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First published online July 3, 2003; 10.1105/tpc.012856 American Society of Plant Biologists The Interaction of Two Homeobox Genes, BREVIPEDICELLUS and PENNYWISE, Regulates Internode Patterning in the Arabidopsis Inflorescence
a Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail maizesh{at}nature.berkeley.edu; fax 510-559-5678
Plant architecture results from the activity of the shoot apical meristem, which initiates leaves, internodes, and axillary meristems. KNOTTED1-like homeobox (KNOX) genes are expressed in specific patterns in the shoot apical meristem and play important roles in plant architecture. KNOX proteins interact with BEL1-like (BELL) homeodomain proteins and together bind a target sequence with high affinity. We have obtained a mutation in one of the Arabidopsis BELL genes, PENNYWISE (PNY), that appears phenotypically similar to the KNOX mutant brevipedicellus (bp). Both bp and pny have randomly shorter internodes and display a slight increase in the number of axillary branches. The double mutant shows a synergistic phenotype of extremely short internodes interspersed with long internodes and increased branching. PNY is expressed in inflorescence and floral meristems and overlaps with BP in a discrete domain of the inflorescence meristem where we propose the internode is patterned. The physical association of the PNY and BP proteins suggests that they participate in a complex that regulates early patterning events in the inflorescence meristem.
The formation of the plant body is dependent on the activity of self-organizing groups of cells called meristems located at the shoot and root apices. The development of the shoot is controlled by the shoot apical meristem (SAM), which initiates leaf primordia repetitively from its flanks. Additional shoot meristems form in the axils of the leaf primordia. The axillary meristem may remain dormant, grow out with a similar body plan as the main stem, or develop into floral meristems, which are determinate meristems. The SAM also produces the internode, the stem portion between the leaves (Vaughn, 1955
Arabidopsis has distinct vegetative and reproductive phases (Hempel and Feldman, 1994
The class-1 KNOTTED1-like homeobox (KNOX) genes are essential for proper meristem function (Reiser et al., 2000
KNOX proteins interact with members of the BEL1-like (BELL) family of homeodomain proteins in both monocots and dicots (Bellaoui et al., 2001 To gain more insight into KNOX function, we characterized a mutation in a BELL gene that we have named PENNYWISE (PNY). pny has similar defects in inflorescence architecture as bp. The double mutant of pny and bp shows a synergistic phenotype that severely affects internode patterning. The expression of PNY and BP overlaps in the meristem at the boundaries of developing floral primordia. In addition, PNY and BP interact physically, suggesting that they form a heterodimeric transcriptional unit required for inflorescence patterning.
Characterization of the pny Mutant Alleles In Arabidopsis, the BELL gene family consists of 13 members, only one of which has been characterized by a mutant phenotype (Robinson-Beers et al., 1992
The T-DNA insertion in pny-57747 is located in exon 1, whereas the T-DNA insertion in pny-40126 is located in the first intron (Figure 1C). Inflorescence mRNA was isolated from the wild type (Columbia), pny-40126, and pny-57747. Reverse transcription (RT) using PNY-specific primers showed that this gene was amplified in the wild type but not in either mutant. Signal was not detected in the mutant samples even when the RT-PCR products were transferred to nylon and probed with the radiolabeled PNY probe (Figure 1D). Primers to ACTIN8 (ACT8) were used as an internal control to demonstrate that relatively equal amounts of ACT8 could be amplified in the three mRNA samples (Figure 1D). These results suggest that both T-DNA insertions into PNY created mRNA null mutants.
Phenotypic Analysis of pny
The paraclades had a highly penetrant defect that affected the first one or two internodes. These internodes were dramatically reduced in length, giving the appearance of leaves initiating in the axils of the cauline leaves (Figure 2G). The internodes on the main stem between the paraclades also often were reduced in size. In addition, the pedicels of flowers in pny were slightly shorter than those found in the wild type (Figures 2D and 2E). Finally, flowers occasionally were aberrant, producing small, curved, club-shaped siliques at a low penetrance (data not shown). Vegetative development appeared normal in pny plants (data not shown).
Synergistic Interactions between pny and bp
A closer examination of the pny bp double mutant showed an enhanced clustering of siliques that was not found in either single mutant or the wild type (Figures 4E to 4H). This clustering occurred on the central axis as well as on the paraclades (Figure 4C). Often, a silique formed at the same position as a paraclade and more than one paraclade formed at the same node. This lack of internode elongation produced what appeared to be aerial rosettes on the main inflorescence (Figure 4D). The clusters of siliques in pny bp indicated that the internodes in these regions were absent or unelongated. In addition, internodes longer than those in the wild type were produced, demonstrating that internode patterning was not uniform (Figures 4E and 4H). We measured internode lengths between the paraclades and between the first 11 siliques on the main axis. Internode lengths between the first three paraclades produced on the main axis tended to be very long in the wild type, >20 mm, whereas the same internodes in pny and bp were shorter, ranging from 1 to 25 mm and <1 to 10 mm, respectively (Figure 3C). In pny bp, more than half (63%) of the internodes between the first three paraclades were <1 mm (Figure 3C). The majority of internodes between siliques in the wild type ranged from 6 to 15 mm, whereas in bp and pny, the majority of internodes ranged in length from 1 to 15 mm and <1 to 10 mm, respectively (Figure 3D). In the double mutant, 61% of all internodes were <1 mm. Furthermore, only 12% of the internodes in pny bp were between 6 and 15 mm, the average internode length in the wild type (Figure 3D).
Cellular Organization of the Stem
The pny bp double mutants had extremely disrupted vascular patterning in the stem, displaying enhancement of characteristics observed in the single mutants (Figures 5D and 5H). The bundles in pny bp were similar to the undeveloped vascular bundles observed in bp. These bp-like bundles contained small, densely stained cells, and the xylem elements were not adjacent to each other, but scattered (Figures 5D and 5H). The pny characteristics also were enhanced in the double mutant. For example, the bundles were adjacent to each other, and a continuous band of phloem cells formed inside the large cortex cells. In addition, there also was an enhancement of disorganized cambial activity, with cell walls in random orientations (Figure 5H).
PNY Expression Overlaps with BP in the Inflorescence Meristem
To localize PNY mRNA more precisely in the inflorescence, in situ hybridization was performed. PNY transcript localized to inflorescence and floral meristems. In the inflorescence meristem, PNY was observed in distinct zones at the apex. In a longitudinal section, the expression appeared as a stripe that extended from the epidermis to the fifth or sixth cell layer of the meristem (Figures 7A and 7B). Transverse consecutive sections confirmed that PNY was not expressed throughout the inflorescence meristem (Figures 7C and 7D). The expression pattern suggests that PNY may be excluded from the floral primordial cells of the inflorescence meristem, similar to the expression of STM (Long and Barton, 2000
In situ hybridization using the BP probe showed similar stripes of expression on the flanks of the inflorescence meristem (Figures 7E and 7F). BP expression also was detected at the bases of floral meristems and in the cortex cells. These results identify possible overlapping regions of PNY and BP expression. However, it should be noted that little or no PNY transcript was detected in the internodes adjacent to the vasculature, as seen with BP (cf. Figures 7E and 7G). We detected no difference in the expression of BP in the pny mutant compared with the wild type or in the expression of PNY in the bp mutant (data not shown), suggesting that BP and PNY do not regulate each other's transcription. PNY also was expressed in a discrete domain in the first four to five cell layers of the floral meristem. PNY was not expressed in initiating sepals (Figures 7G and 7H). The zone of expression narrows in slightly older floral meristems, suggesting that it is downregulated as organ primordia initiate. No expression was seen in the pedicel, unlike the strong expression seen with BP (cf. Figures 7E and 7G). The antisense digoxigenin PNY mRNA probe did not hybridize to tissues in pny inflorescences (data not shown). Finally, no hybridization was detected with the sense digoxigenin PNY mRNA probe in wild-type tissue (data not shown).
PNY Interacts with BP and STM
We identified a mutation in the Arabidopsis gene PNY with similar defects in internode patterning as BP. We propose that BP and PNY cooperatively regulate early events in internode patterning, based on the synergistic double mutant phenotype, the overlap in expression, and the interaction of the proteins in vitro.
Internode Patterning
Two KNOX orthologs, OSH15 (D6) and BP, are expressed in similar domains in the meristem and internode regions of rice and Arabidopsis, respectively (Sato et al., 1999 We determined the phenotype of pny, a BELL gene, through reverse genetics. Both pny and bp have increased numbers of paraclades and very short internodes mixed with long internodes. The phenotype of the double mutant is synergistic. Clusters of siliques are observed on the stems in pny bp with little or no internode elongation between the siliques. These clusters are bracketed by long internodes, occasionally longer than normal. The highly reduced internodes also are found between the paraclades and between cauline leaves on the paraclades. The resulting appearance of the double mutant is bushy. Alterations to the vasculature also are enhanced in the double mutant. bp mutants have an occasional vascular bundle that lacks lignin and contains small xylem elements. pny mutants differ from the wild type in having fewer interfascicular cells and a concomitant increase in vascular bundles. The double mutant accentuates these individual defects. All of the bundles in the pny bp stems resemble the undeveloped bundles of bp, lacking lignin and containing small xylem elements. The vascular bundles form a continuous ring, leaving little or no space for interfascicular cells. The cellular disorganization occurs whether the internodes are very short or of normal length, suggesting that the defect in pny bp affects the entire stem. Given the enhancement of the internode defect in the double mutant and the interaction of BP and PNY in vitro, we expect the two gene products to localize to the same tissues where they are required for proper internode development. PNY is expressed in inflorescence and floral meristems and is not detected in internodes using either in situ hybridization or RT-PCR. The mRNA expression patterns of BP and PNY overlap in a narrow region between the initiating floral primordia and the inflorescence meristem. We suggest that their coincident expression in the meristem establishes the proper patterning of the internode.
We propose that the PNY-BP protein complex may function in the inflorescence meristem to form a boundary between lateral organs and the inflorescence meristem. The PNY-BP boundary then would regulate patterning mechanisms to coordinate proper internode development. In the absence of just BP or PNY, the remaining protein interacts with another BELL or KNOX protein, respectively. These interactions partially compensate for the loss of BP or PNY; therefore, the single mutants are not as severe as the double mutant. For example, in a bp mutant, PNY may interact with STM, and in a pny mutant, BP may interact with another BELL protein. In the absence of both PNY and BP, the alternate partners do not interact; thus, the boundary is not specified properly. The result is mostly an absence of internode but the occasional long internode. The increase in vascular bundles also may result from the defect in patterning. Procambium is first detected below the initiating leaf primordium (Ye, 2002
Histological analyses suggest that the internode of Arabidopsis arises from two zones of the meristem (Vaughn, 1955
Studies in other systems strengthen the relationship of internode, leaf, and meristem. For example, clonal analyses in maize and sunflower suggest that the meristem uses the same population of cells to produce a leaf and its subtending internode (Johri and Coe, 1983
Independent Functions of KNOX/BELL Heterodimers
Resemblance to Hormone Imbalance
Many of the phenotypic characteristics of pny bp are similar to defects in auxin and GA signaling. For example, the loss of apical dominance is typical of reduced auxin or increased cytokinin (Cline, 1994
Plant Growth and Genetic Analysis Arabidopsis thaliana (ecotype Columbia) plants were grown in a 16-h-light/8-h-dark cycle at 22°C. The two T-DNA insertion lines in PNY were obtained from the ABRC (Ohio State University, Columbus; stock numbers SALK_040126 and SALK_057747). The map positions of these T-DNA insertions were at 395,850 and 396,983 bp for SALK_057747 and SALK_040126, respectively. Both alleles were backcrossed two times into the Columbia ecotype. The SALK_040126 insertion line was used in our phenotypic and molecular analyses. Genotypes of pny-40126 and pny-57747 plants were determined using primers to the left border (Lba1) and a primer that was specific to PNY (Lba1, 5'-TGGTTCACGTAGTGGGCCATCG-3'; 40126-1, 5'-TGGAATTGGAGACAAAATGTGTTA-3'; 57747-1, 5'-GTTTCAAGAACCTTGATCC-3'). Only plants that were homozygous for the T-DNA displayed the pny phenotype (data not shown). bp-9 results from a dSpm insertion and was obtained by screening the SLAT lines for insertions (G. Mele, N. Ori, Y. Sato, and S. Hake, unpublished data). Quantitative analysis of the different genotypeswild type, pny, bp, and pny bpwere performed on plants at equal developmental stages, 2 to 3 weeks after bolting.
Molecular in Situ and Biochemical Analyses
To generate a probe for in situ hybridization, PNY was cleaved with XbaI (PNY has two internal XbaI restriction sites at 465 and 987 bp from the ATG start codon). This XbaI fragment was cloned into pBluescript SK- and KS+ plasmids (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA), and the T7 polymerase (Promega, Madison, WI) was used to synthesize sense and antisense UTP-digoxigeninlabeled RNA as described (Jackson, 1992
To construct the GST-MEINOX fusion proteins, gene-specific primers were used to amplify the 5' part of the genes that encoded the N-terminal region containing the MEINOX domain of STM, BP, and KNAT2. Pfu polymerase (Stratagene) was used to synthesize the gene fragments. Each PCR primer (forward and reverse) contained a specific restriction enzyme site that allowed the PCR products to be cloned in frame with GST. The 5' fragments of STM1-703, BP1-747, and KNAT2162-310 were amplified using GSTMSTM-F (5'-CATTATGGATCCAGATGGAGAGTGGTTCCAACAGC-3') and GSTMSTM-R (5'-GTATAGGATCCCTGCTGCTGTCTCTCCATAACCGGA-3'), GSTMBP-F (5'-CAGCTTAGGATCCAGATGGAAGAATACCAGCATGAC-3') and GSTMBP-R (5'-TTATTGGATCCCATTGTCACTCTTCCCATCAGG-3'), and GSTMKNAT2-F (5'-GACAACGGATCCCGCGTATTCGAAAAGCTGAG-3') and GSTMKNAT2-R (5'-GCAAGGTCGACCTAACCAGTGCACAAGTTCTGAAGCTG-3'). The restriction enzyme sites in the primers are underlined. STM1-703 and BP1-747 gene fragments then were cloned into pGEX-5X-2 (Pharmacia, Piscataway, NJ) using BamHI (Panvera/Takara, Madison, WI), whereas KNAT2162-310 was cloned into pGEX-5X-2 using BamHI and SalI (Panvera/Takara). All constructs were sequenced to verify the integrity of the clones. The ligand blot procedure was performed as described (Chen et al., 2000
Histology Upon request, materials integral to the findings presented in this publication will be made available in a timely manner to all investigators on similar terms for noncommercial research purposes. To obtain materials, please contact S. Hake, fax 510-559-5678, maizesh{at}nature.berkeley.edu.
Accession Numbers
We thank the Salk Institute of Genomic Analysis Laboratory and the Salk/Stanford/PGEC Consortium for the T-DNA insertion lines SALK_040126 and SALK_057747. We thank George Chuck for technical advice on in situ hybridization experiments, George Chuck and Giovanni Mele for critical reading of the manuscript, Hans Holtan for graphics assistance, and David Hantz for greenhouse maintenance. H.M.S.S. was supported by National Institutes of Health postdoctoral fellowship GM20158-03. S.H. was supported by National Science Foundation Grant IBN-0131431 and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.012856. Received April 11, 2003; accepted June 8, 2003.
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