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FORGETTER2 protein phosphatase and phospholipase D modulate heat stress memory in Arabidopsis
(2020)
Plants can mitigate environmental stress conditions through acclimation. In the case of fluctuating stress conditions such as high temperatures, maintaining a stress memory enables a more efficient response upon recurring stress. In a genetic screen forArabidopsis thalianamutants impaired in the memory of heat stress (HS) we have isolated theFORGETTER2(FGT2) gene, which encodes a type 2C protein phosphatase (PP2C) of the D-clade.Fgt2mutants acquire thermotolerance normally; however, they are defective in the memory of HS. FGT2 interacts with phospholipase D alpha 2 (PLD alpha 2), which is involved in the metabolism of membrane phospholipids and is also required for HS memory. In summary, we have uncovered a previously unknown component of HS memory and identified the FGT2 protein phosphatase and PLD alpha 2 as crucial players, suggesting that phosphatidic acid-dependent signaling or membrane composition dynamics underlie HS memory.
Fruits exhibit a vast array of different 3D shapes, from simple spheres and cylinders to more complex curved forms; however, the mechanism by which growth is oriented and coordinated to generate this diversity of forms is unclear. Here, we compare the growth patterns and orientations for two very different fruit shapes in the Brassicaceae: the heart-shaped Capsella rubella silicle and the near-cylindrical Arabidopsis thaliana silique. We show, through a combination of clonal and morphological analyses, that the different shapes involve different patterns of anisotropic growth during three phases. These experimental data can be accounted for by a tissue level model in which specified growth rates vary in space and time and are oriented by a proximodistal polarity field. The resulting tissue conflicts lead to deformation of the tissue as it grows. The model allows us to identify tissue-specific and temporally specific activities required to obtain the individual shapes. One such activity may be provided by the valve-identity gene FRUITFULL, which we show through comparative mutant analysis to modulate fruit shape during post-fertilisation growth of both species. Simple modulations of the model presented here can also broadly account for the variety of shapes in other Brassicaceae species, thus providing a simplified framework for fruit development and shape diversity.
The multidrug and toxic compounds extrusion (MATE) family includes hundreds of functionally uncharacterised proteins from bacteria and all eukaryotic kingdoms except the animal kingdom, that function as drug/toxin::Na<sup>+ or H<sup>+ antiporters. In Arabidopsis thaliana the MATE family comprises 56 members, one of which is NIC2 (Novel Ion Carrier 2). Using heterologous expression systems including Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and the homologous expression system of Arabidopsis thaliana, the functional characterisation of NIC2 was performed. It has been demonstrated that NIC2 confers resistance of E. coli towards the chemically diverse compounds such as tetraethylammonium chloride (TEACl), tetramethylammonium chloride (TMACl) and a toxic analogue of indole-3-acetic acid, 5-fluoro-indole-acetic acid (F-IAA). Therefore, NIC2 may be able to transport a broad range of drug and toxic compounds. In wild-type yeast the expression of NIC2 increased the tolerance towards lithium and sodium, but not towards potassium and calcium. In A. thaliana, the overexpression of NIC2 led to strong phenotypic changes. Under normal growth condtions overexpression caused an extremely bushy phenotype with no apical dominance but an enhanced number of lateral flowering shoots. The amount of rossette leaves and flowers with accompanying siliques were also much higher than in wild-type plants and the senescence occurred earlier in the transgenic plants. In contrast, RNA interference (RNAi) used to silence NIC2 expression, induced early flower stalk development and flowering compared with wild-type plants. In additon, the main flower stalks were not able to grow vertically, but instead had a strong tendency to bend towards the ground. While NIC2 RNAi seedlings produced many lateral roots outgrowing from the primary root and the root-shoot junction, NIC2 overexpression seedlings displayed longer primary roots that were characterised by a 2 to 4 h delay in the gravitropic response. In addition, these lines exhibited an enhanced resistance to exogenously applied auxins, i.e. indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and indole-3-butyric acid (IBA) when compared with the wild-type roots. Based on these results, it is suggested that the NIC2 overexpression and NIC2 RNAi phenotypes were due to decreased or increased levels of auxin, respectively. The ProNIC2:GUS fusion gene revealed that NIC2 is expressed in the stele of the elongation zone, in the lateral root cap, in new lateral root primordia, and in pericycle cells of the root system. In the vascular tissue of rosette leaves and inflorescence stems, the expression was observed in the xylem parenchyma cells, while in siliques it was also in vascular tissue, but as well in the dehiscence and abscission zones. The organ- and tissue-specific expression sites of NIC2 correlate with the sites of auxin action in mature Arabidopsis plants. Further experiments using ProNIC2:GUS indicated that NIC2 is an auxin-inducible gene. Additionally, during the gravitropic response when an endogenous auxin gradient across the root tip forms, the GUS activity pattern of the ProNIC2:GUS fusion gene markedly changed at the upper side of the root tip, while at the lower side stayed unchanged. Finally, at the subcellular level NIC2-GFP fusion protein localised in the peroxisomes of Nicotana tabacum BY2 protoplasts. Considering the experimental results, it is proposed that the hypothetical function of NIC2 is the efflux transport which takes part in the auxin homeostasis in plant tissues probably by removing auxin conjugates from the cytoplasm into peroxisomes.
Polyadenylation is a decisive 3’ end processing step during the maturation of pre-mRNAs. The length of the poly(A) tail has an impact on mRNA stability, localization and translatability. Accordingly, many eukaryotic organisms encode several copies of canonical poly(A) polymerases (cPAPs). The disruption of cPAPs in mammals results in lethality. In plants, reduced cPAP activity is non-lethal. Arabidopsis encodes three nuclear cPAPs, PAPS1, PAPS2 and PAPS4, which are constitutively expressed throughout the plant. Recently, the detailed analysis of Arabidopsis paps1 mutants revealed a subset of genes that is preferentially polyadenylated by the cPAP isoform PAPS1 (Vi et al. 2013). Thus, the specialization of cPAPs might allow the regulation of different sets of genes in order to optimally face developmental or environmental challenges.
To gain insights into the cPAP-based gene regulation in plants, the phenotypes of Arabidopsis cPAPs mutants under different conditions are characterized in detail in the following work. An involvement of all three cPAPs in flowering time regulation and stress response regulation is shown. While paps1 knockdown mutants flower early, paps4 and paps2 paps4 knockout mutants exhibit a moderate late-flowering phenotype. PAPS1 promotes the expression of the major flowering inhibitor FLC, supposedly by specific polyadenylation of an FLC activator. PAPS2 and PAPS4 exhibit partially overlapping functions and ensure timely flowering by repressing FLC and at least one other unidentified flowering inhibitor. The latter two cPAPs act in a novel regulatory pathway downstream of the autonomous pathway component FCA and act independently from the polyadenylation factors and flowering time regulators CstF64 and FY. Moreover, PAPS1 and PAPS2/PAPS4 are implicated in different stress response pathways in Arabidopsis. Reduced activity of the poly(A) polymerase PAPS1 results in enhanced resistance to osmotic and oxidative stress. Simultaneously, paps1 mutants are cold-sensitive. In contrast, PAPS2/PAPS4 are not involved in the regulation of osmotic or cold stress, but paps2 paps4 loss-of-function mutants exhibit enhanced sensitivity to oxidative stress provoked in the chloroplast. Thus, both PAPS1 and PAPS2/PAPS4 are required to maintain a balanced redox state in plants. PAPS1 seems to fulfil this function in concert with CPSF30, a polyadenylation factor that regulates alternative polyadenylation and tolerance to oxidative stress.
The individual paps mutant phenotypes and the cPAP-specific genetic interactions support the model of cPAP-dependent polyadenylation of selected mRNAs. The high similarity of the polyadenylation machineries in yeast, mammals and plants suggests that similar regulatory mechanisms might be present in other organism groups. The cPAP-dependent developmental and physiological pathways identified in this work allow the design of targeted experiments to better understand the ecological and molecular context underlying cPAP-specialization.
Single molecule RNA fluorescent in situ hybridization (smFISH) enables gene transcription to be assessed at the cellular level. In this point of view article, we describe our recent smFISH research in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and discuss how this technique could further knowledge of plant gene transcription in the future.
BackgroundPachycladon cheesemanii is a close relative of Arabidopsis thaliana and is an allotetraploid perennial herb which is widespread in the South Island of New Zealand. It grows at altitudes of up to 1000m where it is subject to relatively high levels of ultraviolet (UV)-B radiation. To gain first insights into how Pachycladon copes with UV-B stress, we sequenced its genome and compared the UV-B tolerance of two Pachycladon accessions with those of two A. thaliana accessions from different altitudes.ResultsA high-quality draft genome of P. cheesemanii was assembled with a high percentage of conserved single-copy plant orthologs. Synteny analysis with genomes from other species of the Brassicaceae family found a close phylogenetic relationship of P. cheesemanii with Boechera stricta from Brassicaceae lineage I. While UV-B radiation caused a greater growth reduction in the A. thaliana accessions than in the P. cheesemanii accessions, growth was not reduced in one P. cheesemanii accession. The homologues of A. thaliana UV-B radiation response genes were duplicated in P. cheesemanii, and an expression analysis of those genes indicated that the tolerance mechanism in P. cheesemanii appears to differ from that in A. thaliana.ConclusionAlthough the P. cheesemanii genome shows close similarity with that of A. thaliana, it appears to have evolved novel strategies allowing the plant to tolerate relatively high UV-B radiation.
Membranes of eukaryotic cells contain high lipid-order sterol-rich domains that are thought to mediate temporal and spatial organization of cellular processes. Sterols are crucial for execution of cytokinesis, the last stage of cell division, in diverse eukaryotes. The cell plate of higher-plant cells is the membrane structure that separates daughter cells during somatic cytokinesis. Cell-plate formation in Arabidopsis relies on sterol- and DYNAMIN-RELATED PROTEIN1A (DRP1A)-dependent endocytosis. However, functional relationships between lipid membrane order or lipid packing and endocytic machinery components during eukaryotic cytokinesis have not been elucidated. Using ratiometric live imaging of lipid order-sensitive fluorescent probes, we show that the cell plate of Arabidopsis thaliana represents a dynamic, high lipid-order membrane domain. The cell-plate lipid order was found to be sensitive to pharmacological and genetic alterations of sterol composition. Sterols co-localize with DRP1A at the cell plate, and DRP1A accumulates in detergent-resistant membrane fractions. Modifications of sterol concentration or composition reduce cell-plate membrane order and affect DRP1A localization. Strikingly, DRP1A function itself is essential for high lipid order at the cell plate. Our findings provide evidence that the cell plate represents a high lipid-order domain, and pave the way to explore potential feedback between lipid order and function of dynamin-related proteins during cytokinesis.
In a very simplified view, the plant leaf growth can be reduced to two processes, cell division and cell expansion, accompanied by expansion of their surrounding cell walls. The vacuole, as being the largest compartment of the plant cell, plays a major role in controlling the water balance of the plant. This is achieved by regulating the osmotic pressure, through import and export of solutes over the vacuolar membrane (the tonoplast) and by controlling the water channels, the aquaporins. Together with the control of cell wall relaxation, vacuolar osmotic pressure regulation is thought to play an important role in cell expansion, directly by providing cell volume and indirectly by providing ion and pH homestasis for the cytosoplasm. In this thesis the role of tonoplast protein coding genes in cell expansion in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana is studied and genes which play a putative role in growth are identified. Since there is, to date, no clearly identified protein localization signal for the tonoplast, there is no possibility to perform genome-wide prediction of proteins localized to this compartment. Thus, a series of recent proteomic studies of the tonoplast were used to compile a list of cross-membrane tonoplast protein coding genes (117 genes), and other growth-related genes from notably the growth regulating factor (GRF) and expansin families were included (26 genes). For these genes a platform for high-throughput reverse transcription quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) was developed by selecting specific primer pairs. To this end, a software tool (called QuantPrime, see http://www.quantprime.de) was developed that automatically designs such primers and tests their specificity in silico against whole transcriptomes and genomes, to avoid cross-hybridizations causing unspecific amplification. The RT-qPCR platform was used in an expression study in order to identify candidate growth related genes. Here, a growth-associative spatio-temporal leaf sampling strategy was used, targeting growing regions at high expansion developmental stages and comparing them to samples taken from non-expanding regions or stages of low expansion. Candidate growth related genes were identified after applying a template-based scoring analysis on the expression data, ranking the genes according to their association with leaf expansion. To analyze the functional involvement of these genes in leaf growth on a macroscopic scale, knockout mutants of the candidate growth related genes were screened for growth phenotypes. To this end, a system for non-invasive automated leaf growth phenotyping was established, based on a commercially available image capture and analysis system. A software package was developed for detailed developmental stage annotation of the images captured with the system, and an analysis pipeline was constructed for automated data pre-processing and statistical testing, including modeling and graph generation, for various growth-related phenotypes. Using this system, 24 knockout mutant lines were analyzed, and significant growth phenotypes were found for five different genes.
In silico identification of genes regulated by abscisic acid in Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh.
(2005)
Abscisic acid (ABA) is a major plant hormone that plays an important role during plant growth and development. During vegetative growth ABA mediates (in part) responses to various environmental stresses such as cold, drought and high salinity. The response triggered by ABA includes changes in the transcript level of genes involved in stress tolerance. The aim of this project was the In silico identification of genes putatively regulated by ABA in A. thaliana. In silico predictions were combined with experimental data in order to evaluate the reliability of computational predictions. Taking advantage of the genome sequence of A. thaliana publicly available since 2000, 1 kb upstream sequences were screened for combinations of cis-elements known to be involved in the regulation of ABA-responsive genes. It was found that around 10 to 20 percent of the genes of A. thaliana might be regulated by ABA. Further analyses of the predictions revealed that certain combinations of cis-elements that confer ABA-responsiveness were significantly over-represented compared with results in random sequences and with random expectations. In addition, it was observed that other combinations that confer ABA-responsiveness in monocotyledonous species might not be functional in A. thaliana. It is proposed that ABA-responsive genes in A. thaliana show pairs of ABRE (abscisic acid responsive element) with MYB binding sites, DRE (dehydration responsive element) or with itself. The analysis of the distances between pairs of cis-elements suggested that pairs of ABREs are bound by homodimers of ABRE binding proteins. In contrast, pairs between MYB binding sites and ABRE, or DRE and ABRE showed a distance between cis-elements that suggested that the binding proteins interact through protein complexes and not directly. The comparison of computational predictions with experimental data confirmed that the regulatory mechanisms leading to the induction or repression of genes by ABA is very incompletely understood. It became evident that besides the cis-elements proposed in this study to be present in ABA-responsive genes, other known and unknown cis-elements might play an important role in the transcriptional regulation of ABA-responsive genes. For example, auxin-related cis elements, or the cis-elements recognized by the NAM-family of transcription factors (Non-Apical meristem). This work documents the use of computational and experimental approaches to analyse possible interactions between cis-elements involved in the regulation of ABA-responsive genes. The computational predictions allowed the distinction between putatively relevant combinations of cis-elements from irrelevant combinations of cis-elements in ABA-responsive genes. The comparison with experimental data allowed to identify certain cis-elements that have not been previously associated to the ABA-mediated transcriptional regulation, but that might be present in ABA-responsive genes (e.g. auxin responsive elements). Moreover, the efforts to unravel the gene regulatory network associated with the ABA-signalling pathway revealed that NAM-transcription factors and their corresponding binding sequences are important components of this network.
‘Heterosis’ is a term used in genetics and breeding referring to hybrid vigour or the superiority of hybrids over their parents in terms of traits such as size, growth rate, biomass, fertility, yield, nutrient content, disease resistance or tolerance to abiotic and abiotic stress. Parental plants which are two different inbred (pure) lines that have desired traits are crossed to obtain hybrids. Maximum heterosis is observed in the first generation (F1) of crosses. Heterosis has been utilised in plant and animal breeding programs for at least 90 years: by the end of the 21st century, 65% of worldwide maize production was hybrid-based. Generally, it is believed that an understanding of the molecular basis of heterosis will allow the creation of new superior genotypes which could either be used directly as F1 hybrids or form the basis for the future breeding selection programmes. Two selected accessions of a research model plant Arabidopsis thaliana (thale cress) were crossed to obtain hybrids. These typically exhibited a 60-80% increase of biomass when compared to the average weight of both parents. This PhD project focused on investigating the role of selected regulatory genes given their potentially key involvement in heterosis. In the first part of the project, the most appropriate developmental stage for this heterosis study was determined by metabolite level measurements and growth observations in parents and hybrids. At the selected stage, around 60 candidate regulatory genes (i.e. differentially expressed in hybrids when compared to parents) were identified. Of these, the majority were transcription factors, genes that coordinate the expression of other genes. Subsequent expression analyses of the candidate genes in biomass-heterotic hybrids of other Arabidopsis accessions revealed a differential expression in a gene subset, highlighting their relevance for heterosis. Moreover, a fraction of the candidate regulatory genes were found within DNA regions closely linked to the genes that underlie the biomass or growth heterosis. Additional analyses to validate the role of selected candidate regulatory genes in heterosis appeared insufficient to establish their role in heterosis. This uncovered a need for using novel approaches as discussed in the thesis. Taken together, the work provided an insight into studies on the molecular mechanisms underlying heterosis. Although studies on heterosis date back to more than one hundred years, this project as many others revealed that more investigations will be needed to uncover this phenomenon.