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The Plant Cell 18:786-791 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists
Studies of Abscisic Acid Perception Finally FlowerDepartment of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 finkelst{at}lifesci.ucsb.edu
The classical plant hormones (auxins, ethylene, gibberellins, cytokinins, and abscisic acid [ABA]) were discovered between 40 and 100 years ago, but it is only within the last ABA REGULATES DIVERSE RESPONSES
ABA, misnamed for its presumed role in abscission, functions primarily in plant responses to dehydrating stresses by inducing stomatal closure and production of desiccation protectants and by limiting cell division and expansion (reviewed in Finkelstein et al., 2002 STRUCTURE/FUNCTION STUDIES OF ABA SIGNALING
The structural requirements of ABA perception have been studied by testing the activity of the naturally occurring (+)-S form of ABA, its ()-R enantiomer, and a variety of ABA metabolites and analogs in diverse ABA responses, including stomatal regulation, germination, and gene expression (Walton, 1983
PERCEPTION SITE(S)
Another approach to understanding the perception mechanism is to determine the hormone's site of action and then identify candidate interacting molecules. The structure of ABA is consistent with either intracellular or extracellular action: as a small weak acid, it is likely to be protonated in the relatively acidic apoplast such that it can enter cells as an uncharged molecule but may also remain in the apoplast. Consequently, the structural features of ABA do not dictate its perception site. Studies making use of impermeable ABA derivatives or microinjection and subsequent photoactivation of caged ABA derivatives have demonstrated both intracellular and extracellular sites of perception for distinct responses (reviewed in Finkelstein et al., 2002 BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES Attempts to identify an ABA receptor directly have made use of affinity purification to various ABA derivatives or anti-idiotypic antibodies. Each of these studies depends on the information described in the two preceding sections to design affinity probes that are active and to choose source material likely to express or contain receptors.
More than 20 years ago, ABA binding proteins were first identified, but not purified, by stereospecific photoactivated cross-linking of radiolabeled ABA via the C-4' ketone to guard cell membrane extracts (Hornberg and Weiler, 1984
Yet another approach has made use of anti-idiotypic antibodies. In this strategy, monoclonal anti-(+)-ABA antibodies were used as antigens to generate new polyclonal antibodies that might recognize an ABA binding site that could be structurally similar in the anti-ABA antibodies and a putative receptor. The anti-idiotypic antibodies (AB2) were used to screen barley aleurone cDNA expression libraries (Liu et al., 1999 While such studies have identified ABA binding proteins, functional demonstration of a role in ABA signaling (e.g., by loss- or gain-of-function studies) is required before they can be designated as true receptors. GENETIC APPROACHES (FORWARD AND REVERSE)
Loss of function for hormone receptors or downstream signaling components was initially expected to result in decreased hormone sensitivity, so numerous screens were performed to identify mutants with impaired hormonal responses. Although this approach led to identification of ethylene and cytokinin receptors, even highly pleiotropic mutations affecting signaling by ABA were not due to receptor defects. Instead, the ABA response loci identified genetically included transcription factors, protein phosphatases, a farnesyl transferase subunit, and several RNA processing enzymes affecting transcript splicing and stability (reviewed in Finkelstein and Rock, 2002
A surprising early observation was that the lines displaying the greatest hormone resistance carried dominant mutations and were therefore unlikely to represent simple loss of function. For example, the abi1-1 mutant, which produces a dysfunctional PP2C, is impaired in control of >90% of ABA-regulated genes (Hoth et al., 2002
An alternate approach made use of reverse genetics to test the roles of candidate early signaling molecules identified biochemically or pharmacologically. These included G-proteincoupled receptor-like (GPCR) molecules (Pandey and Assmann, 2004 BIOCHEMISTRY AND GENETICS CONVERGE
Most recently, an Arabidopsis RNA binding protein initially identified for its role in promoting flowering, FCA (for flowering time control protein A), was identified as a candidate ABA receptor based on homology to ABAP1, the barley aleurone protein identified by ABA-mimicking anti-idiotypic antibodies (Razem et al., 2006
Several other ABA response loci have been implicated in aspects of RNA processing, including Cap binding, intron processing, and miRNA production (Kuhn and Schroeder, 2003
A traditional assumption about receptors is that each can initiate multiple responses to a ligand via branching signaling pathways. In recent years, it has become clear that this may be complicated by the existence of multiple classes of receptors with some distinct and some redundant functions. So far, the role of FCA has been tested in only four ABA-regulated responses: flowering, germination, stomatal regulation, and lateral root formation. Although essential for ABA-delayed flowering and ABA-inhibited lateral root formation, FCA does not appear to play a role in the two best-characterized ABA responses: germination inhibition and stomatal regulation. This spectrum of effects is consistent with the expression pattern of the full-length FCA transcript required for production of a functional protein, which is strongest in shoot and root apices and young flower buds but very low or undetectable in seeds and leaf tissue (Macknight et al., 2002 Because FCA regulates RNA processing, a global approach, such as transcriptional profiling of wild-type versus loss- or gain-of-FCA expression lines, would probably have detected the misregulation of FLC and might identify additional FCA-regulated transcripts that could implicate FCA in other processes. In particular, overexpression of a full-length cDNA would avoid complications from autoregulation of alternative splicing and could reveal additional functions of FCA that might be masked by redundantly acting receptors providing these functions in mutant lines. THE SEARCH CONTINUES... Regardless of whether the limited effects of FCA are due to its limited expression, redundancy, or specialized functions of distinct receptors, it is clear that additional receptors must exist. Obvious candidates to start analyzing are close homologs of FCA. The most recognizable conserved domains in FCA are the RRMs, which are shared with 197 other Arabidopsis proteins, and the WW domain implicated in proteinprotein interactions. All known FCAs also have Gln-rich domains surrounding the WW domain and additional highly conserved regions adjacent to the RRMs. Although essential to FCA function, the N-terminal RRMs do not confer ABA responsiveness and were not found in ABAP1. The ABA binding domain has been mapped to an unspecified C-terminal portion of FCA, in close proximity to the FY binding WW domain, but the specific residues involved in ABA binding have not yet been identified (Figure 3). BLAST analyses identify at least half a dozen Arabidopsis proteins with homology to the C-terminal part of FCA, with homology concentrated in the FY binding region, but only one of these includes the RRMs and adjacent conserved regions. Presumably, tighter mapping and structural analysis of the ABA binding domain would aid efforts to identify more candidate receptors.
Even if this approach identifies additional ABA receptors related to FCA, the diversity of stereospecific requirements among ABA responses suggests that there may be other completely unrelated proteins functioning as ABA receptors for other responses. Biochemical approaches with carefully designed affinity probes, such as that described by Nyangulu et al. (2005)
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