Literature DB >> 21778177

Members of the gibberellin receptor gene family GID1 (GIBBERELLIN INSENSITIVE DWARF1) play distinct roles during Lepidium sativum and Arabidopsis thaliana seed germination.

Antje Voegele1, Ada Linkies, Kerstin Müller, Gerhard Leubner-Metzger.   

Abstract

Germination of endospermic seeds is partly regulated by the micropylar endosperm, which acts as constraint to radicle protrusion. Gibberellin (GA) signalling pathways control coat-dormancy release, endosperm weakening, and organ expansion during seed germination. Three GIBBERELLIN INSENSITIVE DWARF1 (GID1) GA receptors are known in Arabidopsis thaliana: GID1a, GID1b, and GID1c. Molecular phylogenetic analysis of angiosperm GID1s reveals that they cluster into two eudicot (GID1ac, GID1b) groups and one monocot group. Eudicots have at least one gene from each of the two groups, indicating that the different GID1 receptors fulfil distinct roles during plant development. A comparative Brassicaceae approach was used, in which gid1 mutant and whole-seed transcript analyses in Arabidopsis were combined with seed-tissue-specific analyses of its close relative Lepidium sativum (garden cress), for which three GID1 orthologues were cloned. GA signalling via the GID1ac receptors is required for Arabidopsis seed germination, GID1b cannot compensate for the impaired germination of the gid1agid1c mutant. Transcript expression patterns differed temporarily, spatially, and hormonally, with GID1b being distinct from GID1ac in both species. Endosperm weakening is mediated, at least in part, through GA-induced genes encoding cell-wall-modifying proteins. A suppression subtraction hybridization (SSH) cDNA library enriched for sequences that are highly expressed during early germination in the micropylar endosperm contained expansins and xyloglucan endo-transglycosylases/hydrolases (XTHs). Their transcript expression patterns in both species strongly suggest that they are regulated by distinct GID1-mediated GA signalling pathways. The GID1ac and GID1b pathways seem to fulfil distinct regulatory roles during Brassicaceae seed germination and seem to control their downstream targets distinctly.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21778177      PMCID: PMC3193015          DOI: 10.1093/jxb/err214

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Bot        ISSN: 0022-0957            Impact factor:   6.992


Introduction

Germination of endospermic seeds is a complex developmental process. It starts with water uptake by imbibition of the dry seed and ends when the radicle has protruded through all seed covering layers (Bewley, 1997). In mature seeds of most angiosperm species, the embryo is encased by the endosperm and testa (seed coat) as covering layers (Linkies ). The endosperm is therefore localized between the embryo and the testa and, in most mature seeds, the endosperm is a living tissue. Traditionally the endosperm was recognized primarily as a nutrient source during seed development and seedling growth (Lopes and Larkins, 1993). However, evidence has accumulated over time (Linkies ) that shows that the endosperm in mature seeds, in particular the micropylar endosperm covering the radicle also plays a major role in regulating germination timing (Ni and Bradford, 1993; Bewley, 1997; Leubner-Metzger, 2003; Linkies ). For the completion of germination, the tissue resistance of the micropylar endosperm must be overcome by the growth potential of the radicle. For several species it has been shown that, during germination, weakening of the micropylar endosperm takes place, which decreases the threshold of the force needed for radicle protrusion through the endosperm layer to complete germination. This is the case in species with a thick endosperm, such as tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum), tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), and coffee (Coffea arabica) and also for seeds with a thin endosperm, such as lettuce (Lactuca sativa) and garden cress (Lepidium sativum) (Ni and Bradford, 1993; Bewley, 1997; Toorop ; Leubner-Metzger, 2003; da Silva ; Müller ). This supports the view that the endosperm, in particular the micropylar endosperm, participates in regulating germination timing. Seed germination is inhibited by abscisic acid (ABA) and promoted by gibberellins (GA) (Kucera ). It has been shown that the induction of endosperm weakening requires an embryo signal which consists, at least in part, of bioactive GA or GA-biosynthesis precursors (Bewley, 1997; Ogawa ). Treatment of ‘isolated micropylar endosperm caps’ with GA can replace the embryo signal to induce the onset and accelerate L. sativum endosperm weakening (Müller ). ABA-insensitive mutants like Arabidopsis thaliana (Arabidopsis) abi3 and ABA-deficient mutants like Arabidopsis aba1-1 and tomato sitiens show reduced seed dormancy (Groot and Karssen, 1992; Nambara ; Bassel ). Inhibition of endosperm weakening by ABA has been shown for L. sativum and other seeds (Bewley, 1997; Müller ; Linkies ). Contrary to that, high GA contents and sensitivities lead to dormancy release and promotion of the germination process. GA-deficient mutants, such as ga1-3 (Arabidopsis) and gib1 (tomato), need an external supply of GA to induce and complete germination (Koornneef and Veen, 1980; Groot ). Endogenous GA is perceived by the GA receptors of the GID1 (GIBBERELLIN INSENSITIVE DWARF1) family, first identified in rice (OsGID1, Oryza sativa) (Ueguchi-Tanaka ). In Arabidopsis, three GID1-type GA receptors are known: AtGID1a, AtGID1b, and AtGID1c. After binding to its receptor, the GA–GID1 complex interacts with DELLA proteins which are negative regulators of the GA signalling pathway (Richards ). The F-Box protein SLY1/GID2, part of the SCFSLY1/GID2 E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, recognizes the GA–GID1–DELLA complex and targets the DELLA repressors for degradation through the 26S proteasome. This leads to a de-repression and allows transcription of GA-responsive genes (Ueguchi-Tanaka ; Yamaguchi, 2008). GA treatment of the GA-deficient Arabidopsis mutant ga1-3 results in the disappearance of the DELLA protein RGL2 (Tyler ) for which SLY1 is required (Ariizumi ). GA-insensitive Arabidopsis mutants, for example, gid1-receptor triple and sly1-10 knockouts, and gain-of-function DELLA-mutants such as gai, show impaired germination (Steber ; McGinnis ; Dill ; Griffiths ; Iuchi ; Willige ). By contrast, loss-of-function DELLA-mutants such as gai-t6 show enhanced germination (Kucera ). L. sativum endosperm weakening and its promotion by GA as a replacement for the embryo signal (Müller ) is thought to be achieved by cell-wall-modifications. The plant cell wall is a highly complex composite composed mainly of cellulose microfibrils embedded in a matrix of hemicellulosic and pectic polysaccharides (Cosgrove, 2005; Knox, 2008). Cell expansion growth is driven by water uptake and is restricted by the cell wall, whose structural properties and mechanical strength determine the shape, rate, and direction of growth of individual cells as well as of whole tissues (Cosgrove, 2005; Schopfer, 2006). Cell wall loosening is therefore an important process in all stages of plant development requiring elongation growth or tissue weakening, as it is the case during seed germination, where radicle growth and endosperm weakening take place. Some cell-wall modifying proteins are known to accumulate in a germination-specific and GA-induced manner. For endospermic Solanaceae seeds, these include β-1,3-glucanase (Leubner-Metzger ; Petruzzelli ) and β-1,4-mannanase (Bewley, 1997; Nonogaki ). For endospermic Brassicaceae seeds, differential regulation of β-1,4-mannanase in the L. sativum micropylar endosperm and radical tissue has been shown by Morris and Arabidopsis β-1,4-mannanase knockout mutants have a germination phenotype (Iglesias-Fernandez ). Isoforms of both enzymes accumulate specifically in the micropylar endosperm, covering the radicle tissue, but not in the non-micropylar endosperm. One of the most important stabilizing and tension-bearing interactions in the primary cell wall of eudicots is between cellulose microfibrils and the hemicellulose xyloglucan, on which xyloglucan endo-transglycosylases/hydrolases (XTHs) can act by transglycosylation (cleaving and reconnecting) or hydrolysis (Rose ). Another group of cell-wall-modifying proteins are expansins, thought to act by loosening of non-covalent bonds (Sampedro and Cosgrove, 2005). Both XTHs and expansins are induced by GA in the micropylar endosperm during tomato seed germination and proposed to facilitate endosperm weakening (Chen and Bradford, 2000; Chen ). The bigger seeds of L. sativum, a close relative of Arabidopsis, were used to construct an endosperm-specific subtractive suppression hybridization (SSH) cDNA library to clone candidate genes involved in the early germination processes. Genes encoding cell-wall-modifying proteins including XTHs and expansins were over-represented in this library. Since GA is known to promote endosperm weakening, this prompted us to investigate the transcript co-expression pattern of the GA receptors GID1a, b, and c and putative cell-wall-modifying genes. A combined approach was carried out with Arabidopsis mutants and seed and seed-tissue-specific analysis of Arabidopsis and L. sativum transcript expression. Our work shows that the eudicot GID1 receptors group into a GID1ac and a GID1b group, which, during seed germination, are regulated differentially and suggest two separate, but partially redundant pathways for GA responsiveness that have distinct downstream cell-wall-loosening genes as targets.

Materials and methods

Plant materials and germination assays

Mature seeds of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heyhn. were harvested and stored for after-ripening at 25 °C, 51–54% relative humidity. The seeds were incubated on 1/10 Murashige-Skoog salts (medium) pH 7.0, solidified with 1% (w/v) agar-agar in continuous white light (c. 100 μmol s−1 m−2) at 24 °C. Homozygous gid1 mutant seeds were kindly provided by Professor Dr Claus Schwechheimer, ZMBP, Tübingen, Germany (Willige ) and by Shiori Ota, Bio Resource Centre RIKEN, Iberaki, Japan (Iuchi ). Testa rupture and endosperm rupture were scored using a binocular microscope as described by (Müller . After-ripened seeds of Lepidium sativum FR14 (Juliwa, Germany) were incubated in Petri dishes on two layers of filter paper with 6 ml 1/10 Murashige-Skoog salts medium in the light. Where indicated, gibberellin A4+7 (GA4+7; Duchefa, The Netherlands) or cis-S(+)-abscisic acid (ABA; Duchefa) were added in the concentrations indicated.

RNA extraction and creation of the subtractive cDNA library

Total RNA from endosperm caps dissected from seeds after 8 h and 18 h imbibition was prepared as described by Cadman . A Suppression Subtraction Hybridization (SSH) library was constructed using the PCR Select™ cDNA Subtraction kit (Clontech, USA) as described in Linkies . cDNA from micropylar endosperm dissected after 8 h imbibition of the whole seed was used as tester, subtracted with cDNA from endosperm caps dissected after 18 h imbibition as a driver. The resulting cDNA fragments were cloned in pUC19 and pCR®4-TOPO, multiplied in E. coli Top10 and sequenced (GATC, Germany). 184 cDNAs were sequenced and have been deposited as ESTs to GenBank, their accession numbers are listed in Supplementary Table S2 at JXB online.

Cloning of cDNA sequences from L. sativum

First strand cDNA was synthesized in 50 μl reactions from 5 μg total RNA from L. sativum FR14 seedlings, 2.5 μM oligo(dT)16, 2.5 μM random hexamers, using the Superscript III reverse transcriptase kit (Invitrogen, Germany) according to its instructions. PCR was performed using primers designed based on known A. thaliana sequences. At least three independent cDNA clones were sequenced to verify L. sativum sequences.

Analyses of transcript levels by quantitative real-time RT-PCR (qRT-PCR)

Total RNA was extracted from 200 L. sativum radicles and 1000 micropylar endosperm caps which were dissected from seeds at the times indicated, frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at –20 °C. RNA extraction of Arabidopsis was done using 200 whole seeds of WT or the gid1 mutants. RNA extraction was carried out as described by Chang . Four biological replicate RNA samples of each time point and treatment were used for downstream applications. qRT-PCR was performed with first-strand cDNAs as templates that were obtained using the Superscript III reverse transcriptase kit (Invitrogen, Germany) with 0.3 nmol random 15-mers for reverse transcription of 5 μg RNA. Aliquots of 1 μl were then used for each quantitative RT-PCR reaction. Absolute QPCR SYBR Green ROX Mix (ABgene; UK) was used according to its instructions for quantification with the ABI PRISM 7300 Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems, UK). A melting curve confirmed single product amplification. Analysis of the raw data and calculation of the efficiency (E) for every single well was done using the software PCR miner (Zhao and Fernald, 2005). Relative expression for each well was calculated as (1+E)–CT. Expression data for Arabidopsis and L. sativum was normalized by using the geometric mean (geomean) of validated housekeeping genes. Mean values ±SE shown were calculated from four biological replicates. Primers were designed using the bioinformatics software Geneious 4.7.5 (Biomatters, New Zealand) and are listed in Supplementary Table S3 at JXB online.

Histochemical GUS-staining and visualization

pAtGID1a::AtGID1a-GUS, pAtGID1b::AtGID1b-GUS, and pAtGID1c::AtGID1c-GUS reporter lines were kindly provided by Masatoshi Nakajima, University of Tokyo, Japan (Suzuki ). Seeds were placed in Petri dishes on two layers of filter paper with 1/10 Murashige-Skoog (MS) salts and imbibed for 20 h at 24 °C in continuous white light (c. 100 μmol s−1 m−2). Where indicated, 5 μM ABA or 10 μM GA4+7 were added to the medium. 10 seeds with ruptured testa but intact endosperm were dissected into the embryo and the seed ‘coats’ (testa plus endosperm). Tissue fixation was done with 90% acetone for 20 min at room temperature. Afterwards, the seed tissues were incubated in 100 μl staining solution (50 mM phosphate-buffer (pH 7.2), 0.2% (v:v) Triton X-100, 10 mM EDTA (pH 8.0), and 2 mM X-gluc). Images were taken after 20 h of staining with the software IM1000 (Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar, Germany) and a Leica DCF480 digital camera attached to a Leica 12.5 binocular microscope.

Tetrazolium assay testing embryo viability

Testa and endosperm of imbibed seeds were removed and embryos were stained according to the procedure described by Graeber in 1% (w/v) 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride (Sigma, Germany) in phosphate buffer (pH 7) at room temperature for the time indicated. As negative controls, heat-killed seeds (dry seeds were incubated at 100 °C for 1 h) were used; wild-type seed served as positive controls. Two biological replicates of several seeds each were analysed per line.

Sequence alignments and molecular phylogenetic analysis

For sequence analysis, the bioinformatics software Geneious 4.7.5 (Biomatters, New Zealand) was used. Geneious Align was used for sequence alignments, with the BLOSUM62 matrix for alignments of protein sequences. Geneious Tree Builder was used for construction of the phylogenetic tree using the sequences of Supplemenatry Table S1 at JXB online.

Results

Three putative orthologues of the Arabidopsis GID1a, GID1b, and GID1c genes are expressed in L. sativum

Three L. sativum GID1 cDNAs were cloned and analysed, including the complete coding sequences (cds) and the 5′ and 3′ untranslated regions (UTRs). Based on detailed analysis (Fig. 1; see Supplementary Figs S1 and S2 at JXB online), these sequences of L. sativum were named LesaGID1a, LesaGID1b, and LesaGID1c according to the putative orthologous AtGID1a, AtGID1b, and AtGID1c genes of Arabidopsis, respectively, and have been submitted to GenBank (accession numbers HQ003455, HQ003456, HQ003457). Comparative sequence analysis between the cds of GID1a, GID1b, and GID1c of Arabidopsis and L. sativum showed 91.4, 89.4, and 91% pairwise identity (see Supplementary Fig. S1 at JXB online), which are values similar to known orthologues of L. sativum and Arabidopsis (Linkies , 2010; Graeber ). Pairwise comparative analysis on amino acid level showed that the putative GID1a, GID1b, and GID1c orthologous proteins of L. sativum and Arabidopsis displayed 96.2, 92.8, and 94.8% pairwise identity, respectively. In most cases, the observed amino acid changes did not affect protein hydrophobicity or polarity (see Supplementary Fig. S2 at JXB online). GID1 belongs to the family of hormone-sensitive lipases which are characterized by two conserved amino acid motifs: HGG and GXSXG (Østerlund, 2001; Hirano ). It was demonstrated that all three Arabidopsis GID1s bind GA and interact with DELLA proteins (Nakajima ; Suzuki ). From the crystal structures of the GA–GID1 and GA–GID1–DELLA complexes (Murase ; Shimada ) conserved amino acids for GA binding and DELLA repressor binding are known (for details see Supplementary Fig. S2 at JXB online). These conserved amino acids, as well as the HGG and GXSXG motifs are all present at the expected positions in the predicted GID1 proteins of L. sativum (see Supplementary Fig. S2 at JXB online). It is therefore proposed that LesaGID1a, LesaGID1b, and LesaGID1c are fully functional GA receptors.
Fig. 1.

Molecular phylogenetic analysis of the angiosperm GID1 receptor family reveals individual clustering into three groups: eudicot GID1ac, eudicot GID1b, monocot GID1. Translated protein sequences of 37 available GID1 full-length or near full-length cDNA sequences from different species were aligned into a phylogenetic unrooted tree as described in the methods. A. cepa=Allium cepa; A. deliciosa=Actinidia deliciosa; A. formosa=Aquilegia formosa; A. pubescens=Aquilegia pubescens; At=Arabidopsis thaliana; Lesa=Lepidium sativum; C. maxima=Cucurbita maxima; G. hirsutum=Gossypium hirsutum; G. max=Glycine max; H. vulgare=Hordeum vulgare; M. truncatula=Medicago truncatula; Os=Oryza sativa; P. trichocarpa=Populus trichocarpa; R. communis=Ricinus communis; S. bicolor=Sorghum bicolor; S. lycopersicum=Solanum lycopersicum; S. officinarum=Saccharum officinarum; T. aestivum=Triticum aestivum; V. vinifera=Vitis vinifera; Z. mays=Zea mays. Sequence accession numbers are listed in Supplementary Table S1 at JXB online. Note that, in addition to tomato, various other asterids (Lactuca and Helianthus species) have at least one GID1ac and one GID1b gene. They are listed in Supplementary Table S1 at JXB online, but were not included in the phylogeny as no full-length sequences are available. (This figure is available in colour at JXB online.)

Molecular phylogenetic analysis of the angiosperm GID1 receptor family reveals individual clustering into three groups: eudicot GID1ac, eudicot GID1b, monocot GID1. Translated protein sequences of 37 available GID1 full-length or near full-length cDNA sequences from different species were aligned into a phylogenetic unrooted tree as described in the methods. A. cepa=Allium cepa; A. deliciosa=Actinidia deliciosa; A. formosa=Aquilegia formosa; A. pubescens=Aquilegia pubescens; At=Arabidopsis thaliana; Lesa=Lepidium sativum; C. maxima=Cucurbita maxima; G. hirsutum=Gossypium hirsutum; G. max=Glycine max; H. vulgare=Hordeum vulgare; M. truncatula=Medicago truncatula; Os=Oryza sativa; P. trichocarpa=Populus trichocarpa; R. communis=Ricinus communis; S. bicolor=Sorghum bicolor; S. lycopersicum=Solanum lycopersicum; S. officinarum=Saccharum officinarum; T. aestivum=Triticum aestivum; V. vinifera=Vitis vinifera; Z. mays=Zea mays. Sequence accession numbers are listed in Supplementary Table S1 at JXB online. Note that, in addition to tomato, various other asterids (Lactuca and Helianthus species) have at least one GID1ac and one GID1b gene. They are listed in Supplementary Table S1 at JXB online, but were not included in the phylogeny as no full-length sequences are available. (This figure is available in colour at JXB online.)

Angiosperm GID1 gene family members fall into three distinct phylogenetic groups: eudicot GID1ac, eudicot GID1b, and monocot GID1

As Arabidopsis and L. sativum have several GID1 genes, it was investigated whether this is a general feature of the eudicots and compared it with the monocots, in which, for example, the rice genome contains only one GID1 gene (OsGID1). Thirty-seven angiosperm GID1 cds were used to carry out a molecular phylogenetic analysis (Fig. 1). Alignment of all predicted proteins showed that the eudicot GID1 genes cluster into two distinct groups: the ‘GID1ac’ and the ‘GID1b’ group, which were named according to the corresponding Arabidopsis GID1 genes that they contain. Almost all of the included core eudicot species (rosids and asterids) have at least one GID1 member of each group. An exception is Actinidia deliciosa for which only one GID1 was found, which may be due to insufficient sequence availability. In addition to the asterid species included in the phylogenetic analysis (Fig. 1), EST sequences were also found that demonstrate that several Lactuca and Helianthus species have at least one GID1 from each group (see Supplementary Table S1 at JXB online). It is an interesting finding that the monocot GID1 proteins (in contrast to the core eudicots) cluster into one separate group with no further split, even when they contain more than one GID1 gene (Fig. 1).

Comparison of GID1 transcript secondary structures and stability motifs suggests high mRNA turnover, and GID1 transcript expression during Arabidopsis seed germination is differentially regulated by GA and ABA

The predicted secondary structures differed between the six GID1 mRNA molecules of L. sativum and Arabidopsis, but in all cases one intron splice site just downstream the start of the coding sequence and relatively long 5' and 3' UTRs are evident (see Supplementary Figs S1 and S3 at JXB online). The average 5' and 3' UTR lengths from all annotated genes of the Arabidopsis genome are 0.13 kb and 0.24 kb, respectively (Haas ). With 0.35–0.49 kb, all the GID1 3' UTRs except LesaGID1c are longer than average (see Supplementary Fig. S1 at JXB online) and this is often associated with high mRNA turnover (Garneau ). mRNA half-lives of AtGID1a and AtGID1b determined by Narsai in Arabidopsis cell cultures are short with t1/2 <1 h, whereas AtGID1c transcripts are of moderate stability. Together with mRNA secondary structure (see Supplementary Fig. S3 at JXB online; Hofacker and Stadler 2006), various global motifs associated with mRNA destabilization, identified by Narsai and Jiao are prominent in the GID1 3' and 5’ UTRs (see Supplementary Figs S3 and S4 at JXB online). Therefore, GID1 transcripts of both species may not only be highly regulated, but also possess conserved regulatory patterns as well as differences between the two species. As considerable amounts of bioactive GA4 are already present in dry Arabidopsis seeds (Ogawa ), it is expected that GA responsiveness of the seed tissues is induced immediately upon imbibition and that its regulation during germination depends, at least in part, on the expression of the three AtGID1 genes. The AtGID1a, AtGID1b, and AtGID1c transcript expression patterns were analysed during the germination of unstratified Arabidopsis seeds by quantitative real-time RT-PCR (qRT-PCR, Fig. 2): The transcript abundance at 30 h imbibition of AtGID1a and AtGID1c was high compared with AtGID1b, with AtGID1a transcripts being twice as abundant as AtGID1c transcripts (CON, Fig. 2C). This difference in transcript abundance, AtGID1a>AtGID1c>>AtGID1b, is already evident in dry seeds and during the early germination phase, as shown in Fig. 2B, based on in silico analysis of microarray expression data (Preston ) with the Arabidopsis eFP browser (Winter ). Furthermore, the hormonal regulation of the AtGID1 transcript expression was analysed by qRT-PCR (Fig. 2C): GA exerts a negative feedback mechanism causing about a 2-fold down-regulation of the transcript levels of AtGID1a and probably also AtGID1c, but did not affect AtGID1b expression. In contrast to GA, ABA did not exert any significant effect on the transcript levels of AtGID1a, AtGID1b or AtGID1c (Fig. 2C). The differential transcript regulation in seeds, especially the higher abundance and the GA-triggered negative feedback loop associated only with the two GID1ac group members, but not with GID1b, suggests that the two groups of GID1 receptors may play distinct roles during the germination process.
Fig. 2.

Transcript abundances in whole seeds of the three Arabidopsis thaliana GID1 genes during germination. (A) The time-course of endosperm rupture of A. thaliana (Col) seeds on medium without (CON) or with 10 μM GA4+7 (GA) or 1 μM ABA added. Afterripened seeds were incubated at 24 °C in continuous light without preceding stratification. Mean values ±SE of 3×50 seeds. (B) In silico analysis on GID1 transcript abundance during early germination of unstratified Arabidopsis (Col) seeds based on eFP-Browser microarray data; Relative expression values ±SD for AtGID1a (At3g05120), AtGID1b (At3g63010), and AtGID1c (At5g27320). (C) GID1 transcript abundance pattern determined by qRT-PCR in whole seeds of Arabidopsis (Col) at 30 h, i.e. at 0% endosperm rupture for CON (see A). ddCt expression values relative to validated constitutive transcripts are presented. Medium additions as in (A). Mean values ±SE of 4× >1000 seeds.

Transcript abundances in whole seeds of the three Arabidopsis thaliana GID1 genes during germination. (A) The time-course of endosperm rupture of A. thaliana (Col) seeds on medium without (CON) or with 10 μM GA4+7 (GA) or 1 μM ABA added. Afterripened seeds were incubated at 24 °C in continuous light without preceding stratification. Mean values ±SE of 3×50 seeds. (B) In silico analysis on GID1 transcript abundance during early germination of unstratified Arabidopsis (Col) seeds based on eFP-Browser microarray data; Relative expression values ±SD for AtGID1a (At3g05120), AtGID1b (At3g63010), and AtGID1c (At5g27320). (C) GID1 transcript abundance pattern determined by qRT-PCR in whole seeds of Arabidopsis (Col) at 30 h, i.e. at 0% endosperm rupture for CON (see A). ddCt expression values relative to validated constitutive transcripts are presented. Medium additions as in (A). Mean values ±SE of 4× >1000 seeds. The pAtGID1::AtGID1-GUS reporter gene lines from Suzuki were used to investigate the spatially and hormonally regulated expression patterns of the three individual GID1 genes in different Arabidopsis seed tissues, i.e. the embryo and the endosperm, during germination. Transcription of the three pAtGID1::AtGID1-GUS reporter constructs is controlled by c. 3 kb of AtGID1a, AtGID1b, and AtGID1c 5' regulatory region containing the corresponding GID1 gene promoters, and in the following text the three transgenic lines are referred to with the abbreviations ‘PGID1a’, ‘PGID1b’, and ‘PGID1c’, respectively. In agreement with the qRT-PCR results on whole Arabidopsis seeds imbibed in medium without the addition of hormones (control, CON), the histological GUS staining of PGID1a and PGID1c embryos was much stronger compared with PGID1b (CON in Fig. 3A). As the GID1 gene promoter activity is an approximate estimate for GID1 gene transcription and, based on the roughly equal distribution of blue staining over the entire embryos, it is concluded that GID1 gene transcription is not confined to a highly localized zone. There are, however, clear differences in the strength of the three GID1 promoter activities that suggest that the high GID1ac and low GID1b transcript abundances in CON-seeds (Fig. 2) are the result of higher-level GID1ac and low-level GID1b gene transcription in CON-embryos (Fig. 3A). To investigate the effects of ABA and GA, seeds of the different transgenic lines were also imbibed with the hormones added. In agreement with a GA-mediated down-regulation of the GID1ac transcript abundances in the qRT-PCR analysis (Fig. 2), GA addition decreased the staining intensity of the PGID1a and PGID1c embryos (Fig. 3A). In contrast to the roughly equal transcript abundances for GID1b in CON and GA (Fig. 2), the blue staining is stronger in embryos from GA-treated seeds compared with CON (Fig. 3A). This suggests as a possible explanation that, for GID1b, the transcript degradation is of utmost importance for the GA-mediated down-regulation of the transcript abundances. Neither GA nor ABA changed the spatial expression patterns in embryos for the three GID1 genes. While GA affected the staining intensities, ABA did not appreciably change the staining intensities of the embryos compared with CON (Fig. 3A). The staining was slightly stronger for PGID1c- compared to PGID1a-embryos for all three treatments (Fig. 3A), whereas, for the transcript abundances, it was the other way around. This implies that transcript degradation may be more important for regulating the GID1c transcript abundances. As for the embryo, the staining intensities in the endosperm were PGID1c>>PGID1a> PGID1b for the CON-series (Fig. 3B). Interestingly, the effects of the hormones on the staining intensities differed between embryo and endosperm: In contrast to the embryo, GA-treatment did not cause increased staining in the PGID1b endosperm. But, as in the embryo, GA-treatment caused decreased staining for PGID1a and PGID1c. For the ABA-treatment the decreasing effect on the PGID1a staining in the embryo was even more pronounced in the endosperm, while for PGID1b and PGID1c the ABA effects did not differ between embryo and endosperm (Fig. 3). Taken together, the embryo and the endosperm of Arabidopsis seeds (Fig. 3D) exhibited similar and distinct aspects regarding the spatial and hormonal regulation of the three GID1 gene promoter activities. This regulation was more similar for GID1a and GID1c, but considerably different between GID1b and GID1ac., and further support the view that the two groups of GID1 receptors may play distinct roles during the germination process.
Fig. 3.

Histochemical analysis of gene promoter activities in of the three Arabidopsis thaliana GID1 genes during seed germination. Seeds of GUS reporter lines in which the three GID1 gene promoters, AtGID1a, AtGID1b, and AtGID1c control the transgene transcription were imbibed in medium without (CON) or with 10 μM GA4+7 (GA) or 5 μM ABA added. After seed dissection into embryo and ‘coat’ (testa plus endosperm) at 20 h, histochemical GUS analysis was performed. (A) Histochemical GUS analysis of isolated embryos from GID1 reporter gene seeds. (B) Histochemical GUS analysis of isolated ‘coats’ from GID1 reporter gene seeds. (C) Negative control for the histochemical GUS staining with isolated wild-type embryo and ‘coat’. (D) Cross-section of A. thaliana seed indicating the specific seed tissues analysed used in the experiment.

Histochemical analysis of gene promoter activities in of the three Arabidopsis thaliana GID1 genes during seed germination. Seeds of GUS reporter lines in which the three GID1 gene promoters, AtGID1a, AtGID1b, and AtGID1c control the transgene transcription were imbibed in medium without (CON) or with 10 μM GA4+7 (GA) or 5 μM ABA added. After seed dissection into embryo and ‘coat’ (testa plus endosperm) at 20 h, histochemical GUS analysis was performed. (A) Histochemical GUS analysis of isolated embryos from GID1 reporter gene seeds. (B) Histochemical GUS analysis of isolated ‘coats’ from GID1 reporter gene seeds. (C) Negative control for the histochemical GUS staining with isolated wild-type embryo and ‘coat’. (D) Cross-section of A. thaliana seed indicating the specific seed tissues analysed used in the experiment.

Germination kinetics of Arabidopsis gid1 mutants reveal different relevance of the three GID1 receptors during seed germination

To investigate the individual roles and importance of the three GID1 receptors in the germination process, phenotypic analyses of Arabidopsis gid1a, gid1b, and gid1c single- and double-knockout mutants were carried out. Endosperm rupture of the seed populations was scored over time on medium without (CON) and with GA or ABA added (Fig. 4). Without hormonal addition none of the single-knockout mutants exhibited an appreciable phenotype, although gid1c completed germination slightly later compared with the wild type (WT) and the other single mutants (Fig. 4A). A very striking phenotype was observed for gid1agid1c: only 4% of the seeds completed germination, and this happened only very late (Fig. 4A). The viability of the gid1agid1c seeds was confirmed using the tetrazolium assay (Fig. 4D). The tetrazolium assay is a standard test for seed viability and is widely used for this purpose (Graeber ). Also gid1bgid1c completed germination later than the WT and the single mutants.
Fig. 4.

The effect of the three GID1 receptors on the seed germination of Arabidopsis thaliana studied with mutants for AtGID1a, AtGID1b, and AtGID1c. Time-course analysis of endosperm rupture of after-ripened seeds of Arabidopsis single (gid1a, gid1b, gid1c) and double (gid1agid1b, gid1bgid1c, gid1agid1c) mutants imbibed at 24 °C in continuous light without preceding stratification. The results presented were obtained with the mutant set by Iuchi , the same results were obtained with an independent mutant set by Willige . (A) Medium without hormones added (control, CON). (B) 10 μM GA4+7 (GA). (C) 1 μM ABA. (D) Tetrazolium-assay to confirm viability of gid1agid1c; (–) and (+): negative (seed killed by preceding heat treatment, 1 h at 100 °C) and positive wild-type seed controls. Mean values ±SE of 3×50 seeds are presented.

The effect of the three GID1 receptors on the seed germination of Arabidopsis thaliana studied with mutants for AtGID1a, AtGID1b, and AtGID1c. Time-course analysis of endosperm rupture of after-ripened seeds of Arabidopsis single (gid1a, gid1b, gid1c) and double (gid1agid1b, gid1bgid1c, gid1agid1c) mutants imbibed at 24 °C in continuous light without preceding stratification. The results presented were obtained with the mutant set by Iuchi , the same results were obtained with an independent mutant set by Willige . (A) Medium without hormones added (control, CON). (B) 10 μM GA4+7 (GA). (C) 1 μM ABA. (D) Tetrazolium-assay to confirm viability of gid1agid1c; (–) and (+): negative (seed killed by preceding heat treatment, 1 h at 100 °C) and positive wild-type seed controls. Mean values ±SE of 3×50 seeds are presented. Treatment with GA did not appreciably alter the germination kinetics of the knockout mutants (Fig. 4B). Only 11% of the gid1agid1c seeds completed germination, demonstrating that most seeds are GA-insensitive and that AtGID1b cannot replace the AtGID1ac group receptors that appear to be required for Arabidopsis seed germination. Treatment with ABA strongly delayed endosperm rupture and completely inhibited gid1agid1c seed germination (Fig. 4C). The strong inhibition of gid1agid1c germination and delayed germination of seeds containing the gid1c mutation was also evident with an independent second set of T-DNA insertion single and double knockout mutants (data not shown). Taken together, the three GID1 genes of Arabidopsis seem to have distinct importance during seed germination: At least one GID1ac group member is required with AtGID1c being more important than AtGID1a, while AtGID1b seems to play a minor role.

Tissue-specific analysis of L. sativum seeds reveals spatial, temporal, and hormonal differences of GID1 transcript expression

The different GID1 GA receptors seem to play distinct roles during plant development. For germination their function during the process of endosperm weakening is of special interest and was examined in individual tissues for this purpose. The bigger seed size and the temporal and ABA-related separation of testa and endosperm rupture of L. sativum facilitate analysis of defined seed tissues (Fig. 5), such as the micropylar endosperm and the radicle. Preparation of samples was done by removing the testa covering the hypocotyl- and radicle part of the seed, cutting off the radicle (lower 1/3 of the hypocotyl-radicle axis) and detaching the micropylar endosperm and the radicle tissue. Transcript expression patterns of LesaGID1a, LesaGID1b, and LesaGID1c in the micropylar endosperm and in the radicle after 8 h and 18 h of imbibition of L. sativum were analysed by qRT-PCR (Fig. 5C, D). Those times were selected in order to capture the early germination phase of Lepidium sativum, just after testa rupture at the onset of endosperm weakening, and the late germination phase, just prior to endosperm rupture. Without hormone treatment (CON), the transcript expression levels at 8 h of LesaGID1a and LesaGID1c were similar and about twice that compared with LesaGID1b. The levels of all three transcripts decline to very low and roughly equal levels from the early to the late germination phase in both tissues (Fig. 5C, D).
Fig. 5.

Transcript abundance patterns of the LesaGID1a, LesaGID1b, and LesaGID1c receptor genes in specific seed tissues of Lepidium sativum during germination. A, Time course analysis of testa and endosperm rupture of L. sativum FR14 seeds in medium without (CON) and with ABA added. Continuous light, 18 °C. Mean values ±SE of 3×50 seeds are presented. Red arrows indicate sampling time points for the qPCR. (B) Cross-section of L. sativum seed indicating the specific seed tissues used in the experiment: micropylar endosperm and radicle (lower 1/3 of the hypocotyl-radicle axis). (C, D) qRT-PCR analysis of LesaGID1a, LesaGID1b, and LesaGID1c transcript abundances for micropylar endosperm (C) and radicles (D) at 8, 18, and 96 h imbibition. ddCt expression values relative to validated constitutive transcripts are presented. Medium additions, as indicated: 10 μM GA4+7, 10 μM ABA. Mean values ±SE of 4×1000 micropylar endosperms and 4×200 radicles are presented; n.d.=not detectable. (This figure is available in colour at JXB online.)

Transcript abundance patterns of the LesaGID1a, LesaGID1b, and LesaGID1c receptor genes in specific seed tissues of Lepidium sativum during germination. A, Time course analysis of testa and endosperm rupture of L. sativum FR14 seeds in medium without (CON) and with ABA added. Continuous light, 18 °C. Mean values ±SE of 3×50 seeds are presented. Red arrows indicate sampling time points for the qPCR. (B) Cross-section of L. sativum seed indicating the specific seed tissues used in the experiment: micropylar endosperm and radicle (lower 1/3 of the hypocotyl-radicle axis). (C, D) qRT-PCR analysis of LesaGID1a, LesaGID1b, and LesaGID1c transcript abundances for micropylar endosperm (C) and radicles (D) at 8, 18, and 96 h imbibition. ddCt expression values relative to validated constitutive transcripts are presented. Medium additions, as indicated: 10 μM GA4+7, 10 μM ABA. Mean values ±SE of 4×1000 micropylar endosperms and 4×200 radicles are presented; n.d.=not detectable. (This figure is available in colour at JXB online.) GA treatment slightly promoted L. sativum seed germination and triggered a negative feedback loop that resulted in reduced transcript levels of LesaGID1a and LesaGID1c at 8 h compared with CON (Fig. 5C, D). While transcript abundance of LesaGID1a was reduced to about 30% upon GA treatment, LesaGID1c mRNA became undetectable in both tissues at 8 h. In contrast to the transcripts of the L. sativum GID1ac group members, GA treatment caused a 14.3-fold (micropylar endosperm) and a 7.2-fold (radicle) increase in LesaGID1b transcript abundance at 8 h compared with CON. LesaGID1b transcript levels declined from the early (8 h) to the late (18 h) germination phase to low levels upon GA treatment as in CON. ABA treatment delays endosperm rupture (Fig. 5). Comparison of CON and ABA at 8 h shows in the radicle about a 2-fold increase of the LesaGID1a and LesaGID1c transcript levels, but no difference for LesaGID1b. As in CON and GA, upon ABA treatment the expression of all three transcripts was also down-regulated to very low levels at 18 h. However, at 96 h ABA, where the percentage of germinated seeds is comparable with 18 h CON (Fig. 5A), in the micropylar endosperm the LesaGID1c transcript levels were up-regulated roughly 3-fold compared with 8 h ABA (Fig. 5C). In the radicle, LesaGID1b and LesaGID1c transcripts levels (96 h versus 8 h ABA) were up-regulated 5-fold to roughly equal values (Fig. 5D). By contrast, the LesaGID1a transcript levels remained low at 96 h ABA in both tissues (Fig. 5C, D). Taken together, a GA-triggered negative feedback loop on transcript expression of the GID1ac group members is evident in the L. sativum micropylar endosperm and the radicle. In addition, a GA-triggered positive feedback loop on LesaGID1b was found during L. sativum seed germination, and the ABA regulation of the GID1 transcripts showed complex temporal and tissue-specific patterns.

A subtractive suppression hybridization (SSH) cDNA library from micropylar endosperm tissue of germinating seeds of L. sativum contains candidate genes for endosperm weakening

An SSH library from micropylar endosperm tissue was constructed enriched for transcripts at 8 h (early germination) compared with 18 h (late germination). This library contains transcripts that are more highly abundant or unique during the early germination phase and, therefore, are likely to be important for the germination process. 184 clones were sequenced and the partial sequences were given a putative function based on their highest BLAST hit (see Supplementary Table S2 at JXB online). About 10% of the transcripts were coding for ribosomal proteins, indicating the importance of protein biosynthesis for germination. This is further supported by the presence of the universal translation initiation and elongation factors. The subtractive cDNA library also contained transcripts of proteins involved in mRNA splicing, binding, and turnover. Furthermore, a clone was found for an RCAR/PYR/PYL-type ABA receptor and many of the library clones are GA regulated (see Supplementary Table S2 at JXB online). An analysis of Gene Ontology (GO) classes in our subtractive cDNA library compared with the whole set of GOs annotated on TAIR by the software GOstat (Beißbarth and Speed, 2004) showed that cDNAs annotated as ‘cell wall’ (GO:0005681) or ‘external encapsulating structure’ (GO:0030312) were significantly over-represented (P <0.001). They contained genes such as the putative orthologues of EXLA1 (an expansin-like A, At3g45970) and EXPA9 (an α-expansin, At5g02260) from the expansin superfamily, and XTH18 (At4g30280) and XTH19 (At4g30290) from the xyloglucan endo-transglycosylases/hydrolases (XTHs) family. They are potential candidates to be involved in early GA-induced weakening of the endosperm tissue and their transcript expression was therefore analysed further.

Analysis of expansin and XTH transcript expression patterns in individual seed tissues of L. sativum and in the gid1 single and double mutants of Arabidopsis during germination assigns them to distinct regulatory GID1 pathways

The transcript expression of EXLA1, EXPA9, XTH18, and XTH19 in the micropylar endosperm and the radicle of L. sativum during germination was determined by qRT-PCR (Fig. 6). All genes showed higher expression at 8 h compared with 18 h (the two time points used for library construction) in the micropylar endosperm (Fig. 6A), which confirms the reliability of the data obtained from the SSH library. At 8 h, the transcript abundances of all four genes was higher in the micropylar endosperm compared witho the radicle (Fig. 6). The expression levels of all four transcripts declined from the early (8 h) to the late germination (18 h) phase to very low and roughly equal levels in both tissues. Interestingly, upon GA treatment EXLA1 and EXPA9 displayed a distinct pattern compared to both XTH genes during early germination. The transcript levels of XTH18 and XTH19 declined below the detection limit in 8 h GA-imbibed seed tissues, while transcript levels of EXLA1 and EXPA9 remained high upon GA treatment during early (8 h) germination. At 18 h with GA treatment all four transcripts showed similar low transcript abundance. This distinct effect of GA on the 8 h transcript expression levels, with a GA-triggered down regulation affecting the XTHs, but not the expansins, shows that, during early germination, they are regulated by distinct pathways regarding GA, but during late germination equally regarding the down-regulation. Since ABA strongly delays endosperm rupture, an additional time point very late during germination was investigated (96 h) which, in terms of endosperm rupture, corresponds to 18 h CON and for which transcripts of LesaGID1c and LesaGID1b accumulated (Fig. 6). Upon ABA treatment there is an up-regulation of all four candidate cell-wall-modifying protein transcripts in the micropylar endosperm and the radicle very late during germination (at 96 h; Fig. 6). Taken together, this shows that the XTHs and expansins in L. sativum are regulated differentially: Both XTHs appear to be in a GID1ac pathway, since LesaGID1a, LesaGID1c, as well as XTH18 and XTH19 are down-regulated by GA during early germination (Figs 5C, 6). Contrary to that, both expansins are not down-regulated by GA during early Lepidium germination, which assigns them to a different pathway.
Fig. 6.

Transcript abundance patterns of putative cell-wall-loosening genes (expansins and XTHs) in specific seed tissues of Lepidium sativum during germination. qRT-PCR analysis of EXLA1, EXPA9, XTH18, and XTH19 transcript abundances for (A) micropylar endosperm and (B) radicles at 8, 18, and 96 h imbibition. ddCt expression values relative to validated constitutive transcripts are presented. For time-courses of testa and endosperm rupture in continuous light (18 °C) see Fig. 5A. Medium additions, as indicated: 10 μM GA4+7, 1 μM ABA. Mean values ±SE of 4×1000 micropylar endosperms and 4×200 radicles are presented; n.d.=not detectable. (This figure is available in colour at JXB online.)

Transcript abundance patterns of putative cell-wall-loosening genes (expansins and XTHs) in specific seed tissues of Lepidium sativum during germination. qRT-PCR analysis of EXLA1, EXPA9, XTH18, and XTH19 transcript abundances for (A) micropylar endosperm and (B) radicles at 8, 18, and 96 h imbibition. ddCt expression values relative to validated constitutive transcripts are presented. For time-courses of testa and endosperm rupture in continuous light (18 °C) see Fig. 5A. Medium additions, as indicated: 10 μM GA4+7, 1 μM ABA. Mean values ±SE of 4×1000 micropylar endosperms and 4×200 radicles are presented; n.d.=not detectable. (This figure is available in colour at JXB online.) The XTH18 and XTH19 transcript levels are up-regulated upon imbibition of Arabidopsis wild-type (WT) seeds, based on comparing dry seeds with 30 h-imbibed seeds (Fig. 7), i.e. a timepoint during germination that corresponds physiologically to the 8 h CON timepoint in L. sativum. Treatment of Arabidopsis WT with GA did not affect the relative transcript abundances of both XTHs in whole seeds as it was evident in specific seed tissues in L. sativum. If, in Arabidopsis, the XTH18 and XTH19 transcripts are regulated by the GID1ac pathway, their regulation should be impaired in the gid1agid1c mutant which also exhibits a germination phenotype (Fig. 4). To test if, in Arabidopsis, the XTH18 and XTH19 transcripts are also regulated by the GID1ac pathway, their expression was compared in seeds of the gid1 single and double mutants (Fig. 7). In contrast to the WT and most gid1 mutants, the XTH18 and XTH19 transcript levels remained low in imbibed gid1agid1c mutant seeds (Fig. 7). As the relative transcript abundances of both XTHs were up-regulated during germination in WT and in the gid1 single and double knockout mutants, except for the gid1agid1c mutant, XTH18 and XTH19 regulation in Arabidopsis can be assigned to the GID1ac pathway.
Fig. 7.

Transcript abundances of XTH18, XTH19, EXLA1, and EXPA9 in Arabidopsis gid1 mutant seeds. qRT-PCR analysis of (A) XTH18 (At4g30280), (B) EXLA1 (At3g45970), (C) XTH19 (At4g30290), and (D) EXPA9 (At5g02260) in wild-type (WT) and gid1 single and double mutants in dry seeds and after 30 h imbibition. ddCt expression values relative to validated constitutive transcripts are presented. Medium additions, as indicated: 10 μM GA4+7, 1 μM ABA. Mean values ±SE of 4×200 seeds are presented. (This figure is available in colour at JXB online.)

Transcript abundances of XTH18, XTH19, EXLA1, and EXPA9 in Arabidopsis gid1 mutant seeds. qRT-PCR analysis of (A) XTH18 (At4g30280), (B) EXLA1 (At3g45970), (C) XTH19 (At4g30290), and (D) EXPA9 (At5g02260) in wild-type (WT) and gid1 single and double mutants in dry seeds and after 30 h imbibition. ddCt expression values relative to validated constitutive transcripts are presented. Medium additions, as indicated: 10 μM GA4+7, 1 μM ABA. Mean values ±SE of 4×200 seeds are presented. (This figure is available in colour at JXB online.) In Arabidopsis it was also found that, as in L. sativum, the expansins exhibited a distinct regulation of their transcript expression during seed germination for WT and the individual gid1 single- and double-mutants (Fig. 7). It is known that transcripts of α-expansins like EXPA9 accumulate strongly during the early phase of Arabidopsis seed germination and that this induction is promoted by GA, is not inhibited by ABA, and is mainly localized in the endosperm (Holdsworth ; Preston ). In agreement with this, it was found that EXPA9 transcripts accumulate in whole seeds of Arabidopsis during early germination, and that this induction is promoted by GA, but not inhibited by ABA (Fig. 7). GA treatment also promoted the transcript expression of the expansin-like A gene EXLA1. GA addition therefore leads to higher transcript levels of both expansins but does not affect the XTH transcript levels. Based on the decrease in AtGID1A and AtGID1c, but not AtGID1b, transcript abundance through the addition of GA (Fig. 2) this suggests that both expansins in Arabidopsis are regulated in a pathway involving GID1b. In contrast to the two XTHs, relative transcript abundances of EXPA9 were not affected in the gid1agid1c mutant and was roughly constant in imbibed seeds of WT and all of the gid1 mutants (Fig. 7). In summary, evidence is provided from two Brassicaceae species that, during seed germination, the GID1ac pathway and the GID1b pathway have different roles and regulate different downstream genes.

Discussion

Eudicots contain at least one GID1 gibberellin receptor from each of the two distinct groups, GID1ac and GID1b, which are associated with two distinct regulatory pathways

Our molecular phylogenetic analysis showed that the known angiosperm GID1 receptors fall into three distinct groups: eudicot GID1ac, eudicot GID1b, and monocot GID1 (Fig. 1). The finding that the core eudicot species always have at least one GID1 gene from each of the two eudicot groups supports the view that the two distinct groups fulfil some distinct developmental functions required for all angiosperms and suggests distinct regulatory pathways. That the individual GID1 receptors of Arabidopsis (AtGID1a, AtGID1b, AtGID1c) display partial redundancy and have functional specificities for regulating the GA-responsiveness of different developmental processes has been postulated before (Griffiths ; Iuchi ). Hirano investigated GA signalling components in a broad evolutionary context by phylogenetic comparison of the GID1 proteins of the two angiosperms, Arabidopsis and rice, to pine as a gymnosperm, Selaginella moellendorffii as a lycophyte and Physcomitrella patens as a moss representative. They showed that the GID1 proteins of pine, the lycophyte, and the moss, cluster further away from the GID1 group with the two angiosperms. In agreement with this, when putative GID1 coding sequences of Selaginella moellendorffii, Physcomitrella patens, and the three gymnosperms Picea glauca, Picea sitchensis, and Pinus taeda are included in our phylogenetic analysis, they also clustered as a distinct group (data not shown) apart from our comprehensive eudicot GID1ac, eudicot GID1b, and monocot-GID1 clusters that are based on comparing the sequences of 36 angiosperm species (Fig. 1; see Supplementary Table S1 at JXB online). The distinction between two eudicot groups (GID1ac and GID1b) and the monocot group is not only supported by the molecular phylogeny, but also by biochemical evidence in studies with the three Arabidopsis GID1s: Nakajima showed that AtGID1a and AtGID1c bind GA4 and GA3 with a c. 10-fold lower affinity compared with AtGID1b. All three Arabidopsis GID1 receptors can interact with all five Arabidopsis DELLA proteins (GAI, RGA, RGL1, RGL2, RGL3) targets (Nakajima ; Willige ; Suzuki ). However, Suzuki showed that differential in vivo interaction affinities exist: the major preference of AtGID1b is GAI and RGA, while the major preferences of AtGID1a and AtGID1c are RGL1 and RGL3; AtGID1a has, in addition, RGL2 as a second major preference. These biochemical features, combined with distinct tissue-specific and hormonal expression patterns of the different GID1 receptors and DELLA repressors, can therefore define distinct GID1ac and GID1b pathways in eudicots. In contrast, in monocot species, only one group of GID1 receptors seems to exist, even when more than one GID1 homologue is present within a species (Fig. 1). This might be linked to the fact that, in monocot species, fewer DELLA proteins exist: one DELLA protein in rice (Oryza sativa; SLR1) and barley (Hordeum vulgare; SLN1) and a putative second homologue in maize (Zea mays; D8 and D9), and, therefore, less specialization of the GID1s is needed (Peng ; Ikeda ; Gubler ; Weston ). Differential expression and distinct patterns of degradation of different DELLA repressors has been shown in seeds (Bassel ; Ariizumi ; Piskurewicz , 2009; Piskurewicz and Lopez-Molina, 2009). In an evolutionary context a separation between an GID1ac-type (interacting preferentially with the RGL1/RGL2/RGL3 group of DELLA repressors) and a GID1b-type (interacting preferentially with the GAI/RGA group of DELLA repressors) pathway hints at a greater specialization of eudicot GID1-mediated GA signalling, while such a partial functional separation has not occurred within the monocots. It has to be noted, though, that less work has been carried out on monocot species seed germination so far, and that the degree of partial redundancy between the two eudicot pathways may differ depending on the developmental process.

The regulation of the GID1 pathways and its roles during seed germination differ from other developmental processes and may be conserved among the Brassicaceae

Our analysis of the Arabidopsis knockout mutants for the three GID1 receptors clearly showed that the AtGID1b receptor is not able to compensate for the phenotype of the gid1agid1c double mutant, i.e. GA signalling via the GID1ac receptors is required for seed germination (Fig.4). By contrast, the AtGID1c and AtGID1a receptors are partially redundant and can compensate for a lack of AtGID1b. Based on the seed germination phenotypes of the Arabidopsis knockout mutants and the ABA-related transcript expression pattern in the micropylar endosperm and the radicle of L. sativum, the GID1c receptors may be more important for Brassicaceae seed germination compared with the GID1a receptors. While transcript abundances in the order AtGID1a>AtGID1c>AtGID1b were evident in dry and imbibed seeds (Cadman ; Preston ), the order AtGID1a>AtGID1b>AtGID1c was evident throughout plant development in many other tissues and in seedlings (Griffiths ). This further indicates that there is a different importance of the individual GID1 receptors during seed germination compared with other developmental processes. The hypothesis of the different importance of the individual GID1 genes during seed germination, with GID1b being distinct from GID1ac and having less importance, is also supported by the stronger GUS staining of the PGID1ac reporter gene lines compared with PGID1b. This finding is further supported by the fact that Griffiths found negative feedback-regulation by GA for all three GID1 transcripts in seedlings, while in our transcript analyses and GUS reporter line staining results, combined with in silico analysis with the eFP browser, down-regulation by GA during the germination of unstratified Arabidopsis seeds was evident only for the AtGID1a and AtGID1c transcripts, but not for the AtGID1b transcripts. It is therefore proposed that, in germinating seeds, AtGID1b transcript abundance is not negatively regulated by GA. An alternative interpretation would be a higher GA sensitivity of the negative feedback mechanism on AtGID1b transcript abundance compared with AtGID1a and AtGID1c as it was proposed by Iuchi . The endogenous GA content would then already be sufficient to decrease AtGID1b transcript abundance. However, in support of our proposal, the GA-triggered negative feedback loop on AtGID1a and AtGID1c, but not on AtGID1b, was also evident in 9 h-imbibed ga1-3 Ler seeds (Ogawa ). In agreement with this, during L. sativum seed germination, a GA-triggered negative feedback loop in the micropylar endosperm and the radicle was only evident for the LesaGID1a and LesaGID1c transcripts. This strongly suggests that a GA-triggered negative feedback loop during seed germination exists for GID1a and GID1c in Brassicaceae seeds, while GID1b-type transcripts are not down-regulation targets. Besides that, in both species expression patterns are similar regarding transcript abundance during early germination (8 h in L. sativum versus 30 h Arabidopsis), in which the GID1ac transcript levels are usually higher compared to GID1b, and no significant regulation by ABA during early germination takes place.

A subtractive cDNA library identified candidate genes for transcript splicing and turnover, translation and proteolysis, hormone signalling, and weakening in the micropylar endosperm

Weakening of the micropylar endosperm of L. sativum progresses between the early (8 h) and late (18 h) time points used in our germination experiments (CON), and is promoted by GA and inhibited by ABA (Müller ). Using a subtractive cDNA library of the micropylar endosperm, transcripts that are more highly expressed or unique during early germination were identified. The overrepresentation of the GO categories ‘ribosomal protein’ (GO:0003735) and ‘ribosome’ (GO:0005840) (GOstat; P-value <0.001; Beißbarth and Speed, 2004) indicates intense protein biosynthesis during early germination. The importance of de novo protein biosynthesis for the germination process of Arabidopsis has been shown by Rajjou . It seems that de novo synthesis of ribosomal components is needed for germination and subsequent seedling growth (Holdsworth . The importance of early translation is further indicated by the occurrence of a translation initiation factor (EIF3G) and a translation elongation factor (EF1-α) in our library. In addition to protein synthesis, UBQ11 and three protease clones (see Supplementary Table S2 at JXB online), support our earlier finding that proteolysis in the micropylar endosperm is important (Müller ). The micropylar endosperm library also contains transcription and splicing factors indicating de novo mRNA biosynthesis and processing, as well as RNA binding proteins and putative ribonucleases that may be involved in diverse pathways of mRNA decay, in particular, the polyA-binding protein RBP31 (Ni ) and a core protein of the evolutionarily conserved CCR4-NOT complex (At2g32070), both involved in the deadenylation pathway of mRNA decay (Denis ; Garneau ). The SSH library also contains a clone encoding PYL6, an RCAR/PYR/PYL-type ABA receptor (Nambara ; Raghavendra ). In germinating Arabidopsis seeds (eFP browser; Toufighi et al., 2005); PYL6 transcripts accumulate during imbibition, are down-regulated by ABA, and up-regulated by GA. In our tissue-specific transcriptome analysis of L. sativum seed germination (Linkies ) transcripts of the putative PYL6 orthologue are far more abundant in the micropylar endosperm compared to the non-micropylar endosperm and the radicle. The RCAR/PYR/PYL-type and the GID1-type receptors may, therefore, be crucial components in regulating ABA and GA responsiveness important for endosperm weakening.

Two XTHs and two expansins are regulated differentially with expression patterns that assign them to distinct hormonal regulation

The two XTHs that were found in our subtractive library are putative orthologues of AtXTH18 and AtXTH19, two phylogenetically closely related group-2-type XTHs (Rose ; Osato ). Several members of the XTH-family are known to be positively regulated on both the transcriptional and activity levels by growth-promoting plant hormones such as auxin and GA. For example, GA stimulates leaf elongation and XTH expression and activity in barley, while dwarf mutants with dysfunctional GA signal transduction show reduced XTH activities and shorter leaves (Smith ). XTHs are implicated in cell-wall hemicellulose remodelling leading to loosening (Van Sandt ) or stiffening (Maris ). The two expansins in our subtractive library, putative orthologues of AtEXLA1 (an expansin-like A) and AtEXPA9 (an α-expansin), may be involved in cell expansion and/or weakening of the micropylar endosperm during germination. Expansins loosen cell walls at acidic pH of around 4.5–6, which corresponds to the pH in the apoplast (Cosgrove, 2005; Sampedro and Cosgrove, 2005). No enzymatic activity has been found for expansins, and it has been hypothesized that they act on non-covalent bonds such as hydrogen bridges between cellulose microfibrils and hemicelluloses. Cell-wall loosening activity of α-expansins, but not of expansin-like proteins, has been demonstrated. In the seed, tissue-specific transcriptome analysis of L. sativum transcripts of the putative EXPA9 orthologue are far more abundant in the micropylar endosperm and the radicle compared with the non-micropylar endosperm (Linkies ; Morris ). This suggests that the EXPA9 proteins are involved in micropylar endosperm weakening and in radicle growth. Expansins and XTHs have both been described in the context of GA and ABA regulation during seed germination (Finkelstein ; Holdsworth ). In our tissue-specific analysis of the XTH and expansin transcript expression in L. sativum, their higher expression during early (8 h) germination indicates the necessity of early transcription of cell-wall-modifying genes before the onset of endosperm weakening. The temporal, spatial, and hormonal (GA and ABA) co-expression patterns (Figs 5, 6) of the XTH18, XTH19, and LesaGID1 transcripts suggest that these XTHs are regulated in a LesaGID1ac involving pathway. Both during seed germination of Arabidopsis (whole seeds; Fig. 2) and L. sativum (specific seed tissues; Fig. 5) the GA-triggered negative feedback loop affected only the GID1ac orthologues, while transcripts of the GID1b orthologues are not down-regulated by GA in Arabidopsis and are strongly up-regulated in L. sativum. By contrast, the expression patterns of the EXPA9 and EXLA1 transcripts assign them to a different pathway, not involving LesaGID1ac. This is supported by the fact that, in 30 h-imbibed Arabidopsis seeds, AtGID1b expression is not affected by GA, while AtGID1a and AtGID1c transcripts are down-regulated by GA (Fig. 2). At the same time, GA induces expression of EXLA1 and EXPA9, but not of the two XTH genes (Fig. 7), which indicates that the main regulation of both expansins during Arabidopsis germination is in a GID1b-involving pathway, while the two XTHs are in another pathway. In support of the association of the two XTHs with a GID1ac signalling pathway, the Arabidopsis gid1agid1c double mutant is impaired in the accumulation of transcripts upon imbibition for the two XTHs, but EXPA9 transcripts accumulate as in WT. The gid1agid1c double mutant also has a seed germination phenotype (Fig. 4). Thus, although for Arabidopsis whole seeds and for L. sativum specific seed tissues were analysed and not every aspect of the regulation is equal in both species, as a general conclusion the cross-species approach provided support for the hypothesis that, during germination of both Brassicaceae species, the two XTHs appear to be regulated by the GID1ac pathway, while the expansins seem to be associated with the GID1b pathway. In conclusion, eudicot species contain at least one GID1ac and one GID1b group member. GA responsiveness is similarly important and regulated during seed germination of different Brassicaceae species [e.g. Arabidopsis thaliana: Ogawa , Lepidium sativum: Müller , Sisymbrium officinale: Hilhorst ; Iglesias-Fernández and Matilla (2010)] and in seeds from other eudicot families [e.g. Solanaceae: Ni and Bradford (1993); Toorop ; Leubner-Metzger (2002, 2003); Petruzzelli ; Asteraceae: Argyris ; Rubiaceae: da Silva ]. Distinct, but partially overlapping roles are proposed for the GID1ac and GID1b pathways and their downstream target genes during seed germination that may be conserved among Brassicaceae (this work) or even among eudicots.

Supplementary data

Supplementary data can be found at JXB online. . GID1 transcript sequence alignments of L. sativum and Arabidopsis. . GID1 protein sequence alignments of L. sativum and Arabidopsis. . Comparison of L. sativum and Arabidopsis GID1 transcript secondary structures and stability motifs in 5' and 3' UTRs. . L. sativum and Arabidopsis GID1 5' and 3' UTRs motifs associated with mRNA stability. . Angiosperm phylogeny and GID1 receptor sequence accession. . cDNA clones obtained of the early micropylar endosperm SSH library. . Primer sequences used for quantitative PCR analyses.
  79 in total

Review 1.  The evolution of seeds.

Authors:  Ada Linkies; Kai Graeber; Charles Knight; Gerhard Leubner-Metzger
Journal:  New Phytol       Date:  2010-04-12       Impact factor: 10.151

2.  Identification and characterization of Arabidopsis gibberellin receptors.

Authors:  Masatoshi Nakajima; Asako Shimada; Yoshiyuki Takashi; Young-Cheon Kim; Seung-Hyun Park; Miyako Ueguchi-Tanaka; Hiroyuki Suzuki; Etsuko Katoh; Satoshi Iuchi; Masatomo Kobayashi; Tatsuya Maeda; Makoto Matsuoka; Isomaro Yamaguchi
Journal:  Plant J       Date:  2006-06       Impact factor: 6.417

3.  Seed germination of GA-insensitive sleepy1 mutants does not require RGL2 protein disappearance in Arabidopsis.

Authors:  Tohru Ariizumi; Camille M Steber
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2007-03-23       Impact factor: 11.277

Review 4.  Gibberellin receptor and its role in gibberellin signaling in plants.

Authors:  Miyako Ueguchi-Tanaka; Masatoshi Nakajima; Ashikari Motoyuki; Makoto Matsuoka
Journal:  Annu Rev Plant Biol       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 26.379

5.  Proteolysis-independent downregulation of DELLA repression in Arabidopsis by the gibberellin receptor GIBBERELLIN INSENSITIVE DWARF1.

Authors:  Tohru Ariizumi; Kohji Murase; Tai-Ping Sun; Camille M Steber
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2008-09-30       Impact factor: 11.277

6.  The GA-signaling repressor RGL3 represses testa rupture in response to changes in GA and ABA levels.

Authors:  Urszula Piskurewicz; Luis Lopez-Molina
Journal:  Plant Signal Behav       Date:  2009-01

Review 7.  Revealing the structural and functional diversity of plant cell walls.

Authors:  J Paul Knox
Journal:  Curr Opin Plant Biol       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 7.834

8.  The Pea DELLA proteins LA and CRY are important regulators of gibberellin synthesis and root growth.

Authors:  Diana E Weston; Robert C Elliott; Diane R Lester; Catherine Rameau; James B Reid; Ian C Murfet; John J Ross
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2008-03-28       Impact factor: 8.340

9.  A principal role for AtXTH18 in Arabidopsis thaliana root growth: a functional analysis using RNAi plants.

Authors:  Yasue Osato; Ryusuke Yokoyama; Kazuhiko Nishitani
Journal:  J Plant Res       Date:  2006-02-14       Impact factor: 2.629

10.  An "Electronic Fluorescent Pictograph" browser for exploring and analyzing large-scale biological data sets.

Authors:  Debbie Winter; Ben Vinegar; Hardeep Nahal; Ron Ammar; Greg V Wilson; Nicholas J Provart
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2007-08-08       Impact factor: 3.240

View more
  37 in total

Review 1.  Auxin: a master regulator in plant root development.

Authors:  Shivani Saini; Isha Sharma; Navdeep Kaur; Pratap Kumar Pati
Journal:  Plant Cell Rep       Date:  2013-04-04       Impact factor: 4.570

2.  DELAY OF GERMINATION 1 mediates a conserved coat-dormancy mechanism for the temperature- and gibberellin-dependent control of seed germination.

Authors:  Kai Graeber; Ada Linkies; Tina Steinbrecher; Klaus Mummenhoff; Danuše Tarkowská; Veronika Turečková; Michael Ignatz; Katja Sperber; Antje Voegele; Hans de Jong; Terezie Urbanová; Miroslav Strnad; Gerhard Leubner-Metzger
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-08-11       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Substituted Phthalimide AC94377 Is a Selective Agonist of the Gibberellin Receptor GID1.

Authors:  Kai Jiang; Masato Otani; Hiroaki Shimotakahara; Jung-Min Yoon; Seung-Hyun Park; Tomoko Miyaji; Takeshi Nakano; Hidemitsu Nakamura; Masatoshi Nakajima; Tadao Asami
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2016-11-29       Impact factor: 8.340

Review 4.  Beyond gibberellins and abscisic acid: how ethylene and jasmonates control seed germination.

Authors:  Ada Linkies; Gerhard Leubner-Metzger
Journal:  Plant Cell Rep       Date:  2011-11-02       Impact factor: 4.570

5.  Dose- and tissue-specific interaction of monoterpenes with the gibberellin-mediated release of potato tuber bud dormancy, sprout growth and induction of α-amylases and β-amylases.

Authors:  Sonja Rentzsch; Dagmara Podzimska; Antje Voegele; Madeleine Imbeck; Kerstin Müller; Ada Linkies; Gerhard Leubner-Metzger
Journal:  Planta       Date:  2011-08-20       Impact factor: 4.116

6.  Comparative Analyses of Anatomical Structure, Phytohormone Levels, and Gene Expression Profiles Reveal Potential Dwarfing Mechanisms in Shengyin Bamboo (Phyllostachys edulis f. tubaeformis).

Authors:  Tao Wang; Lei Liu; Xiaojing Wang; Lixiong Liang; Jinjun Yue; Lubin Li
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2018-06-07       Impact factor: 5.923

7.  Seed Dormancy Involves a Transcriptional Program That Supports Early Plastid Functionality during Imbibition.

Authors:  Alberto Gianinetti; Franca Finocchiaro; Paolo Bagnaresi; Antonella Zechini; Primetta Faccioli; Luigi Cattivelli; Giampiero Valè; Chiara Biselli
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2018-04-19

8.  Spatiotemporal seed development analysis provides insight into primary dormancy induction and evolution of the Lepidium delay of germination1 genes.

Authors:  Kai Graeber; Antje Voegele; Annette Büttner-Mainik; Katja Sperber; Klaus Mummenhoff; Gerhard Leubner-Metzger
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2013-02-20       Impact factor: 8.340

9.  Role of the gibberellin receptors GID1 during fruit-set in Arabidopsis.

Authors:  Carolina Gallego-Giraldo; Jianhong Hu; Cristina Urbez; Maria Dolores Gomez; Tai-Ping Sun; Miguel A Perez-Amador
Journal:  Plant J       Date:  2014-08-07       Impact factor: 6.417

10.  Distinct cell wall architectures in seed endosperms in representatives of the Brassicaceae and Solanaceae.

Authors:  Kieran J D Lee; Bas J W Dekkers; Tina Steinbrecher; Cherie T Walsh; Antony Bacic; Leónie Bentsink; Gerhard Leubner-Metzger; J Paul Knox
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2012-09-06       Impact factor: 8.340

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.