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First published online January 13, 2009; 10.1105/tpc.108.061887 The Plant Cell 21:184-196 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists Epidermal Cell Death in Rice Is Confined to Cells with a Distinct Molecular Identity and Is Mediated by Ethylene and H2O2 through an Autoamplified Signal Pathway[W]Botanisches Institut, Universität Kiel, 24118 Kiel, Germany 1 Address correspondence to msauter{at}bot.uni-kiel.de.
Rice (Oryza sativa) forms adventitious root primordia at stem nodes during normal development. Root emergence is preceded by ethylene-induced, H2O2-mediated local death of epidermal cells. Exogenous H2O2 or enhancement of endogenous H2O2 promoted epidermal cell death in a dose-dependent manner. Inhibition of NADPH oxidase lowered ethylene-induced cell death rates. Inhibition of ethylene perception by 1-methylcyclopropene did not abolish H2O2-induced cell death, indicating that H2O2 acts downstream of ethylene. Microarray studies of epidermal cells that undergo cell death identified 61 genes coregulated by the ethylene-releasing compound ethephon and by H2O2, supporting a joint signaling pathway. Regulation of the ethylene biosynthetic genes 1-Aminocyclopropane-1-Carboxylate Oxidase1 and Ethylene Overproducer-Like1 and downregulation of Metallothionein2b (MT2b), which encodes a reactive oxygen scavenger, indicated mutual enhancement of ethylene and H2O2 signaling. Analysis of MT2b knockdown mutants showed that cell death rates were inversely related to MT2b transcript abundance. Epidermal cells above adventitious roots have a morphological and molecular identity distinct from other epidermal cells. Pro-death signals regulated several transcription factor genes with a proposed function in cell type specification. It is hypothesized that induction of cell death is dependent on epidermal cell identity.
Cell death is an integral part of plant development that sets in as early as during female gametophyte development. It continues throughout reproduction as in tapetum and stomium degradation in the anther, in certain incompatibility reactions and during flower senescence. Seed, embryo, and plant development are also accompanied by and dependent on controlled cell death events, such as in endosperm and aleurone cell death in seeds (Bethke et al., 1999
Cell death in response to biotic or abiotic stresses is often mediated by plant hormones, including ethylene, jasmonic acid, and salicylic acid. In addition, it has become clear that the reactive oxygen species (ROS) superoxide anion radical (O2.–) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) are central regulators of plant cell death (Moeder et al., 2002
In rice (Oryza sativa), adventitious root primordia are formed at the nodes of the stem as part of normal plant development (Bleecker et al., 1986
H2O2 Accumulates Specifically in Epidermal Cells above Adventitious Roots It was shown previously that death of epidermal cells above adventitious roots is induced by ethylene (Mergemann and Sauter, 2000
To test if ethylene enhanced production of either ROS species in epidermal cells, rice stem sections cv PG56 were treated with 150 µM ethephon, which releases ethylene. For a kinetic study of H2O2 accumulation, DAB and 150 µM ethephon were applied simultaneously, and H2O2 staining was detected between 1 and 10 h of treatment (Figure 1B). In controls, the number of stained patches increased between 1 and 2 h of incubation possibly due to increased uptake of DAB and declined again between 6 and 8 h of treatment, indicating that the precipitate was not stable. In the presence of ethephon, no differences in DAB-stained epidermal patches were observed up to 4 h. After 6 h, the percentage of stained patches was significantly elevated to 64% compared with 40% staining rate in controls. Even though total percentages declined as in controls between 6 and 8 h of treatment, the overall rates remained elevated in ethylene-treated stem sections over controls. The percentage of epidermal patches with detectable O2.– levels was not significantly different in controls and ethephon-treated stem sections during a 10-h period as detailed in a time-course study (Figure 1D).
In summary, H2O2 and O2.– are specifically produced in epidermal cells above adventitious roots. As was observed for cell death, a basal number of epidermal patches display H2O2 and O2.– production in the absence of ethylene. However, the rate of H2O2-producing epidermal patches is significantly increased after 6 h in the presence of ethylene. From these results, it was hypothesized that epidermal cell death may be mediated by H2O2. The reason why values at other time points were not significantly elevated may be due to the measuring method that did not count single cells as being stained but whole patches. A similar observation with hardly elevated numbers was described previously for stage III of epidermal cell death (Mergemann and Sauter, 2000
H2O2 Is a Regulator of Epidermal Cell Death
We next altered endogenous ROS levels to see if cell death rates were dependent on internal ROS homeostasis. Rice cv PG56 stem sections were pretreated with or without 1 µM diphenylene iodonium (DPI) for 3 h to inhibit NADPH oxidase. Subsequently, 150 µM ethephon was added and stem sections were incubated for another 15 h. As a control, stems were treated with DPI in the absence of ethephon (Figure 3A ). In the absence of ethephon with or without DPI, cell death rates were 5%. Treatment with 150 µM ethephon for 15 h resulted in a cell death rate of 67%. When stems were incubated with ethephon in the presence of DPI, cell death rates were reduced to 39%.
3-Amino-1,2,4-triazole (AT) was applied to rice stems cv PG56 for 8 h at concentrations of 20 to 500 mM to inhibit metabolization of H2O2. As controls, stem sections were treated with or without 150 µM ethephon for 8 h (Figure 3B). Ethephon induced cell death rates of 53% compared with 23% in control stems. In the presence of AT, cell death rates of up to 43% were observed, indicating that inhibition of H2O2 metabolization was sufficient to induce cell death. A maximal response was achieved with 100 mM AT. In conclusion, the results supported the idea that endogenous accumulation of H2O2 in epidermal cells above adventitious roots was required for epidermal cell death to occur and that H2O2 could, at least in part, replace ethylene activity with respect to cell death induction. Application of H2O2 to stems did not overcome the cell-type specificity of cell death that limited death to epidermal cells above roots. Thus, it was concluded that epidermal cells above adventitious roots were preprogrammed to respond to ethylene or H2O2 with cell death and that molecular and/or cellular differences likely exist that determine cell death fate.
Ethylene Acts Upstream of H2O2 in Epidermal Cell Death Signaling
Epidermal Cells above Adventitious Roots Are Morphologically Distinct At the third youngest node of rice cv PG56, adventitious root primordia are big enough to push out the epidermis that covers them, resulting in a bulge (Figures 1, 5A, and 5B ). Scanning electron micrograph pictures were taken from this nodal tissue to visually compare epidermal cells above adventitious roots with the remaining epidermis (Figure 5). The waxy cuticle that covered the epidermis was different between these epidermal areas. Epidermal cells above roots displayed a plain cuticle (Figures 5B and 5C), whereas epidermal cells that did not cover roots displayed knobs and hair-like extensions (Figures 5B and 5D). It thus appeared that epidermal cells above adventitious roots had a specialized structure with a specialized cuticle.
Microarray Analysis To learn about the molecular basis of cell type–specific induced cell death, we performed a number of microarray studies. RNA was isolated from epidermal cells above roots and from epidermal cells not covering roots. Tissues from at least 30 rice cv PG56 stem sections were harvested each after treatment for 4 h with 150 µM ethephon or with 3% (v/v) H2O2, or with no effector, resulting in a total of six different tissues or treatments analyzed. All microarray hybridizations were performed three times using RNA from three independent biological repeat experiments on GeneChip Rice Genome Arrays (Affymetrix). Data processing and normalization were performed with robust multiarray average (RMA) and MAS 5.0. Probes that were never above background according to the MAS 5.0 detection calls were removed. A set of 33,337 probes was retained. The Linear Models for Microarray (LiMMA) moderated t test was constructed, and P values were corrected for multiple tests using a Benjamini-Hochberg correction. The three replicates were used to calculate an expression value for each gene. For the analysis of the expression profile, the fold change of normalized signals was used. Only fold changes that met the significance criterion of P < 0.001 were considered. The reproducibility of the chip hybridization was confirmed by components analysis of the RMA expression values (see Supplemental Figure 1 online). Components analysis revealed that the main difference between the 18 microarray hybridization assays was attributable to differential expression between the two tissue types and the three different conditions used, indicating high quality of the data. When transcriptomes from epidermal cells above roots and from other epidermal cells isolated from untreated stem sections were compared, 2642 genes (P < 0.001) with a more than twofold difference in expression were identified, supporting the view that these epidermal cell types were clearly distinct at the molecular level. Of these, 1673 genes were found to be expressed at lower levels in epidermal cells above roots and 969 genes were upregulated compared with other epidermal cells.
Ethylene and H2O2 Regulate a Common Subset of 61 Genes in Cells That Undergo Cell Death
Ethylene and H2O2 Regulate ACO1 and EOL1 Involved in Ethylene Biosynthesis Specifically, the transcriptome data pointed to feedback activation of ethylene biosynthesis by ethylene as well as by H2O2. 1-Aminocyclopropane-1-Carboxylate Oxidase1 (ACO1; Os03g0860600) was upregulated, and Ethylene Overproducer-Like1 (EOL1; Os11g0585900) was downregulated in epidermal cells above roots treated with ethylene or H2O2. EOL1 targets defined ACS proteins for proteasomal degradation. Downregulation of EOL1 is therefore predicted to result in stabilization of ACS and, hence, in enhanced formation of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate (ACC). Upregulation of ACO1 is predicted to enhance ethylene synthesis from ACC.
Ethylene and H2O2 Downregulate the ROS Scavenger-Encoding Gene MT2b
Downregulation of MT2b Promotes Epidermal Cell Death
The homozygous MT2b::Tos17 insertion line of rice cv Nipponbare was shown previously to not have detectable MT2b transcripts (Wong et al., 2004
To verify the observation that genetic downregulation of MT2b expression promoted cell death, we next analyzed RNA interference (RNAi) lines of rice cv Kinmaze. To test if epidermal cell death occurred in response to H2O2 in cv Kinmaze, stem sections were treated with H2O2 at concentrations between 0.0001% (v/v) and 0.1% (v/v) (see Supplemental Figure 2 online). The dose–response curve indicated elevated rates of cell death in epidermal cells above adventitious roots at concentrations as low as 0.01% (v/v) H2O2. Thus, cell death was induced by H2O2 in cv Kinmaze with a higher sensitivity compared with cv PG56 (Figure 2). Two homozygous MT2b-RNAi lines were analyzed by RNA gel blots (Figure 7C). MT2b-RNAi line 3 had reduced MT2b transcript levels, while line 5 had about wild-type transcript levels. Stem sections from wild-type and MT2b-RNAi lines 3 and 5 were incubated with or without 150 µM ethephon for 26 h, and cell death rates were determined using Evans Blue staining (Figure 7D). The incubation time was chosen based on the observation that the cell death response in cv Kinmaze occurred after a longer lag phase than that observed in cv PG56 (see Supplemental Table 2 online). Wild-type plants showed a basal cell death rate of 18%, and the transgenic line 5 with no reduction in transcript levels showed a basal cell death rate of 11% (Figure 7D). In comparison, line 3 with reduced MT2b mRNA levels displayed an elevated basal cell death rate of 45%. In the presence of ethylene, cell death rates rose in all three genotypes and was highest in MT2b-RNAi line 3 (Figure 7D). To test if the different sensitivities toward H2O2 observed in the three rice cultivars PG56, Nipponbare, and Kinmaze was due to generally different expression levels of MT2b, RNA gel blot analysis was performed (see Supplemental Figure 3 online). Cultivars Nipponbare and Kinmaze had comparable levels of MT2b mRNA that were higher than that of PG56. Since PG56 was the least sensitive genotype, an inverse relationship between basic MT2b transcript levels and sensitivity to exogenously supplied H2O2 was not obvious. It is conceivable that different uptake rates are responsible for the genotype-specific differences in effectiveness of H2O2. In summary, genetic studies showed that downregulation of MT2b resulted in elevated cell death rates in epidermal cells above adventitious roots, indicating that H2O2 scavenging by MT2b was required to suppress cell death in these epidermal cells when plants were not submerged or exposed to ethylene.
Epidermal Cells above Adventitious Roots Are Morphologically and Molecularly Distinct This study showed that the cuticle covering epidermal cells above adventitious roots is morphologically different from that of other epidermal cells. Hair-like structures were observed only in epidermal cells that did not cover adventitious roots. Furthermore, the two epidermal cell types possessed different transcriptomes, indicating that cell type–specific genetic programs were established prior to induction of cell death. Microarray studies identified 2642 genes that were differentially expressed in epidermal cells above root primordia prior to induction of cell death compared with other epidermal cells. The cell death response was confined to epidermal cells above adventitious root primordia, indicating that these cells were not only morphologically and molecularly distinct but were also physiologically different. Taken together, the data support the idea that epidermal cells above roots were fated for cell death prior to the perception of the cell death signal. This would explain why death occurred in cells above root primordia only, even when the cell death–inducing signals, ethephon or H2O2, were supplied to the whole node. It is conceivable that adventitious roots are involved in this preprogramming, for instance, through the emission of a diffusible signal. Cell-type specification through a signal emitted by root primordia would not only explain why cell death occurs only above root primordia, but also why it occurs above essentially all root primordia.
Ethylene-Induced Epidermal Cell Death Is Mediated by H2O2
Ethylene is involved in the regulation of many cell death responses in plants, including senescence (Lim et al., 2007
Epidermal cell death was observed in rice cultivars of the indica and japonica subgroups, indicating that it is a conserved response. Epidermal cell death was induced by ethylene and by H2O2. Treatment with 1-MCP, an inhibitor of ethylene perception, inhibited ethylene-induced cell death, while the cell death rate in response to H2O2 was unaffected, indicating that H2O2 acts downstream or independently of ethylene. Inhibition of the ROS-producing NADPH oxidase reduced ethylene-induced cell death rates, supporting the conclusion that H2O2 was required for ethylene to promote cell death (Figure 8
). Ethylene and H2O2 were previously shown to also cooperate in guard cell regulation in Arabidopsis (Desikan et al., 2006
Induction of Cell Death by Ethylene or H2O2 Results in the Regulation a Defined Set of Genes In response to the cell death–inducing signals ethylene and H2O2, a defined set of 61 genes was regulated specifically in epidermal cells above adventitious roots. Many of the proteins identified belong to classes that have previously been implicated in stress responses, confirming earlier findings that common signal and execution pathways are employed by plants to meet different biotic and abiotic stresses. Gene products may play a role in induction, execution, or containment of cell death. Interestingly, transcription factors closely related to ANT-like (Os02g0614300), ARF2 (Os01g0670800), ARF3 (Os01g0753500), and Hox9 (Os10g0480200) have been shown to play a role in cell specification and boundary establishment in maize and Arabidopsis, possibly highlighting a need for cell type–specifying processes for local confinement of cell death (Sessions et al., 1997
Synthesis of the Signaling Molecules Ethylene and H2O2 Is Autoamplified
ROS are continuously produced in cells and scavenged by various antioxidative mechanisms. Enzymatic detoxification systems include superoxide dismutase, catalase, and ascorbate peroxidase, which convert H2O2 to H2O and O2 (Jwa et al., 2006
Nonenzymatic control of H2O2 levels is exerted by proteins with ROS scavenging properties, such as MT2b. MT2b belongs to the metallothionein (MT) family of low molecular weight, Cys-rich metal binding proteins (Kägi, 1991
In epidermal rice cells, the MT2b gene was downregulated in response to ethylene and H2O2. Constitutive genetic downregulation of MT2b expression resulted in elevated epidermal cell death rates, establishing a link between MT2b-dependent H2O2 accumulation and epidermal cell death. Since ethylene and H2O2 repressed MT2b expression, it was hypothesized that H2O2 feedback downregulates its scavenger MT2b, thereby autoamplifying H2O2 accumulation. In accordance with the observed MT2b regulation, the MT2b promoter has an antioxidant response element (Rushmore et al., 1991
Treatment with either ethylene or H2O2 resulted in elevated transcript levels of ACO1 and lowered transcript levels of EOL1 in epidermal cells above roots. The specific ethylene biosynthetic pathway consists of two enzymatic steps, formation of ACC by ACC synthase (ACS) and release of ethylene from ACC by ACO (Kende, 1993
ACO1 was previously shown to be upregulated by partial submergence in the internode of deepwater rice plants, indicating that it plays a key role in promoting ethylene synthesis in response to low oxygen stress (Mekhedov and Kende, 1996
In summary, it is proposed that ethylene and H2O2 act as mutually and self-amplifying signal molecules in coregulation of epidermal cell death. A similar function for H2O2, ethylene, and salicylic acid in a self-amplifying feed-forward loop was previously proposed to act in plant–pathogen interactions leading to HR cell death (Overmyer et al., 2003
Sequence of Signaling Events in Planta during Submergence It is conceivable that ethylene can induce cell death via an H2O2-dependent and via an H2O2-independent signaling pathway. This would explain why the number of epidermal patches with detectable H2O2 levels increased significantly after 6 h, while cell death rates rose after 1.5 h in response to ethephon. The existence of H2O2-independent ethylene signaling of cell death is supported by the finding that the cell death rates obtained with H2O2 were not quite as high as those obtained with ethephon. Both signals lead to overlapping responses; that is, both induce cell death and both regulate a common set of genes. For one gene, MT2b, a function in regulating the rate of cell death was shown. MT2b scavenges ROS, and this gene hence ties ethylene signaling to ROS abundance. A model summarizing these findings is shown in Figure 8.
Plant Materials and Growth Conditions Seeds of Oryza sativa indica cultivar Pin Gaew 56 (PG56) were cultivated according to Sauter (1997)
Stem sections were prepared from 18- to 23-week-old plants (Sauter, 1997
Evans Blue Staining
Hydrogen Peroxide and Superoxide Anion Radical Staining
Microarray Analysis
Micorarray slides (GeneChip Rice Genome Array; Affymetrix) containing 51,279 transcripts representing two rice cultivars, with A graphic overview of differential gene expression is shown in an MA plot for epidermal cells above roots versus control epidermal cells (see Supplemental Figure 4 online). The MA plot indicates the difference in log expression values (Minus) of the two tissue types [M = (log(epidermal cells above root) – log(control epidermal cells)] plotted against the sum (Add) of the log expression values divided by 2 [A = {log(epidermal cells above roots) + log(control epidermal cells)}/2] with the x axis representing the expression level and the y axis representing differential gene expression at P < 0.05.
RT-PCR
RNA Gel Blot Analysis
Statistical Analysis The reproducibility of the chip hybridization in microarray analysis was confirmed by components analysis of the RMA expression values (see Supplemental Figure 1 online). Components analysis revealed that the main difference between the 18 microarray hybridization assays was attributable to differential expression between the two tissue types and the three different conditions, confirming high quality of the data.
Accession Numbers
Supplemental Data
We thank Hann Ling Wong and Ko Shimamoto (Plant Molecular Genetics, Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Ikoma, Nara, Japan) for generously providing MT2b-RNAi lines and Akio Miyao (Genome Research Centre, Ibaraki, Japan) for kindly supplying the MT2b::Tos17 insertion line NE7013.
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: Margret Sauter (msauter{at}bot.uni-kiel.de).
[W] Online version contains Web-only data. www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.108.061887 Received July 3, 2008; Revision received December 17, 2008. accepted December 23, 2008.
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