ms/GMCs (Figures 3A, 3B, 3D, and 3E). In the sdd1-1 mutant background, however, strong GUS activity also was detected in the dividing cells of developing leaves and in leaf primordia (Figures 3C and 3F). The absence of repression of the SDD1 promoter in the sdd1-1 mutant, which lacks functional SDD1 protein, indicates that the SDD1 promoter is negatively feedback controlled by components of an SDD1-dependent signaling pathway.
The SDD1ctGreen Fluorescent Protein Fusion Protein Is Associated with the Plasma Membrane
Because the exact processing sites within SDD1 were unknown, we created two different translational GFP fusions of SDD1. In the first construct (35S-SDD1-GFP), we fused the GFP C-terminal to the entire 2.3-kb coding region of SDD1 (Figure 4A)
. In the second construct (35S-SDD1ct-GFP), we fused the GFP C-terminal to a truncated 1.9-kb coding region of SDD1 lacking the region encoding the 121 C-terminal amino acids. This truncated SDD1 protein still harbors the common features of mature subtilisins: the catalytic triad, consisting of three highly conserved domains, and a fourth conserved domain, the substrate binding site (Dodson and Wlodawer, 1998
Four independent transgenic lines overexpressing 35S-SDD1-GFP and 10 lines overexpressing 35S-SDD1ct-GFP were selected according to the results of protein gel blot analysis performed with an antibody raised against a synthetic SDD1 peptide (amino acids 586 to 599). In the 35S-SDD1-GFPoverexpressing lines, a minor 73-kD form and a predominant 63-kD form of the SDD1 protein were observed, whereas in all 35S-SDD1ct-GFPoverexpressing lines, an estimated 100-kD form of SDD1 was detected using the SDD1 peptide antibody (data not shown). The calculated molecular mass of the SDD1 protein without its prepropeptide is 73 kD, and the mass of the GFP protein is 27 kD. The expected molecular mass of the full-length SDD1-GFP fusion (derived from 35S-SDD1-GFP) after removal of the prepropeptide is 100 kD. The predominant 63-kD form of SDD1 detected in the lines overexpressing 35S-SDD1-GFP probably represents a C-terminally processed form of the SDD1 protein. This assumption was confirmed using GFP antibodies that detected a 27-kD protein in these lines (data not shown). Accordingly, the GFP was liberated from the fusion. The 100-kD form of SDD1, which was observed in the lines overexpressing the SDD1ct-GFP fusion involving the C-terminally truncated SDD1 protein, is equivalent to the calculated molecular mass of the fusion protein without its prepeptide. This 100-kD protein also was detected using the anti-GFP antibody. These data demonstrate that in the 35S-SDD1ct-GFP lines, an SDD1ct-GFP fusion protein accumulated that lacked the prepeptide and thus probably was targeted to its correct destination.
In the 35S-SDD1ct-GFPoverexpressing lines, green fluorescence corresponding to GFP was localized to the plasma membrane (Figures 5A to 5D) . Similar fluorescence patterns were observed when leaves were incubated for 1 to 12 h in a buffer at pH 7.0 in an attempt to neutralize the apoplast, because GFP is unstable at low pH (Haseloff et al., 1997
Several attempts were made to use the SDD1 peptide antibody for immunolocalization of the SDD1 protein in tissue sections of young developing Arabidopsis leaves. Unfortunately, no antigen/antibody complexes were detected, indicating that the SDD1 peptide antibody is not suitable for immunolocalization. Thus, no independent proof of the localization of the native SDD1 protein is available.
SDD1 Overexpression Leads to a Twofold to Threefold Decrease in Stomatal Density and to the Formation of Arrested Stomata Stomatal density and differentiation were analyzed microscopically (the adaxial side of fully developed rosette leaves) in transformed plants selected for hygromycin resistance. Four independent transgenic wild-type lines and two transgenic sdd1-1 mutant lines overexpressing 35S-SDD1-T7 were selected according to this microscopic examination. The four transgenic wild-type lines exhibited a twofold to threefold reduction in stomatal density compared with the nontransgenic wild type (Figure 6) . In transgenic line sdd1-1 SDD1#4, the stomatal density was reduced to wild-type levels, and in transgenic line sdd1-1 SDD1#9, a further twofold to threefold reduction of stomatal density was observed (Figure 6).
With increasing light intensity, stomatal density increased in the wild type as well as in the sdd1-1 mutant and in most of the selected 35S-SDD1-T7overexpressing lines, indicating that the adaptation of stomatal density to light is independent of the SDD1-controlled signal transduction pathway that negatively regulates stomatal density (Figure 6). In the wild-type 35S-SDD1-T7overexpressing lines C24 SDD1#4 and C24 SDD1#7 and in the transgenic line sdd1-1 SDD1#9, a minor 73-kD form and a predominant 63-kD form of SDD1 were detected via protein gel blot analysis using the SDD1 peptide antibody (Figure 7A) . The fact that no SDD1 protein was detectable in the transgenic wild-type lines C24 SDD1#20 and C24 SDD1#21 but that a twofold to threefold decrease in stomatal density was observed indicates that minute amounts of additional SDD1 protein are sufficient to cause the developmental change. Using a T7 antibody against the C-terminal T7 tag fused to the SDD1 protein, no protein was detected in any of the transgenic lines (data not shown), supporting the results from the GFP fusion experiments that suggest that the SDD1 protein is C-terminally processed.
For further analysis of stomatal density, stomatal index, and the differentiation status of the stomata, dental resin imprints of primary leaves of the transgenic wild-type lines C24 SDD1#4 and C24 SDD1#7 and the transgenic line sdd1-1 SDD1#9 were prepared and evaluated. A twofold to threefold reduction in stomatal density compared with the nontransgenic wild type was observed (Figures 8A and 8B) . To determine whether stomatal density is affected by alterations in epidermal cell size and/or changes in the ratio of pavement cells to stomata, the stomatal indices were determined.
The stomatal index shifted from 22.4% (on the abaxial surface of Arabidopsis wild-type cv C24 primary leaves) to 7.3 and 8.3% in the transgenic wild-type lines C24 SDD1#4 and C24 SDD1#7, respectively, and from 42.4% in the sdd1-1 mutant to 6.7% in the transgenic line sdd1-1 SDD1#9. Thus, in SDD1-overexpressing lines, the number of stomata was reduced as a result of a shift in the ratio of GCs to pavement cells. In addition to the twofold to threefold reduction in stomatal density, all three 35S-SDD1-T7overexpressing lines exhibited the formation of arrested (at the M/GMC stage) stomata (Figures 9A to 9D) . In the transgenic wild-type lines, 35% of C24 SDD1#4 and 19% of C24 SDD1#7 stomata were arrested at the M/GMC stage (Figure 8A). In the transgenic line sdd1-1 SDD1#9, 36% of the stomata were arrested (Figure 8B).
The leaf size and the number of epidermis cells per leaf area of the analyzed primary leaves of the transgenic wild-type line C24 SDD1#4 did not differ from those of the nontransgenic wild type. The transgenic wild-type line C24 SDD1#7 had the same leaf size as the wild type, and the number of epidermis cells per leaf area was slightly higher compared with that in the wild type (Table 1).
tmm but Not flp Acts Epistatically to SDD1 To determine whether the SDD1, TMM, and FLP genes are involved in common regulatory pathways, we monitored 35S-SDD1-T7 overexpression for alterations of stomatal characteristics in the flp and tmm mutants. We isolated three independent transgenic lines overexpressing 35S-SDD1-T7 in flp and four in tmm via protein gel blot analysis using the SDD1 peptide antibody (Figures 7B and 7C). Two transgenic lines were selected for each mutant and analyzed using dental resin imprints from primary leaves. In the flp mutant, SDD1 overexpression led to the same effects as in the wild type and sdd1-1. The transgenic lines flp SDD1#15 and flp SDD1#21 showed twofold to threefold reductions in stomatal density. Nineteen percent and 11% of the stomata were arrested at the M/GMC stage in lines flp SDD1#15 and flp SDD1#21, respectively (Figures 8C, 9E, and 9F). The stomatal index shifted from 24.3% in the flp mutant to 10.2% in line flp SDD1#15 and 13.9% in line flp SDD1#21. Thus, as shown for wild-type cv C24 and sdd1-1, the ratio of GCs to pavement cells was altered. In addition, in lines flp SDD1#15 and flp SDD1#21, the fraction of stomata arranged in clusters was unchanged (Figure 10A) . Accordingly, the effects of the loss of FLP function and increased SDD1 activity were additive.
In sharp contrast to the effects of SDD1 overexpression in the wild type, in sdd1-1, or in flp, no differences in stomatal density or in average cluster size were observed between the tmm mutant and the transgenic lines tmm SDD1#1 and tmm SDD1#10 (Figures 8D and 10B). Furthermore, no arrested stomata occurred in these lines (Figures 9G and 9H). Thus, the tmm mutation acted completely epistatically to SDD1 overexpression.
Pattern formation is a fundamental aspect of development in all multicellular organisms. Stomata constitute a valuable plant system for the study of cell patterning because GCs are distributed nonrandomly in the epidermis, a two-dimensional tissue that can be examined easily.
In this study, we analyzed the localization and function of SDD1, a gene involved specifically in the regulation of stomatal differentiation and pattern formation (Berger and Altmann, 2000
In the present study, SDD1 was shown to be expressed strongly in Ms/GMCs and weakly in developing leaf mesophyll cells and in the entire shoot apical meristem. Thus, neither protoderm cells nor neighboring cells, the developmental fates of which are affected by the action of SDD1, show detectable SDD1 expression. These findings can be explained readily by SDD1 involvement in signaling events between different cell types. According to this hypothesis, the SDD1-expressing mesophyll may exert control over protodermal cells, the developmental pathway of which is shifted from stomatal complex formation to differentiation into pavement cells. Thus, the loss of SDD1 activity and the concomitant lack of signal generation in the mesophyll would result in the observed increase in the fraction of protodermal cells that enter a stomatal cell lineage (from 35.3% in the wild type to 59.45% in the sdd1-1 mutant) (Berger and Altmann, 2000 Similarly, the shift in the developmental fate of neighboring cells (from pavement cell to SM precursor) may be controlled by a signal created through an SDD1-dependent reaction in the Ms/GMCs, which show strong SDD1 expression. Within the limits of spatiotemporal expression analysis resolution (via in situ hybridization and reporter gene analysis), it appears that the timing of SDD1 expression coincides with the phase at which cell fate determination takes place in the majority of the neighboring cells. This is consistent with the proposed role of SDD1 in the generation of a signal that moves from Ms/GMCs to the neighboring cells and mediates cell-to-cell communication. This signal may either stimulate the development of neighboring cells into pavement cells or inhibit the conversion of neighboring cells into SM precursors. Clearly, real-time high-resolution expression analysis will be necessary to determine the exact temporal order of events (the timing of SDD1 expression and developmental processes in the neighboring cells). Such an analysis also should reveal whether the role of SDD1 in regulating the number of asymmetric divisions in SMs involves cell-to-cell signaling or autonomous action. The proposed signaling from Ms/GMCs to neighboring cells is consistent with the observed role of SDD1 in the control of the orientation of asymmetric cell divisions in neighboring cells acting as satellite meristemoid mother cells.
The signal, probably generated in a SDD1-dependent manner in the Ms/GMCs, may provide a positional cue used by the neighboring cells for proper orientation of their (first) asymmetric division. Recent studies showing that cell fate is determined according to cell position and not cell ancestry indicate the likelihood that cell identity acquisition is dependent on cellcell interactions (Jenik and Irish, 2000
At present, the molecular nature of the proposed signal is unknown. According to the sequence similarity of SDD1 to eukaryotic subtilisin-like Ser proteases, it may act as a processing protease. In animal systems, these enzymes have been shown to exert their actions via specific cleavage of prohormones, growth factor precursors, or proreceptors involved in the regulation of various developmental processes (Thacker et al., 1995 The necessity of precise temporal and spatial control of SDD1 expression was highlighted in this study by monitoring the activity of the SDD1 promoter in the wild type and in the sdd1-1 mutant and by the analysis of transgenic lines ectopically expressing SDD1 under the control of the 35S promoter of Cauliflower mosaic virus. In contrast to the situation in the wild type, in the sdd1-1 mutant, the SDD1 promoter was highly active not only in developing stomata but also in dividing cells of leaf primordia and developing leaves. In the wild type, the latter tissues exhibit only a transient weak expression of SDD1. Apparently, the presence of the SDD1 gene product in the wild type causes repression of the SDD1 promoter in the dividing cells of leaf primordia and developing leaves, except in Ms/GMCs. In other words, the SDD1 promoter is negatively feedback controlled by components of an SDD1-dependent signal transduction pathway, which may not be operative in the stomata precursor cells. In transgenic plants overexpressing SDD1, this regulation is disrupted and SDD1 is expressed in all plant tissues. This deregulated SDD1 expression has dramatic consequences, causing a twofold to threefold reduction in stomatal density and the arrest of stomatal development at the M/GMC stage. It is likely that the reduction in stomatal density is caused by reduced SM production rather than by reduced initiation of stomatal cell lineages from protodermal cells.
This conclusion is based on the observation that leaf size and epidermal cell size are not changed considerably in the transgenic plants. Such changes would be expected if SDD1 overexpression caused reduced initiation of stomatal cell lineages, because the majority of epidermis cells (65 to 85% in leaves) are part of a stomatal lineage (Geisler et al., 2000
The observed arrest of stomatal precursors halted at the M/GMC stage is similar to the formation of arrested stomata in the monocots Tradescantia, Ruscus, and Aeonium and the dicots Anagallis and Pisum (Marks and Sachs, 1977
Furthermore, depending on when stomata arrest and their subsequent development, they might not be recognizable in mature organs. At present, it cannot be determined whether this response of the Ms/GMCs is attributable to the action of neighboring cells expressing SDD1 or extended expression in the Ms/GMCs themselves. The first possibility could be similar to the situation in which two Ms/GMCs, placed in direct contact with each other, results in one of the two arresting and dedifferentiating (Geisler et al., 2000 In any case, these observations highlight the importance of the SDD1 gene product during stomatal development and pattern formation. However, overexpression of SDD1 leads to a reduction in stomatal density but does not prevent the formation of stomata. Similarly, the fraction of protodermal cells that form stomatal initials is increased in sdd1-1, yet not all protodermal cells in sdd1-1 develop into stomatal initials. Thus, additional unknown independent signal transduction pathways may be operative in the control of protodermal cell fate. The response of plants to SDD1 overexpression provided a means of studying epistatic relations between SDD1 and other known stomatal patterning genes such as FLP and TMM or mutant alleles thereof. To determine whether the SDD1, TMM, and FLP genes are involved in the same regulatory pathway, we examined the consequences of SDD1 overexpression in the tmm and flp mutants. This analysis revealed that SDD1 acts in a pathway independent of FLP. By contrast, none of the changes triggered in primary leaves and rosette leaves of the wild type occurred upon SDD1 overexpression in the tmm mutant. This epistatic relationship clearly demonstrates the necessity of TMM for SDD1 action and places the gene products of these two genes in the same signaling pathway. However, according to the proposed function of SDD1 as a processing protease, the order of action of the two gene products cannot be deduced at present. Thus, TMM may be necessary for the synthesis of the substrate of SDD1 or may be involved in the perception/transduction of the SDD1-dependent signal. In any case, additional components are likely part of the proposed signaling pathway.
Precedence for signaling pathways involving extracellular proteinaceous signaling molecules (peptides) is provided by plantpathogen interactions and by cell-to-cell communication in the shoot apical meristem. The bacterial elicitor flagellin and 15 to 22amino acid peptides corresponding to the highly conserved N-terminal region of the Pseudomonas syringae pv tabaci flagellin have been shown to trigger defense responses in plants (Felix et al., 1999
Plant Material and Growth Conditions tmm and flp seeds from a trichomeless gl1 mutant background of Arabidopsis thaliana (Columbia ecotype) were kindly provided by Fred D. Sack, Department of Plant Biology, Ohio State University, Columbus. The sdd1-1 mutant is in the Arabidopsis cv C24 background, which also carries a gl1 mutation (Berger and Altmann, 2000
Plants cultivated in growth chambers were grown in standard soil (Einheitserde GS90; Gebrüder Patzer, Sinntal-Jossa, Germany) under a long-day light regime (16 h of fluorescent light [80 or 120 µmol·m-2·s-1] at 20°C and 60% RH/8 h of dark at 16°C and 75% RH). In tissue culture, seedlings up to 3 weeks old were grown in half-concentrated Murashige and Skoog (1962)
Dental Resin Imprints
Statistics
In Situ Hybridization
Construction of the SDD1 Promoter Fusion to the
5-Bromo-4-chloro-3 indolyl
Generation of SDD1 Translational Green Fluorescent Protein Fusions and Analysis of Transgenic Plants
A second construct, called 35S-SDD1ct-GFP, was created by ligation of a fragment amplified with primers 5'-GCGTCGACATGGAACCCAAACCTTTCTTTC-3' (forward) and 5'-GACTAGTACGCTCAC-GTTCTTATGAGTGATTGCTA-3' (reverse) from the same BAC (F20D22) and provided with SalI linker sequences at the 5' end and with SpeI linker sequences at the 3' end into the SalI- and SpeI-digested vector 35S-10H-GFP-JFH1. In this construct, the SDD1 coding region is C-terminally truncated and terminates at position 658 of the deduced amino acid sequence. The constructs were introduced into Arabidopsis cv C24 by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation (Bechtold et al., 1993
Subcellular localization of 35S-SDD1ct-GFP in transformed Arabidopsis plants was examined using the Leica DM IRB confocal laser scanning microscope equipped with the Leica TCS SPII true confocal scanner and a HC PLAPO x20/0.70 immersion objective (Leica, Wetzlar, Germany). Image acquisition and processing were performed using Leica confocal software. To visualize GFP in the apoplast, the leaves were incubated in 20 mM Pipes-KOH, pH 7.0, for 1 to 12 h on half-concentrated Murashige and Skoog (1962)
Generation of SDD1-Overexpressing Plants
Preparation of Protein Extracts and Immunoblotting
Immunoblotting was conducted using standard laboratory procedures (Sambrook et al., 1989
We thank F. Sack for providing the tmm and flp seeds, L. Bartetzko and H. Kulka for plant care, C. Schönberg and M. Preller for technical support, J. Bergstein for photographic work, M. McKenzie for critical reading of the manuscript, and Karin Köhl for the statistical analysis of the data. This work was supported by Grant Al 1-3 from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeintschaft.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.001016. Received December 13, 2001; accepted March 21, 2002.
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