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First published online March 30, 2007; 10.1105/tpc.106.041871 The Plant Cell 19:1123-1133 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists A Mutant of the Arabidopsis Phosphate Transporter PHT1;1 Displays Enhanced Arsenic AccumulationDepartamento de Genética Molecular de Plantas, Centro Nacional de Biotecnología, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Cantoblanco, E-28049 Madrid, Spain 3 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail aleyva{at}cnb.uam.es; fax 34-91-585-4506.
The exceptional toxicity of arsenate [As(V)] is derived from its close chemical similarity to phosphate (Pi), which allows the metalloid to be easily incorporated into plant cells through the high-affinity Pi transport system. In this study, we identified an As(V)-tolerant mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana named pht1;1-3, which harbors a semidominant allele coding for the high-affinity Pi transporter PHT1;1. pht1;1-3 displays a slow rate of As(V) uptake that ultimately enables the mutant to accumulate double the arsenic found in wild-type plants. Overexpression of the mutant protein in wild-type plants provokes phenotypic effects similar to pht1;1-3 with regard to As(V) uptake and accumulation. In addition, gene expression analysis of wild-type and mutant plants revealed that, in Arabidopsis, As(V) represses the activation of genes specifically involved in Pi uptake, while inducing others transcriptionally regulated by As(V), suggesting that converse signaling pathways are involved in plant responses to As(V) and low Pi availability. Furthermore, the repression effect of As(V) on Pi starvation responses may reflect a regulatory mechanism to protect plants from the extreme toxicity of arsenic.
Arsenic, one of the most toxic metals found in soils, is derived from both natural and anthropogenic sources (Tamaki and Frankenberger, 1992
In soils, the most abundant arsenic species is arsenate [As(V)] (Tamaki and Frankenberger, 1992
Once As(V) enters the cell, it is promptly reduced to arsenite [As(III)] (Pickering et al., 2000 Here, we report the identification and characterization of a new semidominant mutant allele of the high-affinity Pi transporter PHT1;1. This allele, named pht1;1-3, exhibits an enhanced ability to accumulate arsenic while Pi and As(V) uptake rate is reduced, suggesting that this may be the single mechanism operating in naturally selected arsenic-tolerant plants. Additionally, we show that As(V) suppresses the Pi starvation response while activating other genes potentially involved in As(V) detoxification/tolerance, suggesting that an As(V) Pi interacting pathway operates in plants to reduce arsenic uptake.
Screening for As(V)-Tolerant Mutants To identify As(V)-tolerant mutants, we first studied the phenotypic changes of wild-type Arabidopsis seedlings in response to the metalloid. Since As(V) competes with Pi for the Pi uptake system, we performed a morphological analysis of seedlings directly sown on medium containing 30 µM As(V) supplemented with different Pi concentrations. As expected, As(V) toxicity symptoms increased as Pi concentrations decreased (Figure 1A ). In the above-ground (aerial) tissues, the most emblematic symptoms observed were growth arrest and anthocyanin accumulation. In roots, growth arrest was also characteristic of As(V) toxicity, and root hair elongation appeared to be completely inhibited (Figure 1B). Arabidopsis seedlings grown in the presence of 30 µM As(V) and 30 µM Pi demonstrated intermediate toxicity symptoms, indicating that this concentration range may be suitable for screening As(V)-tolerant mutants. Under these conditions, we screened 100,000 M2 seedlings from a population of ethyl methanesulfonatemutagenized Columbia lines and ultimately identified nine mutants. One of the selected mutants developed a larger aerial part, with less growth arrest than that observed in wild-type plants when grown in the presence of 30 µM As(V) (Figure 1A). In addition, this mutant was able to elongate root hairs when grown on Pi-lacking medium supplemented with 30 µM As(V) (Figure 1B). Moreover, after an extended exposure to As(V), the mutant clearly accumulated less anthocyanins in the aerial portion and exhibited longer roots than wild-type plants (Figure 1C). We named this mutant pht1;1-3 in accordance with its molecular characterization (described below).
pht1;1-3 Shows Enhanced Arsenic Accumulation Genetic analysis revealed that the tolerant phenotype displayed by pht1;1-3 is caused by a single mutation and that heterozygous plants showed an intermediate As(V) tolerance phenotype (Figure 1C). When plants were exposed to As(V) for a shorter time (Figure 1D), quantification of root length (Figure 1E) and anthocyanin accumulation (Figure 1F) confirmed the intermediate tolerant phenotype of the heterozygotes. Therefore, in the conditions used here, the mutation behaved as semidominant. To further characterize the pht1;1-3 tolerance phenotype and to establish its potential for arsenic phytoremediation, we determined the arsenic concentration in mutant and wild-type plants. As shown in Figure 1G, pht1;1-3 plants accumulate at least twice the arsenic than that accumulated by wild-type plants after 12 d of growth on As(V)-containing medium. Based on these phenotypes, pht1;1-3 was chosen for further characterization.
pht1;1-3 Harbors a Missense Mutation in the Pi Transporter PHT1;1
To evaluate the effect of the pht1;1-3 allele on the Pi starvation response, we first took advantage of the fact that the mutagenized collection from where pht1;1-3 was isolated harbors the Pi starvation responsive reporter gene IPS1:ß-glucuronidase (GUS) (Martín et al., 2000
Overexpression of pht1;1-3 Results in Decreased Pi Content and Enhanced Arsenic Accumulation To confirm whether the pht1;1-3 allele is responsible for the observed semidominant mutant phenotypes, we obtained transgenic Arabidopsis lines in which either pht1;1-3 or PHT1;1 alleles were expressed in wild-type plants under the control of the constitutive 35S promoter (Figure 3A ). No obvious phenotypic differences were observed between wild-type and any of the expressor lines in medium without As(V). However, in the presence of As(V), wild-type plants expressing pht1;1-3 displayed an As(V)-tolerant phenotype, while expression of the wild-type allele conferred hypersensitivity to the metalloid (Figure 3A). Quantification of root length and anthocyanin accumulation in these plants confirmed that the As(V) tolerance phenotypes were enhanced in the pht1;1-3 expressor line, while plants expressing the wild-type allele exhibited hypersensitivity to As(V) (Figures 3B and 3C). Analysis of soluble Pi and arsenic content in these lines showed that the expression of the mutant protein results in Pi content reduction and increased arsenic accumulation (Figures 3D and 3E, respectively). Pi and As(V) uptake experiments revealed that both Pi and As(V) influx were reduced in the mutant and in the pht1;1-3 expressor line, indicating that differential Pi versus As(V) uptake rates were not the cause of the opposite behavior in Pi and As(V) accumulation displayed by the mutant (Figure 3F). Moreover, competition Pi uptake experiments performed in wild-type and mutant plants showed that Pi uptake rate decreases in a similar proportion both in wild-type and mutant plants when exposed to increasing As(V) concentrations (Figure 3G). Therefore, differential affinity in Pi and As(V) transport was not the cause for the tolerance phenotypes observed in pht1;1-3.
These results also indicated that the expression of the mutated protein in wild-type plants accurately mimics the mutant phenotype with regard to As(V) tolerance and both Pi and As(V) accumulation.
Mimicry of the pht1;1-3 Mutation in the Yeast Pho84p Transporter
As(V) Represses the Pi Starvation Response while Activating Arsenic-Responsive Genes To further characterize the pht1;1-3 mutant phenotype, and because of the similarity between Pi and As(V), we next investigated the effect of As(V) on the Pi starvation response in pht1;1-3 and in wild-type plants. We performed RNA gel blot analysis of the Pi-responsive genes PHT1;1, SQD1, IPS1, and PHF1 in wild-type and pht1;1-3 plants grown in the presence of As(V). Additionally, we included in this experiment plants treated with Pi, As(III), cadmium (Cd), and nickel (Ni). As expected, all Pi-responsive genes analyzed were induced by Pi starvation (Figure 5A ). When wild-type plants were then transferred for 8 h to the same medium supplemented with either 30 µM As(V) or Pi, the amount of transcript corresponding to each of the Pi-responsive genes was reduced (Figure 5B). As(V) was less efficient than Pi in the repression of SQD1, IPS1, and PHF1. By contrast, As(V) was more efficient than Pi in the repression of the Pi transporter PHT1;1. In pht1;1-3 plants, gene responsiveness to Pi starvation was reduced with respect to that in wild-type plants (Figure 5B). The reason for this behavior remains to be elucidated, but reduced gene responsiveness to Pi starvation was also observed in other mutants displaying partially constitutive Pi starvation response, such as phf1 and siz1 (González et al., 2005
Therefore, we conclude that As(V) downregulates genes transcriptionally regulated by Pi starvation, being particularly efficient in the repression of the Pi/As(V) uptake system. The repression occurs conversely to the activation of As(V)-responsive genes.
In plants, restriction of As(V) uptake is the major strategy used by naturally selected As(V)-hypertolerant ecotypes. Actually, As(V) toxicity is based on the similarity between Pi and As(V), which allows the metalloid to be easily incorporated into plants cells through the high-affinity Pi transport system (Meharg and Macnair, 1990 In this study, we identified an arsenic-tolerant mutant in Arabidopsis, named pht1;1-3, which harbors a new allele coding for the high-affinity Pi transporter PHT1;1. Characterization of pht1;1-3 revealed that decreased As(V) uptake contributes to enhanced arsenic content. Our investigations also uncovered the existence of an integrated Pi/As(V) signaling pathway, which modulates As(V) uptake. The constitutive Pi starvation response displayed by pht1;1-3 is consistent with the observed reduction in Pi content, indicating that pht1;1-3 may be functionally impaired. However, despite As(V) uptake reduction, pht1;1-3 accumulates at least twice the amount of arsenic found in wild-type plants. The semidominant nature of the pht1;1-3 mutation allowed the confirmation of this association between reduced arsenic uptake and increased arsenic accumulation using transgenic plants overexpressing pht1;1-3. Indeed, pht1;1-3 overexpression affected both traits. These two phenotypes conferred by the pht1;1-3 semidominant mutation help to explain the genetic data on arsenic tolerance of naturally selected variants of H. lanatus involving a single chromosomal region. In fact, it is unnecessary to invoke that complex loci are responsible for both apparently contradictory phenotypes.
One possible explanation for the apparent paradox represented by the association between decreased As(V) uptake and enhanced arsenic accumulation is that lowering As(V) content in the cytoplasm may allow the arsenic detoxification machinery to cope more efficiently with the metalloid, allowing for greater accumulation of arsenic into the vacuole. As(V) reduction to As(III) is a prerequisite for compartmentalization into the vacuole, and it has been recently shown that enhanced As(V) reductase activity is also a major determinant in As(V) hypertolerance (Bleeker et al., 2006
The semidominant character of the pht1;1-3 mutation also has mechanistic implications. Dominant negative mutations have been reported in a wide variety of transporters (Zhou and Christie, 1997
The results presented here indicate that As(V) rapidly repressed genes involved in the Pi starvation response and induced the expression of other As(V)-responsive genes. While the repressor function on Pi starvationresponsive genes is specific for As(V), induction of arsenic-responsive genes is also mediated by As(III). This leads us to propose a model whereby arsenic acts through two different signaling pathways. Based on the analogy between Pi and As(V), we propose that As(V) could mislead the Pi sensor, thus triggering the repression of the Pi starvationresponsive genes. In that case, As(V) should act as a nonmetabolizable Pi analog as it was seen for phosphite (Ticconi et al., 2001 In conclusion, we propose that, due to the chemical similarity between As(V) and Pi, plants have evolved an integrated sensing mechanism in which As(V) and Pi signaling pathways act in opposition to preserve plant integrity from arsenic toxicity. Our data open the possibility of further evaluating the As(V) response to identify exclusive, or overlapping, elements in As(V), As(III), and Pi starvation responses that may be relevant to arsenic perception and accumulation.
Plant Material and Growth Conditions Arabidopsis thaliana ecotypes used in this study were Columbia (Col-0) and Ler. Seeds were surface-sterilized and plated onto Bates and Lynch medium (Bates and Lynch, 1996
Plant Measurements and Histochemical Staining
For measuring root length, anthocyanin accumulation, and As(V) accumulation, plants were cultured for 7 d on 30 µM Pi medium and then transferred to fresh medium supplemented with 50 µM As(V). Samples were collected 4 d (root length and anthocyanin accumulation) or 12 d (arsenic content) later. To measure As content, plants were dried at 60°C for 5 d, mineralized with HNO4-H2O2 in a pressure digester, and analyzed for total arsenic content through inductively coupled plasmamass spectrometry (ICP-MS) at the Centro de Espectrometría Atómica of the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Anthocyanins were measured according to Swain and Hillis (1959)
Plant Uptake Experiments
Genetic Analysis and Positional Cloning of pht1;1-3
cDNA Isolation and Overexpression
RNA Extraction and Gel Blot Analysis
Yeast Transformation and Constructs
Yeast Acid Phosphatase Activity and Tolerance Experiments
Yeast Uptake Experiments
Accession Numbers
We thank Georg Leggewie for kindly providing the PHO84 cDNA in the yeast expression vector p181A1NE and Bengt Persson for providing the S. cerevisiae strain PAM1. We also thank C.L. Torán for critical reading of the manuscript. The excellent technical assistance of María Jesús Benito and Yolanda Leo del Puerto is also acknowledged. P.C. and M.L. were supported by Spanish Ministry of Education Grants BIO99-0229 and BIO2001-1204, respectively; B.G.-P. was supported by a postdoctoral contract of the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (010116). This research was supported by the EXOTIC grant (Contract QLG2-CT-1999-000351) funded by the 5th European Framework Program, by the Comunidad de Madrid (Contract 07B/0037/2002), and by the Spanish Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología (Contract BIO2001-1204).
1 These authors contributed equally to this work
2 Current address: Laboratorio de Genética Molecular y Evolución, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ap. Postal 70-275, Mexico D.F. 04510, Mexico. 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: Antonio Leyva (aleyva{at}cnb.uam.es). www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.106.041871 Received February 13, 2006; Revision received February 27, 2007. accepted March 9, 2007.
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