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First published online January 17, 2003; 10.1105/tpc.006148 American Society of Plant Biologists
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| Abstract |
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-subunit of a putative heterotrimeric G protein (GPA1) have reduced cell division. Here, we show that this prototypical G protein complex acts mechanistically by controlling auxin sensitivity toward cell division. Loss-of-function G protein mutants have altered auxin-mediated cell division throughout development, especially during the auxin-induced formation of lateral and adventitious root primordia. Ectopic expression of the wild-type G
-subunit phenocopies the G
mutants (auxin hypersensitivity), probably by sequestering the G
-subunits, whereas overexpression of G
reduces auxin sensitivity and a constitutively active (Q222L) mutant G
behaves like the wild type. These data are consistent with a model in which G
acts as a negative regulator of auxin-induced cell division. Accordingly, basal repression of approximately one-third of the identified auxin-regulated genes (47 of 150 upregulated genes among 8300 quantitated) is lost in the G
transcript-null mutant. Included among these are genes that encode proteins proposed to control cell division in root primordia formation as well as several novel genes. These results suggest that although auxin-regulated cell division is not coupled directly by a G protein, the G
-subunit attenuates this auxin pathway upstream of the control of mRNA steady state levels. | INTRODUCTION |
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, phospholipase A2, and potassium channels.
Although the presence of G proteincoupled signal transduction is well documented in metazoa, evidence for a comparable system in plants is scant (reviewed by Assmann, 2002
). Genes that encode putative G protein subunits have low sequence identity to known G proteins; thus, the existence of a prototypical G protein in plants remains unproven. However, evidence based on pharmacological experiments suggests a role for a heterotrimeric G protein in various signal transductions, such as for auxin (Zaina et al., 1990
, 1991
, 1994
), abscisic acid (Fairley-Grenot and Assmann, 1991
), gibberellin (Jones et al., 1998
; Ueguchi-Tanaka et al., 2000
), pathogens (Beffa et al., 1995
), blue light (Warpeha et al., 1991
), and red light (Neuhaus et al., 1993
). Recently, genetic evidence has indicated that abscisic acid (Wang et al., 2001
) and brassinosteroids (Ullah et al., 2002
) use a heterotrimeric G protein in signal transduction.
To date, 23 G
, 6 G
, and 12 G
genes have been found in mammals (Vanderbeld and Kelly, 2000
). The
-subunits are classified into four subfamilies: Gs, Gi, Gq, and G12. By contrast, based on the essentially complete genome of Arabidopsis, plants have a single candidate gene, GPA1, that encodes a prototypical G
-subunit. GPA1 shares
30% amino acid sequence identity with mammalian G
-subunits, with slightly higher identity to Gi. Among the Gi subfamily, GPA1 is most similar to Gz, the most divergent member of this group (Jones, 2002
). Similarly, based on sequence information alone, there is a single candidate G
gene and possibly two G
-subunit genes. Unfortunately, structural information, either predicted or empirically derived, for the authentication of an Arabidopsis G protein complex has not been reported; thus, the authenticity of a plant G protein complex has not been proven. However, GTP
S binding to GPA1 (Wise et al., 1997
) and a slow GTPase activity for an ortholog of GPA1 (Aharon et al., 1998
) have been reported.
The possibility of a single heterotrimeric G protein complex suggests that G-coupled signaling in plant cells must be dramatically less complex than that in animals, but this simplicity raises the question of how such a wide diversity of plant signals can be coupled by a single heterotrimeric complex and how this specificity in transduction is achieved. In assessing this paradox, several questions must be answered. What evidence supports a genuine heterotrimeric G protein complex composed of GPA1, AGB1, and AGG1? What are the signal pathways in which the G protein operates? And what are the relative contributions of the G
- and G
-subunits in these pathways?
Our previous work with G
protein-null mutants suggested a role for a candidate G protein subunit in cell proliferation and for G protein coupling of auxin-regulated cell proliferation (Ullah et al., 2001
). Biochemical evidence for the G protein coupling of auxin signaling has been reported by Zaina et al. (1990)
. Using a nonhydrolyzable 35S-labeled GTP analog, GTP
S, they found that indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) increased the binding of 35S-GTP
S to rice coleoptile membrane vesicles by twofold compared with the auxin control. This finding indicates that auxin stimulates the exchange of GDP bound on a G protein for a GTP, which is diagnostic of G protein coupling in an auxin pathway.
Auxin regulates lateral and adventitious root formation (Blakely et al., 1988
; Laskowski et al., 1995
) by controlling the rate of cell elongation in emerging roots and the amount and position of cell division in root primordia formation. Lateral root formation is initiated when a small number of quiescent cells in the root pericycle dedifferentiate and undergo cell division to form the root primordium. Subsequent changes in the positions of division planes and expansion of cells in the primordium have been staged (Malamy and Benfey, 1997
), and the cell elongation and cell division processes can be separated genetically (Celenza et al., 1995
). Exogenous application of IAA induces lateral root formation (Blakely et al., 1988
), and mutants and transgenic plants with increased auxin levels have excess roots compared with the wild type (Klee, 1987
; Boerjan et al., 1995
). By contrast, application of the auxin transport inhibitor naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) decreases lateral root formation in tomato (Muday and Haworth, 1994
), and the auxin-resistant mutants axr1, axr4, and aux1 have significantly fewer lateral roots (Hobbie and Estelle, 1995
; Timpte et al., 1995
).
gpa1 and agb1 mutants have altered auxin-induced root formation among other relevant phenotypes. The root phenotype was used here to dissect the specific role of a heterotrimeric G protein in plant cell proliferation and to determine mechanistically which G protein subunit predominates in the auxin signaling pathway in root pericycle cells.
| RESULTS |
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(bovine)/Gi-
(rat) chimera, Gi-
1 (human), and Gt-
1 (bovine) (Lambright et al., 1996
1 (rat), Gi-
1 (human), and Gi-
2 (C68S) (bovine) (Wall et al., 1995
-,
-, and
-subunits colored blue, purple, and gold, respectively. The G
-subunit is composed of an N-terminal helix that interacts with G
, a mixed
-helical/
-strand Ras-like domain with GTPase function, and an all
-helical domain. The G
-subunit is a seven-bladed
-propeller structure with an N-terminal helix. The
-subunit contains two helices that interact with the N-terminal helix of the subunit and the
-propeller structure itself.
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. Models for each of the three subunits were built independently and then superimposed onto the heterotrimer structure of the G protein. The fold-recognition servers BIOINBGU (Fischer, 2000
protein with >99% confidence, and all but 3D-PSSM identified the Arabidopsis sequence AGB1 as a G
protein with >99% confidence. The 3D-PSSM server selected the seven- bladed
-propeller structure as the most compatible structure with the AGB1 sequence with 80 to 90% confidence. All of the servers determined the G
protein to be the most compatible structure with the Arabidopsis AGG1 sequence, although none of the predictions had >99% confidence. The final theoretical model for Arabidopsis G
was given a self-compatibility score of 146.9 by the Profiles-3D/Verify module of Insight II. The typical score expected for an experimentally determined protein structure of 362 residues was 165.0, whereas a score of <74.2 was considered indicative of an incorrect structure. For comparison, the self-compatibility score for the 338-residue mammalian G
structural template was 148.9, with a typical score of 154.0 and a minimum score of 69.3. Self-compatibility scores of 167.5 and 165.9 were calculated for the theoretical Arabidopsis G
structure and the experimentally determined mammalian G
, respectively. The Arabidopsis G
model contained 362 residues and the typical self-compatibility score was reported at 165.0, whereas the mammalian G
contained 339 residues and had a typical self-compatibility score of 154.4. The 786-residue theoretical Arabidopsis heterotrimer had self-compatibility and typical scores of 336.8 and 360.4, respectively. The self-compatibility score for the mammalian composite heterotrimer was 346.9, with a typical score of 331.3 for a 723-residue protein.
The theoretical models (Figure 1B) of the Arabidopsis G protein heterotrimer monomers based on the mammalian templates (Figure 1A) are "valid" structures overall (model deposited at PDB). The compatibility of the Arabidopsis sequences with the mammalian G protein structures was predicted by the fold-recognition servers BIOINBGU, 3D-PSSM, GenTHREADER, and FUGUE. The Profiles-3D/Verify self-compatibility scores indicated that the final theoretical structures for Arabidopsis G
and G
are nearly as compatible with the Arabidopsis sequences as the experimentally determined mammalian structures of G
and G
are with the mammalian sequences. Although the overall structures are valid, there are some minor differences between the Arabidopsis structures and the mammalian structures caused by insertions in the Arabidopsis proteins. The insertions generally are small, with an average size of 5.0 residues for 5 inserts in the Arabidopsis G
-subunit and an average size of 2.3 residues for 10 inserts in the Arabidopsis G
-subunit. The unpredicted conformations are colored green in Figure 1B.
The functionally important regions of the G protein heterotrimer structure are highly conserved in the Arabidopsis heterotrimer. Guanine nucleotide binding proteins contain five conserved sequence elements that are highlighted in Figure 1C. These elements are: (1) the NKxD motif (orange), which interacts with the nucleotide base and is responsible for guanine specificity; (2) the P-loop (green), a GxxxxGKS motif that interacts with the
- and
-phosphates; (3) the DxxG motif (yellow), which is responsible for distinguishing between GTP and GDP; and the two switches: (4) switch I (red) and (5) switch II (dark blue). Figure 1D, which shows the Arabidopsis heterotrimer in the same orientation as the mammalian heterotrimer in Figure 1C, shows residues highlighted according to the degree of conservation among G proteins. Invariant or highly conserved residues are dark blue, dark magenta, or dark gold in G
, G
, or G
, respectively. Conserved residues are correspondingly light blue, light magenta, or light gold. Residues that are not conserved are white in the Arabidopsis heterotrimer. This color scheme is reproduced in Figures 1E and 1F, in which the heterotrimer has been rotated to show the G
G
interactions (Figure 1E) and the G
G
interactions (Figure 1F). The side chains of residues involved in proteinprotein interactions are highlighted and also are colored according to conservation. Residues in G
that interact with G
(Figure 1E) are Ala-7, Ile-10, Glu-11, Ile-14, and Glu-17. Residues in G
that interact with G
(Figure 1F) are Val-11, Leu-14, Glu-17, Val-27, Ser-28, Leu-34, Leu-48, Leu-49, and Trp-60 (Arabidopsis numbering). Clearly, the sequence elements of the guanine nucleotide binding proteins that are responsible for their action as molecular switches are conserved in the Arabidopsis G
-subunit. The interface residues involved in formation of the heterotrimer also are highly conserved. A cycling view of the conserved interactions between G
- and G
-subunits and G
- and G
-subunits, as shown in Figures 1E and 1F, is provided as a video of 5-Å increment rotation in the supplemental data online.
A Transcript-Null Allele of agb1 and Genetic Complementation
Deconvoluted pools of DNA from T-DNAtransformed plants were screened for insertion in the Arabidopsis AGB1 gene. A total of 40,000 T-DNA insertion lines in the Columbia ecotype (J.M. Alonso and J.R. Ecker, unpublished data) were screened by PCR using gene- and T-DNAspecific primers (see Methods). A single putative insertion line was identified, and the sequence of the corresponding mutant DNA revealed that the T-DNA insertion was in the fourth exon of the AGB1 coding sequence (Figure 2A)
. Segregation of the kanamycin-resistant marker among an F2 population indicated a single T-DNA insertion event (data not shown). Reverse transcriptasemediated PCR of cDNA isolated from homozygous mutant plants failed to detect an AGB1 transcript, indicating that individuals homozygous at the mutant AGB1 locus are transcript null (Figure 2B). The mutant described here is designated agb1-2 because after completion of the T-DNA screen, another mutant allele of agb1 was reported from a genetic screen for additional loci in the ERECTA receptor kinase signaling pathway (Lease et al., 2001
). This putative protein-null mutant, agb1-1, contains a missense mutation in an intron splice site, resulting in the addition of 20 novel amino acids to a truncated AGB1.
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-subunit. It has been shown that a truncation mutant consisting of the first 41 amino acids of AGB1 cannot interact with the putative Arabidopsis G
-subunit (Mason and Botella, 2000
(Clapham and Neer, 1997To confirm that the agb1-2 phenotype is caused by the T-DNA insertion, genetic complementation was performed by transforming the agb1-2 plants with a dexamethasone-inducible AGB1 cDNA. The construct rescued Agb1- phenotypes in a dexamethasone-inducible manner (complementation shown in Figure 6) . Genetic complementation of agb1-2 is discussed after a full description of the Agb1- phenotypes described in Figures 3 to 6 .
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Opposite phenotypes of gpa1 and agb1 mutants are apparent in mature plants. Although agb1 plants display increased apical dominance relative to the wild type (Figure 3E), gpa1 plants have decreased apical dominance (Figure 3F). Interestingly, agb1 mutants have increased root mass compared with the wild type, and the opposite occurs with gpa1 mutants (cf. Figures 3G and 3H). The fruit phenotype of agb1-2 confirms the observation reported by Lease et al. (2001)
that agb1 siliques are shorter and wider than wild-type siliques (Figure 3J). gpa1 siliques do not share this Agb1- silique phenotype (Figure 3I). Constitutive overexpression of GPA1 (line D5) causes a shorter silique size similar to that in agb1 mutants, although to a much greater degree (Figure 3I). The cellular basis for these altered fruit phenotypes remains unknown.
Phenomics Profiling of gpa1 and agb1 Mutants throughout Development
The mutants, grown side by side with their corresponding wild-type ecotypes, were subjected to an exhaustive profiling of their phenotypes from seedling to senescence using the Paradigm Genetics, Inc., phenotypic analysis platform (Boyes et al., 2001
). A set of 40 quantitative measurements were made at defined growth stages during Arabidopsis development, and mean values of these traits in the mutants were tested for significant deviation from the corresponding values in the wild type by pair-wise, two-sample Student's t tests. Mean values were derived from the analysis of 14 replicate plants per trait on average (see supplemental data online). The t test results indicate the normalized difference between the mean response for the mutant and the mean response for the wild type and can be represented in units of standard error (Figure 4). A value of zero indicates concordance with the wild-type trait value, whereas positive and negative t values indicate the relative degree to which the mutant trait value is larger or smaller, respectively. In this data set, t values of >2 standard errors from the wild-type mean are expected to occur by chance <5% of the time (P < 0.05).
The diagonal outcome of the comparison between the two protein-null gpa1 alleles (Figure 4A) indicates that these two allelic mutants share phenotypes both qualitatively and quantitatively, whereas the two G
mutants clearly differ in their quantitative deviation from the wild-type trait value (Figure 4B). The lack of perfect correlation between the t test values of the two agb1 alleles indicates that they do not share a complete set of phenotypes. agb1-1 was proposed to be a protein-null mutant, but this was not tested directly (Lease et al., 2001
). Another possible reason for differences between the two agb1 alleles is the presence of second-site mutations. Because agb1-2 is a confirmed transcript-null mutant caused by a single T-DNA insertion (Figure 2B), only this mutant was used for a direct comparison with gpa1. The pair-wise comparison of t values between the wild-type means for the gpa1-2 and agb1-2 mutants reveals several interesting points (Figure 4C). First, many altered phenotypes are shared by both mutants, as indicated by those values that fall along the diagonal two t test values away from zero. For example, fruit and seed weights are greater for both mutants compared with the wild type, and several seed and leaf shape properties are shared by both G protein mutants. Second, several phenotypes are unique to one mutant. gpa1 pedicels are uniquely long, whereas root properties are altered in the agb1 mutants. agb1 flowers and fruits are uniquely different from those of the wild type. Third, some traits are opposite in the two G protein subunit mutants. For example, gpa1 sepals are longer, whereas agb1 sepals are shorter, than wild-type sepals. agb1 seedlings are larger, whereas gpa1 seedlings are smaller, than wild-type seedlings.
This comparison of the global phenotypic profiles of the two G protein mutants suggests that some development is mediated predominantly by G
and some is mediated predominantly by G
. Because acquisition of the G
active conformation requires functional G
subunits to associate the complex with the receptor, phenotypes shared by both mutants indicate developmental pathways in which G
acts independently of or in positive coordination with G
. On the other hand, because G
is capable of interacting with its effector simply by release from the heterotrimeric complex, phenotypes unique to the G
mutant or opposite to the G
mutant phenotype suggest that the predominant subunit in that developmental pathway is G
.
Auxin-Regulated Cell Expansion May Be Normal in gpa1 and agb1 Mutants
Many of the G protein mutant phenotypes shown in Figures 3 and 4 suggest that the defect resides in either auxin-induced cell division or elongation pathways. Two assays were performed to examine the inhibitory and stimulatory effects of auxin on cell expansion. Five-day-old gpa1 and agb1 mutants along with their respective wild-type ecotypes were transferred to plates supplemented with different concentrations of auxin. The lengths of the roots and hypocotyls were measured 4 days later. The inhibition of root elongation (see supplemental data online) and hypocotyl elongation (data not shown) in the G protein mutants was statistically the same as that in the wild type.
The second assay for auxin-induced cell expansion also indicated wild-type sensitivity to auxin for the G protein mutants. This assay, developed by Gray et al. (1998)
, took advantage of the temperature dependence of the endogenous auxin pool size. At an increased temperature, free auxin is increased in hypocotyls and manifests as increased growth. The growth of the hypocotyl was shown to be attributable entirely to increased cell elongation. Hypocotyl lengths in G protein mutants at low and increased temperatures were statistically the same as those in the wild type based on pair-wise Student's t tests (see supplemental data online).
agb1 Mutants Have Excessive Lateral Root Primordia That Develop More Rapidly
We focused on the root phenotype because it offers a model system for the coordination of auxin-induced cell division with auxin-induced cell expansion. Protrusion of the lateral roots occurs primarily by cell elongation, whereas the number of lateral roots is established by cell division (Malamy and Benfey, 1997
). Therefore, the higher number of lateral roots observed for the agb1 mutants could result from the increased rate of cell elongation from a wild-type number of primordia or from excessive primordia formation. Lateral root primordia of wild-type and mutant roots were scored along the root, and the number, position, and developmental stage of primordia are displayed in spiderweb graphs (Figure 5). The density of threads visually depicts the relative primordia density. Note that agb1 roots have an approximately twofold greater primordia density than wild-type roots, whereas gpa1 roots have twofold less primordia density. Twin primordia were observed frequently in agb1 roots but never in wild-type and gpa1 mutant roots. Although the greater density of lateral roots in agb1 mutants suggested excessive cell division, the developmental stage of lateral roots in agb1 at any comparable position is advanced compared with that in the wild type, indicating that agb1 root cells may elongate slightly faster as well. The difficulty in visually scoring primordia in stages I and II was addressed by the experimental modification described below.
Auxin-Induced Cell Division Is Negatively Regulated by AGB1
The opposite root phenotypes of agb1 and gpa1 suggest that G
, rather than G
, is the predominant signaling factor. The loss of G
results in an increase in free G
and therefore more signal output, whereas the loss of G
decreases it. G
genetically acts downstream of G
in the classic model, and because it does not undergo a conformational change, its activity is constitutive when released from the heterotrimeric complex via either G
activation or the loss of G
in the gpa1 mutant. Alternatively, if G
is the predominant signaling factor, similar phenotypes for both G
and G
loss-of-function mutants are expected, because G
is required for the recruitment of G
to the receptor for activation.
One possible explanation for the root phenotypes is that loss-of-function mutations result in altered pool sizes of free auxin in roots. Application of the auxin transport inhibitor NPA reduces the number of lateral roots (Casimiro et al., 2001
; Himanen et al., 2002
). The mechanism may be disruption of the cycling of auxin transporters to the plasma membrane (Friml et al., 2002a
, 2002b
). Lateral root formation occurs in NPA-pretreated roots in an auxin dose-dependent manner, serving as a cell division assay for auxin sensitivity. Figure 6A illustrates this auxin dependence of root formation, because plants expressing a bacterial auxin lyase gene have fewer primary roots than control plants on auxin. Auxin-induced lateral root formation was quantitated in G protein mutants and transgenic lines. agb1 primary roots form more lateral roots, whereas gpa1 primary roots form fewer lateral roots, compared with their respective wild-type ecotypes (Figure 6B). Rescue of the AGB1 attenuation of auxin-induced roots to wild-type levels was demonstrated by genetically complementing the agb1-2 mutant with a dexamethasone-inducible promoter to drive the expression of the AGB1 cDNA (Figure 6B). The observation that both agb1 and gpa1 mutants respond to auxin, albeit with altered sensitivities, indicates that a G protein cannot directly couple the auxin signal to an effector, leading to cell division. In addition, these results suggest that the free G
-subunit attenuates the auxin pathway (Figure 7A
, hypothesis 1). The alternative view (Figure 7A, hypothesis 2), that G
potentiates the auxin pathway, is less tenable because in the classic paradigm, G
is required for G
activation; therefore, in this scenario, the phenotype of G
and G
mutants would be the same for root cell division.
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-subunit versus the released G
-subunits, we examined the root phenotypes of plants that overexpress different forms of the G
-subunits (GOX lines C3 and H2) and G
-subunits (BOX lines 6-4 and 8-3) and compared the observed phenotypes with the expectations based on the alternative hypotheses (Figure 7A). A dexamethasone-inducible promoter drove the expression of wild-type GPA1 and AGB1, whereas constitutive expression of a mutant G
(GPA1*) occurred using the viral 35S promoter (lines D and E). Controlled overexpression of a wild-type G
should sequester and therefore deplete G
because, in the absence of activation, the ground state of G
is its GDP conformation. By contrast, GPA1*, as a result of a Q222L mutation disabling its GTPase activity, remains in its activated GTP conformation and should be unable to deplete the G
pool. Although GPA1* is capable of constitutively activating its cognate effectors, it is unable to sequester G
. This approach has been successful in distinguishing the predominant role of G protein subunits in Drosophila asymmetric cell division (Schaefer et al., 2001Auxin treatment of hypocotyls produces roots adventitiously. To test the effect of gain and loss of G protein function in a tissue that lacks preexisting root primordia, we treated hypocotyl explants from mutant and wild-type seedlings with auxin (Figure 6D). As shown for lateral root formation, agb1 hypocotyls were hypersensitive to auxin, whereas gpa1 roots were less sensitive (Figure 6E). Hypocotyls overexpressing the wild-type form of GPA1, but not GPA1*, were hypersensitive to auxin, and increased AGB1 expression resulted in fewer roots than from control hypocotyls (Figure 6F). Altered auxin sensitivity depended on G protein subunit expression, because lateral roots did not form in the absence of dexamethasone.
These results are consistent with a model in which the G
subunit negatively regulates auxin-induced cell division (Figures 7A and 7B), although a formal model must consider the possible role of autoregulation and its early timing, because root cell division does not become apparent for hours after auxin application. Therefore, changes in G protein levels were extrapolated from quantitative PCR data of GPA1 and AGB1 steady state message levels in the wild type and the mutants. Figure 8
shows that auxin causes an increase in GPA1 message and a decrease in AGB1 message within 15 min of application. The change is stable over at least 60 min. Neither the increase nor the decrease in steady state levels of the respective messages depended on a functional G protein complex, because the same changes in steady state message levels were observed in the corresponding G protein mutants.
The model shown in Figure 7C posits that the free G
-subunit attenuates auxin-induced cell division. Accordingly, the G
-subunit blocks G
action by sequestering G
into the heterotrimeric complex. Negative autoregulation of the auxin path occurs in a G proteinindependent manner via an increase in G
and a decrease in G
mRNA steady state levels (Figure 8).
A Set of Genes Negatively Regulated by AGB1
To test the model shown in Figure 7C, we examined the gene expression profiles of wild-type and agb1 seedlings treated with 10 µM auxin for 20 min. The rationale for this experiment is that auxin rapidly alters the expression of a set of genes that function in concert in cell division, and we postulate that AGB1 acts upstream of this control of steady state levels of corresponding mRNAs. Strict criteria were established for the acceptance of genes into an auxin-induced gene set. For a gene to be scored as auxin regulated, its expression level must be at least 500 pixel units in controls for downregulated genes or in the auxin-treated samples for upregulated genes, and the change in expression between controls and treated seedlings must be at least twofold. Only 150 genes among 8300 analyzed met these criteria for auxin upregulation, and 114 genes met the criteria for auxin downregulation (see supplemental data online). These included most of the known auxin-regulated genes, such as Aux/IAA, GH3, SAURs, and GST.
Additional criteria were established to determine if the expression of a set of genes was uncoupled in agb1-2 seedlings. The level of expression in agb1-2 in the absence of auxin must be within 25% of the expression level of the auxin-treated wild-type seedlings. Furthermore, the ratio of expression of a gene in auxin-treated agb1-2 to control agb1-2 seedlings must approximate 1. Forty-seven and 17 genes among the auxin-upregulated and -downregulated sets, respectively, met these criteria, indicating that approximately one-quarter of the auxin-regulated genes require AGB1 for correct basal expression. These 47 and 17 genes selected as uncoupled in agb1 seedlings from auxin-upregulated and -downregulated sets, respectively, were clustered, and their expression was compared with that in wild-type seedlings (Figure 9)
. Although 30% of the genes had "unknown protein" annotations and 9% were reported previously to be regulated by auxin (see supplemental data online), most other genes identified here were informative and not shown previously to be regulated by auxin. Twenty percent of the genes encoded transcription factors and metabolic enzymes. The remaining genes involved G protein signaling, stress, and kinase functions (see supplemental data online). Several other genes in these sets are known to be involved in cell division, specifically lateral root development, but were not clustered previously as auxin regulated or known to require G
for basal repression. In addition, some of the known auxin-regulated genes are implicated here in cell division.
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| DISCUSSION |
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It is not known whether the initial perception of auxin occurs via two (or more) receptors that control these separable responses or whether multivalent occupancy of a single receptor activates the two pathways individually. In Arabidopsis, Auxin Binding Protein1 (ABP1) is essential for cell elongation but not for cell division (Chen et al., 2001
); thus, the former possibility is favored at present. We previously showed that cell division, likely initiated by auxin, is altered in gpa1 mutants; therefore, we proposed that a heterotrimeric G protein is involved in plant cell proliferation (Ullah et al., 2001
). We extend that work here to show that although auxin-induced cell division does not require a G protein for direct coupling, the sensitivity toward auxin is regulated by a pathway that involves a heterotrimeric G protein. Moreover, we conclude that the G
-subunit released from the heterotrimeric complex operates to attenuate auxin signaling upstream of auxin's control of mRNA steady state levels (Figure 8C). This conclusion is tempered by the assumption that the classic paradigm for heterotrimeric G protein coupling operates similarly in Arabidopsis. However, analysis of the double mutant between agb1-2 and new null alleles of gpa1 in the Columbia ecotype (gpa1-3 and gpa1-4) support this conclusion (data not shown). Double mutants have the lateral root phenotype of the single agb1-2 mutant. The genotype and partial characterization of the new gpa1 alleles and the double mutant are described by Jones et al. (2003)
.
It also is possible that G
serves as a positive regulator of cell elongation in the roots, because agb1 roots are shorter than wild-type roots under certain conditions, and seedlings that inducibly express AGB1 conditionally have longer roots than wild-type seedlings (data not shown). These ideas may seem at variance with our data (see supplemental data online) that the sensitivity to auxin inhibition of root growth is wild type in the G protein mutants; however, auxin-induced growth and auxin-inhibited growth may be separate pathways. Alternatively, AGB1 could promote cell elongation independently of auxin.
In yeast, the mechanism of G
action classically defined by the pheromone response in mating is partially known. The released G
(Ste4/18p) interacts with the protein kinase (Ste20p) to cause a conformational change that enables Ste20p to phosphorylate the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase, Ste11p (van Drogen et al., 2001
). One possibility is that G
recruits the mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade scaffold (Ste5p) to the plasma membrane, bringing the tethered Ste11p into proximity to Ste20p (Pryciak and Huntress, 1998
). Interestingly, auxin action via the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway in Arabidopsis results in negative transcriptional regulation (Kovtun et al., 1998
; Mockaitis and Howell, 2000
), consistent with our findings here using the G
loss-of-function mutant. In addition, the plant mitogen-activated protein kinases are expressed in mitotic cells, suggesting their involvement in division (Bogre et al., 2000
). Thus, at present, auxin signaling appears to share some similarity with the framework of the pheromone pathway in yeast.
In mammals, G
coupling to effectors also occurs, and a well-understood pathway is G
control of potassium inward conductance channels (Clapham and Neer, 1997
; Corey and Clapham, 2001
). In Arabidopsis, the G protein couples abscisic acid's negative control of potassium flux (Wang et al., 2001
), but it is not known if this involves G
interaction with the channel directly, if G
is the predominant interacting subunit, or if an alternative effector is activated. Potassium flux is critical for auxin-induced cell elongation (Thiel et al., 1993
; Blatt and Thiel, 1994
; Philippar et al., 1999
), and a direct test of whether auxin-regulated potassium flux occurs in the G protein mutants is warranted.
Gene expression profiling revealed several informative examples of genes shown to be derepressed in agb1-2. One of these is LRP1. LRP1 encodes a novel protein that is expressed in the dividing cells at or before stage II (Smith and Fedoroff, 1995
), and its expression is induced rapidly by auxin in the wild type (Figure 9). Additional genes now have been implicated in the auxin signaling pathway and shown to be repressed by a G proteindependent pathway. The expression of COP1 increases nearly fourfold with auxin application in wild-type seedlings, but COP1 is expressed constitutively in the agb1 mutant (Figure 9). cop1 mutants share some of the de-etiolated phenotypes seen in agb1, such as short hypocotyls and open hooks (Schwechheimer and Deng, 2000
), and it is interesting that COP1 is predicted to have a
-propeller structure like that shown here for AGB1.
AGB1 most likely couples another signal to modulate auxin action upstream of its transcriptional control, but the identity of that signal is not yet known. Considering the recent evidence suggesting that brassinosteroid signaling is coupled by a heterotrimeric G protein in Arabidopsis (Ullah et al., 2002
) and the well-known observation that brassinosteroid and auxin signaling interact (Clouse, 1998
; Ephritikhine et al., 1999
; Yin et al., 2002
), we propose that brassinosteroids fulfill this role.
| METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
, G
, and G
proteins, respectively. Alignments between the Arabidopsis sequences and several different structural templates of G proteins were provided by the servers. These alignments varied in detail among the different servers, although all servers recognized these proteins as G proteins. The CLUSTAL X program (Thompson et al., 1997
sequences (including GPA1 from Arabidopsis) obtained from the SWISS-PROT protein sequence database (Bairoch and Apweiler, 2000
A consensus alignment between the Arabidopsis sequence and the mammalian G
in 1GOT was determined by comparing the alignments from the different fold-recognition servers with the multiple sequence alignment from CLUSTAL X. A model of GPA1 was built using the Modeler module of the Insight II molecular modeling system from Accelrys, Inc. (www.accelrys.com). The homology model was evaluated for sequence-structure compatibility using the Verify function of the Profiles-3D module of Insight II. Different alignments between GPA1 and the G
protein from 1GOT were generated in regions that had low Profiles-3D/Verify scores. A new homology model was generated from each new alignment and again evaluated for structure-sequence compatibility. This was an iterative process that continued until the compatibility between sequence and structure could not be improved. A similar methodology was followed for the modeling of AGB1 and AGG1. In the case of AGB1, 29 G
sequences were obtained from SWISS-PROT and aligned with the G
sequence from 1GOT. Twenty-seven G
sequences were obtained from SWISS-PROT and aligned with the G
sequence from 1GOT. A similar iterative process was used to generate homology models for AGB1 and AGG1.
CLUSTAL X was used to generate quality scores ranging from 0 to 100 to represent the conservation of each position in the multiple sequence alignment. A score of 100 represents a position in the alignment that is invariant, and a score of 0 represents a position that is highly variant among all of the individual sequences. The calculation of the quality score is dependent on a residue comparison matrix giving a score for the alignment of two residues. The quality score for a position is defined as the mean of the sequence distances between each sequence and the consensus position according to the residue comparison matrix. Scores were output to a text file for every position in the multiple sequence alignment where there was a residue (not a gap) in the Arabidopsis sequence. CLUSTAL X also labels positions in the alignment window using various symbols: an asterisk (*) for positions that are invariant, a colon (:) for highly conserved positions, and a dot (.) for conserved positions. This labeling generally corresponds to a given range of quality scores, but not always. For example, a particular position in the G
alignment had 24 Thr residues and 6 Ser residues. The score for this position was 78 (a score lower than those for some positions that were not labeled as highly conserved), but the residue was reasonably labeled as highly conserved (:) in the sequence window because the residue in that position was always a Ser or a Thr. We designated positions in the alignment as (1) highly conserved, (2) conserved, or (3) not conserved based on a combination of two criteria. Positions in the alignment were highly conserved if the quality score was
80, conserved if the quality score was
40 but <80, and not conserved if the score was <40. If the labeling (: and .) in the alignment window indicated that a position was considered more conserved than was determined by the quality score, the position was upgraded. The alignments used to calculate the quality scores were the multiple sequence alignments generated for the homology modeling. All figures were created with SPOCK (Christopher, 1998
).
Isolation of the agb1-2 Mutant and Genetic Complementation
DNA from 40,000 T-DNA insertion lines in the Columbia ecotype were screened by PCR using a primer 200 bp downstream of the AGB1 stop codon in the 3' untranslated region (5'-AGTAGCGTG-TTGAAGCAGTTTAGTTCCC-3') and a T-DNA left border primer (5'-GGCAATCAGCTGTTGCCCGTCTCACTGGTG-3'). A single insertion in the fourth exon of AGB1 was isolated, and the insertion was confirmed by sequencing. Genetic complementation was accomplished by transforming agb1-2 plants with a dexamethasone-inducible AGB1 cDNA and assaying for lateral root primordia as described below except that the roots developed in the presence of 0.1 µM dexamethasone.
Mutant Characterization and Cell Division and Elongation Assays
Mature plants were grown under a short-day (8-h-light/16-h-dark) regimen at 23°C for 3 weeks and then transferred to a long-day (16-h-light/ 8-h-dark) regimen for an additional 2 weeks. Mature roots were scored from plants grown under similar conditions. Special care was taken to ensure that no lateral root was lost during soil removal. Siliques were collected from fully mature plants (
8 weeks old).
Plants were grown for 2 days in darkness for hypocotyl and epidermal cell length measurements. Hypocotyls of dark-grown seedlings were incubated in chloral hydrate (2.5 g/mL) for 24 h to clear the tissue and then examined using Nomarski optics. Digital images of cells were analyzed for area and length using NIH Image 1.61 software. Five hypocotyls were measured, and data are presented as means ± SE.
For histological analyses, 2-day-old dark-grown seedlings were fixed in Karnovsky solution (4% paraformaldehyde, 2.5% glutaraldehyde, and 0.1 M cacodylate buffer) for 24 h at 4°C, dehydrated in an ethanol series, and embedded in paraffin. Seedlings were sectioned at 10-µm thickness and stained with Safranin O and Fast Green. Developmental stages of the chloral hydratecleared lateral root primordia depicted in Figure 5 were determined from 5-day-old roots grown under continuous light at 23°C. Quantitation of lateral roots and primordia as depicted in Figure 6A was performed using roots grown on 5 µM naphthylphthalamic acid for 9 days and transferred to 0.1 µM auxin containing 1x Murashige and Skoog (1962)
salts supplemented with 1% Suc and grown vertically under continuous light. The plates were supplemented with or without 100 nM dexamethasone for BOX, GOX, and vector lines. After clearing, primordia were counted using Nomarski optics. The standard error of the mean is based on 10 seedlings. Adventitious roots, as depicted in Figures 6D to 6F, were measured according to the protocols of Kubo and Kakimoto (2000)
. Seedlings were grown for 7 days in dim light (2 µmol·m-2·s-1). Hypocotyls were excised aseptically and transferred to plates containing 100 ng/mL 1-naphthyl-acetic acid. Excised hypocotyls were grown for an additional 10 days under continuous light (65 µmol·m-2·s-1) and then scored with a dissecting microscope for the number of adventitious roots per length of hypocotyl. The standard error of the mean is based on 10 excised hypocotyls.
Construction of GOX, BOX, and GPA1* Lines
The full-length Arabidopsis GPA1 and AGB1 cDNA coding regions were cloned into binary vector pTA7002 (Aoyama and Chua, 1997
) for Agrobacterium tumefaciensmediated transformation of Columbia and agb1-2. GPA1* was made by replacing A with T at position 1264 of GPA1 by site-directed mutagenesis (Kroll et al., 1992
) to create a Q-to-L change. The mutated cDNA was cloned into pGPTV-HYG vector. The vector was introduced into Agrobacterium strain GV3101 for plant transformation.
High-Throughput Phenotype Profiling
Details of the Paradigm Genetics Phenotypic Analysis Platform have been described previously (Boyes et al., 2001
). The analysis of germination and seedling development was conducted on plants grown on Petri plates containing 0.5x Murashige and Skoog (1962)
salts that were oriented vertically within growth chambers. In this configuration, the roots grow over the surface of the agar and are readily visible. Soil-grown plants were used for the characterization of the later stages of development. In all cases, plants were grown under a 16-h daylength, with day and night temperatures of 22 and 20°C, respectively. Data for seed and rosette area, perimeter, major axis, minor axis, standard deviation of the radius, and eccentricity were derived from digital image analysis using IP Lab software (Scanalytics, Fairfax, VA). All other data were collected by visual inspection or using standard measuring devices, including analytical balances, calipers, and rulers.
Gene Expression Profiling
Three samples of seedlings were grown for 2 days in darkness in liquid culture (1x Murashige and Skoog [1962]
medium and 1% Suc) and treated with 10 µM indole-3-acetic acid for 20 min. Total RNA was isolated from the pooled samples three times using the Plant RNAeasy Kit (Qiagen, Santa Clarita, CA) according to the manufacturer's protocol, and the RNA was pooled. Purified RNA (7 µg) was reverse transcribed by Superscript II reverse transcriptase (Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY) using T7-(dT)24 primer containing a T7 RNA polymerase promoter. After synthesis of the second strand, this product was used in in vitro transcription to generate biotinylated complementary RNA. Fragmented complementary RNA was hybridized to an Affymetrix Arabidopsis Genome Array Genechip (Santa Clara, CA) according to the manufacturer's protocol. This high-density oligonucleotide-based array contains
8300 Arabidopsis gene probe sets and >100 EST clusters selected from the NCBI GenBank database. Each microarray was used to assay a single sample. After hybridization, the microarray was washed and stained on an Affymetrix fluidics station and scanned with the Hewlett-Packard GeneArray Scanner (Boise, ID). Affymetrix GeneChip Microarray suite 4.0 software was used for basic analysis. The whole procedure was performed at the Genomics Core and Microarray Facility at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Data analysis was performed with Genespring software version 6.04 (Silicon Genetics, San Carlos, CA).
Expression was normalized to the median value for the entire raw data set of the corresponding chip. To calculate fold changes and not lose genes that are not expressed in one sample but are switched on in the other, or vice versa, we set the lowest raw data value at an arbitrary 10. To eliminate "fold-change" calls within the range of background noise, we required that genes classified as "upregulated" have raw data values of at least 500 and genes classified as "downregulated" have raw data values of at least 500 in the control (Hoffmann et al., 2001
). Within these strict parameters, the genes selected were either upregulated or downregulated at least twofold in treatments compared with the controls. The entire raw score data set is provided in the supplemental data online.
RNA Quantitation by Real-Time PCR
Total RNA from different transgenic lines was isolated from seedlings grown in light for 10 days with or without 100 nM dexamethasone. Five hundred nanograms of total RNA was processed directly into cDNA by reverse transcription with Superscript II (Life Technologies) according to the manufacturer's protocol in a total volume of 20 µL. One microliter of cDNA was used as a template for real-time PCR analysis. Oligonucleotides were synthesized by Sigma-Genosys (Woodlands, TX) using published sequence data from the NCBI database. The primer sequences were as follows: GPA1RT.FW, 5'- AGAAGTTTGAGGAGTTATATTACCAG-3'; GPA1RT.RV, 5'-AAGGCCAGCCTCCAGTAA-3'; AGB1RT.FW, 5'-GACGTACTCGGGTGA-GCTT-3'; and AGB1RT.RV, 5'-GAGCATTCCACACGATTAAT-3'. The primers were selected from the 3' site of the gene to ensure the availability of transcripts from oligo(dT)-based reverse transcription. The primers were expected to produce
150-bp products. We used primers for a genomic marker, MYN21c, on the fifth exon of the Suc cleavage proteinlike gene as a control to normalize the expression data for each gene. The sequences for the control primers are as follows: MYN21cF, 5'-CTAGCTTTGGAGTAAAAAGATTTGAGTGTGCAACC-3'; and MYN21cR, 5'-TCTTTTCGCTGTTTAATTGTAACC-TTTGTTCTCGA-3'. They are expected to produce a product of 333 bp from the control gene. PCR amplification and fluorescence detection were accomplished using the Smart Cycler system from Cepheid, Inc. (Sunnyvale, CA). SYBR green was used as the intercalating dye. The thermal cycling conditions were as follows: 5 min in 96°C, followed by 40 cycles of 95°C for 15 s, 60°C for 15 s, and 72°C for 15 s. The "primary cycle threshold" values were used to calculate differences in fold changes between treatment and control samples.
As an independent confirmation of the microarray data, expression levels of the Lateral Root Primordia (LRP) gene were tested using real-time PCR. Two micrograms of total RNA from the same total RNA pool used for microarray analysis was used for cDNA synthesis. The primer sequences were as follows: LRP1FW, 5'-CGTGTCAAG-ACTGTGGAAATCAG-3'; and LRP1RV, 5'-AGGTCGAAAGAGACG-AGCCA-3'.
Upon request, all novel materials described in this article will be made available in a timely manner for noncommercial research purposes.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.006148.
1 These two authors contributed equally to this report. ![]()
2 Current address: Department of Genetics, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695-7614. ![]()
Received July 8, 2002; accepted October 30, 2002.
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