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First published online January 26, 2007; 10.1105/tpc.106.048157 The Plant Cell 19:84-93 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists CRYPTOCHROME2 in Vascular Bundles Regulates Flowering in ArabidopsisLaboratory of Plant Physiology, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Kitashirakawa-Oiwake-Cho, Sakyo-Ku, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail nagatani{at}physiol.bot.kyoto-u.ac.jp; fax 81-75753-4126.
Plants make full use of light signals to determine the timing of flowering. In Arabidopsis thaliana, a blue/UV-A photoreceptor, CRYPTOCHROME 2 (cry2), and a red/far-red photoreceptor, PHYTOCHROME B (phyB), are two major photoreceptors that control flowering. The light stimuli for the regulation of flowering are perceived by leaves. We have recently shown that phyB expression in mesophyll but not in vascular bundles suppresses the expression of a key flowering regulator, FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT), in vascular bundles. In this study, we asked where in the leaf cry2 perceives light stimuli to regulate flowering. To answer this question, we established transgenic Arabidopsis lines in which the cry2green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion was expressed under the control of organ/tissue-specific promoters in a cry2-deficient mutant background. Analysis of these lines revealed that expression of cry2-GFP in vascular bundles, but not in epidermis or mesophyll, rescued the late flowering phenotype. We further confirmed that cry2-GFP expressed in vascular bundles increased FT expression only in vascular bundles. Hence, in striking contrast with phyB, cry2 most likely regulates FT expression in a cell-autonomous manner.
Environmental factors, such as temperature, nutrition, and light, strongly affect the growth and development of plants. Transition from vegetative to reproductive growth, namely flowering, is an important developmental step for plants. The timing of flowering is under strict control of the light environment (Simpson and Dean, 2002
To perceive light signals, plants use a set of photoreceptors, including blue/UV-A photoreceptors, cryptochromes (cry) (Cashmore et al., 1999
cry2 is a nuclear protein, which binds the flavin chromophore and shares sequence similarity with prokaryotic DNA photolyases (Lin et al., 1998
The molecular mechanism of the regulation of flowering by light has been intensively studied in Arabidopsis. An external coincidence model is now widely accepted to explain how Arabidopsis recognizes the daylength and regulates flowering (Davis, 2002
In case of the shade avoidance response, phyB destabilizes the CO protein (Valverde et al., 2004
Spot light irradiation and grafting experiments have demonstrated that leaves are the major organs to sense both daylength and shade for the regulation of flowering (Knott, 1934
In contrast with CO and FT, photoreceptors are expressed in almost all tissues. phyB, for example, is expressed in the epidermis, mesophyll, and vascular bundles in cotyledons (Somers and Quail, 1995
It is essential to know the functional site of cry2 at the tissue level to elucidate the molecular mechanism of its action. As is the case with phyB, the CRY2 gene is expressed in almost all organs/tissues (Toth et al., 2001
Preparation of Transgenic Arabidopsis Lines That Express cry2-GFP in an Organ/Tissue-Specific Pattern To determine the functional site of cry2 in leaves, we established transgenic lines that expressed cry2-GFP under the control of tissue-specific promoters on the cry2 mutant background. For this purpose, the CAB3 (for mesophyll) (Susek et al., 1993
The CRY2-GFP gene was fused to these promoters and introduced into the cry2 mutant of Arabidopsis by the Agrobacterium tumefaciensmediated method. As a control, the CRY2-GFP gene was expressed under the control of the authentic CRY2 promoter (Toth et al., 2001
Expression Patterns of cry2-GFP We first examined the expression levels of cry2-GFP protein in independent pCRY-C2G lines with an anti-cry2 antibody to choose a standard line in which cry2-GFP was expressed at the endogenous level (Figure 1B). Seedlings of this line were then observed under a laser scanning confocal microscope (Figures 2A , 2I, 3A , 3I, and 3Q). GFP fluorescence was observed exclusively in the nucleus, as has been reported previously (Guo et al., 1999
In contrast with pCRY-C2G, other lines exhibited organ/tissue-specific expression patterns (Figures 2 and 3). In pCAB-C2G, expression was observed exclusively in the mesophyll of both cotyledons and young true leaves (Figures 2B, 2J, and 3B). Semiquantitative analysis of GFP fluorescence indicated that the expression level in pCAB-C2G mesophyll was 1.8 times higher than that in pCRY-C2G mesophyll. In addition, cry2-GFP was expressed in the cortex of hypocotyl at lower levels (Figure 3J). In pSUC-C2G and pSultr-C2G, GFP expression was observed only in vascular bundles in all organs (Figures 2C, 2D, 3K, 3L, 3S, and 3T). No expression was observed in the shoot apexes. Semiquantitative analysis indicated that GFP expression levels in pSUC-C2G and pSultr-C2G in cotyledonous vascular bundles were 1.5 and 2.7 times higher than that in pCRY-C2G, respectively. Expression was restricted to epidermis of the aerial part of the seedlings in pML-C2G and pCER-C2G (Figures 2M, 2N, 3M, and 3N). Expression levels in pML-C2G and pCER-C2G in cotyledons were 3.8 and 4.7 times higher, respectively, than in pCRY-C2G. We also confirmed that expression was restricted to the shoot apex in pUFO-C2G and to the root in pAt3g-C2G (Figures 2G and 3W).
cry2-GFP in Vascular Bundles Regulates the Flowering Time
We then examined whether or not pSUC-C2G and pSultr-C2G responded normally to changes in daylength. In the short-day (SD) condition, flowering is not delayed in the cry2 mutant compared with the wild type (Guo et al., 1998
The cry2 mutant exhibits long hypocotyl phenotype under blue light (Lin et al., 1998
To confirm the tissue-specific expression of cry2-GFP in pSUC-C2G and pSultr-C2G, the CRY2-GFP mRNA levels in isolated vascular bundles and mesophyll protoplasts were quantified by RT-PCR (Figure 5
). Mesophyll cells and vascular bundles were isolated from cotyledons as described (Endo et al., 2005
Consistent with microscopic observation (Figures 2 and 3), the CRY2-GFP mRNA levels in mesophyll cells were much higher in pCRY-C2G and pCAB-C2G than in other lines (Figure 5). Consistent with the semiquantification of the GFP fluorescence (see above), the level was higher in pCAB-C2G than in pCRY-C2G. Conversely, the CRY2-GFP mRNA was detected in vascular bundles in pSUC-C2G, pSultr-C2G, and pCRY-C2G (Figure 5). The levels were much lower in other lines, except pCAB-C2G. This might be due to the contamination of the vascular bundle samples with mesophyll cells. It should be noted that cry2-GFP in pCAB-C2G failed to affect flowering regardless of the high CRY2-GFP mRNA expression in the mesophyll ( 10 times higher than that in the vascular bundles of pCRY-C2G). To examine quantitative relationships between cry2-GFP expression in vascular bundles and flowering times, we examined several independent pSUC-C2G, pSultr-C2G, and pCRY-C2G lines under LD. The expression levels of CRY2-GFP mRNA in vascular bundles were determined by RT-PCR and plotted against flowering times (Figure 6 ). The expression level and the flowering time correlated well. All points were laid on a single curve containing the point for the wild-type plant. Flowering was advanced depending on the expression levels of CRY2-GFP up to about the endogenous level. The response was then more or less saturated. These results further supported that the flowering time was dependent on the expression of cry2-GFP in vascular bundles but not in other tissues.
cry2-GFP in Vascular Bundles Regulates FT Expression in Vascular Bundles cry2 advances flowering by inducing the expression of a key flowering regulator, FT (Yanovsky and Kay, 2002 Total mRNA was extracted from cotyledons every 3 h and subjected to RT-PCR analysis. The FT expression patterns in pCRY-C2G and pSUC-C2G were almost identical to that in the wild type (Figure 7 ). The expression peaked at the end of the light period in these lines. Hence, the effects of cry2-GFP expressed in vascular bundles were indistinguishable from those of the endogenous cry2. By contrast, the levels of FT expression remained low in pCAB-C2G and the cry2 mutant. These results were fully consistent with the flowering phenotype (Figure 4A).
It has been shown that FT expression is restricted to vascular bundles in either the presence or absence of phyB (Takada and Goto, 2003
cry2-GFP Expression Using Organ/Tissue- Specific Promoters In this study, we employed tissue-specific promoters to express cry2-GFP in different tissues. Our main focus was on three major tissues in cotyledons: namely, mesophyll, vascular bundles, and epidermis. As negative controls, we expressed cry2-GFP in other organs/tissues, such as the root and the shoot apex.
For mesophyllic expression, the CRY2-GFP gene was driven by the CAB promoter. The CAB gene encodes chlorophyll a/b binding proteins that are highly expressed in mesophyll. As was expected from previous results using a reporter gene analysis (Susek et al., 1993
Epidermal expression of cry2-GFP was examined using the At ML1 and CER6 promoters. The At ML1 and CER6 genes, which encode a homeobox protein and a very-long-chain fatty acid condensing enzyme, respectively (Lu et al., 1996
Tissue-specific promoters can be a powerful tool to examine tissue-specific functions of photoreceptors and other factors. Although such possibilities in plants have not been explored fully yet, they would be applicable to various aspects of the light signal transduction. It is now possible to suppress the function of endogenous genes by RNA interference technology (Fire et al., 1998
Vascular Bundle as a Functional Site of cry2
Although cry2-GFP expression in vascular bundles was required for regulation of flowering, cry2 is expressed in other tissues as well (Toth et al., 2001
With respect to the hypocotyl elongation, we did not observe dramatic effects of cry2-GFP in any lines except pCRY-C2G (Figure 4C). Hence, our set of lines may not be covering all of the functional sites of cry2. Alternatively, cry2-GFP expression in multiple tissues may be required for these photomorphogenic responses. This was in striking contrast with phyB. Our previous work has demonstrated that phyB in mesophyll cells principally regulates hypocotyl elongation (Endo et al., 2005
Possible Mechanism of cry2 Function in Vascular Bundles
One possible mechanism by which cry2 stabilizes CO is through a physical interaction with COP1, which has E3 ubiquitin ligase activity (Wang et al., 2001
Flowering Regulation by phyB and cry2
It is not clear if there is any advantage for plants to regulate flowering using photoreceptors in different tissues. A possible explanation is as follows: The timing is a key issue in the daylength perception by cry2. In LD plants such as Arabidopsis, daylength is thought to be recognized in the following way. CO mRNA accumulation is controlled by the circadian clock (Yanovsky and Kay, 2002
It remains unclear why phyB regulates the flowering in mesophyll. Timing may be less important for the phyB responses because it mainly mediates the shade avoidance responses. However, it should be mentioned here that phyB is also involved in photoperiodic flowering in other species (Hanumappa et al., 1999
cry2 and phyB are not the only photoreceptors involved in the flowering regulation. phyA mediates photoperiodic responses by far-red light (Yanovsky and Kay, 2002
Plant Materials and Growth Conditions The Arabidopsis thaliana cry2 mutant used for this report was cry2-2 (Guo et al., 1998 35 µmol m2 s1 from white fluorescent light tubes [FLR40SW/M/36-B; Hitachi] and 8 h of darkness) and SD (8 h of white light at 70 µmol m2 s1 from white fluorescent light tubes and 16 h of darkness) received the same total fluence of light. For hypocotyl length measurements, plants were grown in continuous blue light (3 µmol m2 s1 from fluorescent light tubes [FL20S·B; Toshiba]) for 7 d. Hypocotyl lengths were measured by ImageJ software (National Institutes of Health).
Plasmid Construction and Plant Transformation
The full-length CRY2 cDNA was PCR-amplified from a cDNA library using specific primers with XbaI-SpeI and ClaI tails. The GFP was PCR-amplified from the pPZP211/Bpro (Endo et al., 2005
Organ/tissue-specific promoters were inserted into pPZP211/NP/CRY2-GFP using the SalI, XbaI, or SpeI site. The CRY2 ( Specific sequences for each primer pair were as follows: CRY2-cDNA-F, 5'-GCTCTAGAACTAGTATGAAGATGGACAAAAAGAC-3'; CRY2-cDNA-R, 5'-CCATCGATTTTGCAACCATTTTTTCCCAAACTTG-3'; CRY2-pro-F, 5'-ACTTGTCGACAATTGCAAAAAGAAATGCTACTC-3'; CRY2-pro-R, 5'-GCTCTAGAGTTATTATGATCACAGATGAATCAAAGAT-3'; CAB3-pro-F, 5'-CGTCTAGAAATCAAGAGAAAATGTGATTCTCGG-3'; CAB3-pro-R, 5'-GCACTAGTGAAACTTTTTGTGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTG-3'; SUC2-pro-F, 5'-ACTTGTCGACTTTGTCATACATTTATTTGCCACAAG-3'; SUC2-pro-R, 5'-GCTCTAGATTTGACAAACCAAGAAAGTAAGAAAAAAA-3'; Sultr1;3-pro-F, 5'-CGTCTAGAGTTTTTCTTCATAGGTTTCGTGATAAT-3'; Sultr1;3-pro-R, 5'-GCTCTAGATGCTATGTGTGTTTTGTAGCAAAC-3'; At ML1-pro-F, 5'-ACTTGTCGACCAAGAGATATTGGGTTGCTACACAA-3'; At ML1-pro-R, 5'-GGACTAGTGATGATGATGGATGCCTATCAATTTTT-3'; CER6-pro-F, 5'-ACTTGTCGACAATGATGAGCAAAAGTGTTTGC-3'; CER6-pro-R, 5'-TGCTCTAGACGTCGGAGAGTTTTAATGTATAATTG-3'; UFO-pro-F, 5'-ACTTGTCGACGAATTCTCTGTTTTAATTGCCCCA-3'; UFO-pro-R, 5'-GCTCTAGATTTAGCTGAAAAATGAAAAGATTTGG-3'; At3g25820/25830-pro-F, 5'-CGTCTAGATGTCAATTTTCATGGCACATCGAG-3'; and At3g25820/25830-pro-R, 5'-GGACTAGTGATTTAGTAGACTATTCTCTTATTCGTGGC-3'.
The Arabidopsis cry2 mutant was transformed with vectors described above by the Agrobacterium tumefaciensmediated floral dip method (Clough and Bent, 1998
Immunochemical and Microscopic Detection of cry2-GFP Ten-day-old seedlings grown under LD were observed at around the end of the light period with a confocal laser scanning microscope (Zeiss LSM510). Seedlings were vacuum-infiltrated in water before observation. For shoot apex and hypocotyl observations, seedlings were embedded in 5% low melting point agarose to prepare longitudinal sections without fixation. Green fluorescence from GFP (observation, 500 to 530 nm; excitation, 488 nm) and red fluorescence from chlorophyll (observation, >560 nm; excitation, 543 nm) were overlaid electronically. To semiquantify the GFP fluorescence, the gain was set to 720 and the fluorescence intensity within the nuclear region was integrated for each nucleus. For each line, >20 nuclei from several samples were quantified and averaged.
Isolation of Mesophyll Cells and Vascular Bundles
RNA Extraction, cDNA Synthesis, and Real-Time PCR The TUB2/TUB3 genes, which are known to be expressed at similar levels in different tissues, were used as an internal control for normalization of the PCR reaction. Note that no CRY2 mRNA is expressed in the parental cry2-2 mutant because the CRY2 gene is deleted in this allele. Specific sequences for each primer pair were as follows: CRY2-RT-F, 5'-AATCCCGCGTTACAAGGC-3'; CRY2-RT-R, 5'-TTCCGAGTTCCACACCAG-3'; FT-RT-F, 5'-TATCTCCATTGGTTGGTGACTG-3'; FT-RT-R, 5'-GGGACTTGGATTTTCGTAACAC-3'; TUB2/3-RT-F, 5'-CCAGCTTTGGTGATTTGAAC-3'; and TUB2/3-RT-R, 5'-CAAGCTTTCGGAGGTCAGAG-3'.
Quantitative RT-PCR was performed in 200-µL tubes with a Rotor-Gene RG-3000A (Corbett Research) using SYBR green to monitor double-strand DNA synthesis. The reaction mixture contained 7.5 µL of Platinum SYBR Green qPCR SuperMix UDG (Invitrogen), 1 µL of cDNA, and 200 nM gene-specific primers in a final volume of 15 µL. The following thermal cycling profile was used for all PCRs: 95°C for 20 s,
Accession Numbers
We thank T. Nishimura for providing the pPZP211/NP vector. We thank C. Lin for providing the anti-cry2 antibody. We thank BioMed Proofreading for English proofreading. This work was partially supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B) 17370018 (to A.N.), a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Priority Areas 17084002 (to A.N.), a Grant-in-Aid for Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Fellows 02709 (to M.E.), and a Grant-in-Aid for 21st Century Circle of Excellence Research, Kyoto University (A14).
The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantcell.org) is: Akira Nagatani (nagatani{at}physiol.bot.kyoto-u.ac.jp). www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.106.048157 Received October 12, 2006; Revision received November 30, 2006. accepted January 12, 2007.
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