Mark L Tucker1, Ronghui Yang. 1. Soybean Genomics and Improvement Lab, USDA/ARS, Bldg 006, BARC-West, 10300 Baltimore Avenue, Beltsville, MD 20705 , USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The stimulatory and inhibitory role of ethylene and auxin, respectively, in leaf abscission (leaf drop) is well documented. More recently, IDA (INFLORESCENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION) peptides and their putative interacting receptor-like-kinase partners, HAESA and HAESA-like2, were shown to be essential components in Arabidopsis floral organ abscission. Prior to research on IDA, it was reported that bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) leaf abscission required a diffusible signal that emanated from the vascular tissue. We were interested in determining whether the IDA signalling path might regulate abscission in plants other than Arabidopsis and whether IDA might act as a diffusible signal in abscission. METHODOLOGY: Quantitative polymerase chain reaction was used to monitor gene expression and a GUS reporter gene construct used to determine the need for a diffusible signal in tomato. PRINCIPAL RESULTS: We identified 12 IDA-like and 11 HAESA-like genes in soybean (Glycine max) and monitored their gene expression in abscission in relation to the expression of several cell-wall-modifying proteins and aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid synthases. Ethylene evoked the expression of several IDA-like genes in abscission zones (AZ), but also to a lesser degree in the adjacent petiole tissue. Surprisingly, IDA-like gene expression was very high in senescent soybean leaves. We identified five IDA-like genes in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum). Only one IDA-like gene was expressed in the tomato AZ and its expression was approximately equal in the AZ and petioles, but no IDA-like gene showed significant expression in leaves at up to 96 h of exposure to ethylene. CONCLUSIONS: IDA-like gene expression is up-regulated during soybean and tomato abscission but up-regulation was not limited to the AZ. Cell separation in the AZ cortex of tomato does not require a diffusible signal emanating from the stele. A role for IDA in soybean and tomato leaf abscission is discussed.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The stimulatory and inhibitory role of ethylene and auxin, respectively, in leaf abscission (leaf drop) is well documented. More recently, IDA (INFLORESCENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION) peptides and their putative interacting receptor-like-kinase partners, HAESA and HAESA-like2, were shown to be essential components in Arabidopsis floral organ abscission. Prior to research on IDA, it was reported that bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) leaf abscission required a diffusible signal that emanated from the vascular tissue. We were interested in determining whether the IDA signalling path might regulate abscission in plants other than Arabidopsis and whether IDA might act as a diffusible signal in abscission. METHODOLOGY: Quantitative polymerase chain reaction was used to monitor gene expression and a GUS reporter gene construct used to determine the need for a diffusible signal in tomato. PRINCIPAL RESULTS: We identified 12 IDA-like and 11 HAESA-like genes in soybean (Glycine max) and monitored their gene expression in abscission in relation to the expression of several cell-wall-modifying proteins and aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid synthases. Ethylene evoked the expression of several IDA-like genes in abscission zones (AZ), but also to a lesser degree in the adjacent petiole tissue. Surprisingly, IDA-like gene expression was very high in senescent soybean leaves. We identified five IDA-like genes in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum). Only one IDA-like gene was expressed in the tomato AZ and its expression was approximately equal in the AZ and petioles, but no IDA-like gene showed significant expression in leaves at up to 96 h of exposure to ethylene. CONCLUSIONS:IDA-like gene expression is up-regulated during soybean and tomato abscission but up-regulation was not limited to the AZ. Cell separation in the AZ cortex of tomato does not require a diffusible signal emanating from the stele. A role for IDA in soybean and tomato leaf abscission is discussed.
The stimulatory and inhibitory roles of ethylene and auxin, respectively, in
controlling the onset of abscission (organ separation) have been known and studied
for many years (Sexton and Roberts
1982; Sexton 1997; Roberts ).
More recently, additional regulatory components that are essential for floral organ
abscission have been identified in Arabidopsis (Lewis ; Nath ). Butenko
identified an Arabidopsis abscission mutant and they named it
inflorescence deficient in abscission (ida),
in which the floral organs (petals, sepals and stamens) remain attached throughout
enlargement of the silique. The IDA gene was found to encode a
small protein that included an N-terminal signal peptide. In
Arabidopsis, there are five more IDA-like
(IDL) genes that are differentially expressed in development.
When each IDL was overexpressed in Arabidopsis,
all five IDLs displayed phenotypes similar to those of
IDA-overexpressing plants, suggesting functional redundancy
(Stenvik ). The IDA and IDL genes all
include a conserved (EPIP) peptide motif, and an exogenous application of synthetic
EPIP peptide to ida mutant floral explants induced a nearly
wild-type abscission response (Stenvik
).In an earlier study, Jinn identified an Arabidopsis
receptor-like kinase (RLK), which they called HAESA, that was
highly expressed where the petals, sepals and stamens attached to the flower
receptacle and, when suppressed in transgenic plants, abscission of the floral
organs was delayed. Neither overexpression of the IDA gene nor
exogenous application of the EPIP peptide rescued the delayed abscission phenotype
in double mutants lacking functional HAESA (HAE)
and HAESA-like2 (HSL2) genes (Stenvik ).
Based on these data, Stenvik proposed that the IDA peptide binds to HAE/HSL2
to initiate a signalling path that culminates in floral organ abscission. They also
proposed that the other IDL peptides might act through RLKs like HAE/HSL2 to
regulate events in other tissues and developmental processes. In the same year,
Cho
corroborated the IDA–HAE/HSL2 interaction and extended the signalling path to
include a mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade.Here, we sought to determine whether IDA and
HAESA-like gene expression in soybean (Glycine
max) and IDA-like expression in tomato (Solanum
lycopersicum) supported a possible role for these proteins in
regulating abscission in these species. We analysed the expression of 12
IDA-like and 11 HAESA-like genes in soybean
leaf abscission zones (AZ), petioles, leaves and roots, and five
IDA-like genes in tomato leaf AZ, petioles, leaves, fruit and
roots. To add perspective to the expression profiles for IDA and
HAESA-like gene expression, we followed the expression of
several genes for cell-wall-modifying proteins (CWMPs) previously demonstrated to be
up-regulated and specific to abscission in soybean (Tucker ) and tomato (Kalaitzis ).
In soybean, we also followed the expression of genes associated with the initial
committed step for ethylene synthesis, aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC)
synthase (Tucker ).The interrelationship of IDA gene expression and ethylene is
particularly important because although ethylene is not essential for
Arabidopsis floral organ abscission (Patterson and Bleecker 2004), it appears to be essential
in soybean and tomato (Lanahan ; Roberts
). With this in mind, we examined gene
expression in AZ and petioles from explants kept in air without ethylene or exposed
to air containing a physiologically high concentration of ethylene (25 μL
L−1) or 2,5-norbornadiene (NBD), which inhibits ethylene
action (Sisler 2006).Thompson and Osborne (1994) proposed
that bean leaf abscission requires a small signal produced in the vascular bundle
(stele) that diffuses out into the cortex to initiate cell separation in the cortex.
They observed that no endo-β-1,4-glucanhydrolase (cellulase) activity or cell
separation was detectable in the AZ cortex if the cortex were separated from the
stele prior to the treatment with ethylene; however, if they waited for several
hours after treatment with ethylene and then separated the cortex from the stele,
cellulase and cell separation in the cortex were detected. Because IDA is secreted
and possibly processed into a smaller peptide (Stenvik ), we hypothesized that the IDA
peptide might be the small diffusible signal predicted to exist in bean leaf AZ
(Thompson and Osborne 1994).
Nevertheless, we first needed to determine whether a diffusible signal like that
found in bean was essential for abscission in a species that we could easily
surgically manipulate and which also had good molecular indicators for abscission.
We chose to examine tomato leaf abscission to test for a requirement for a
diffusible signal.
Methods
Tissue preparation
Stem/petiole explants ∼5–7 cm tall (leaf blades removed) were
prepared from 2-week-old soybean (G. max, cv. Williams 82)
seedlings grown in a growth chamber with 15 h of light at 23 °C, or from
young (several weeks old) tomato plants (S. lycopersicum, cv.
Ailsa Craig) grown in the greenhouse. Explants were placed in Erlenmeyer flasks
of water inside a dark chamber maintained at 25 °C, where they were
exposed to a gas flow of either air or 25 μL L−1
ethylene in air. For NBD treatments, the soybean explants in flasks were placed
in 9-L desiccators and liquid NBD injected through a septum to achieve an NBD
gas concentration of 2000 μL L−1. The desiccators were
then placed in a dark chamber at 25 °C. The desiccators were opened every
48 h to collect tissue and when closed again the NBD was replenished. From the
soybean explants, the AZ (∼2 mm) were harvested from the upper foliar AZ
immediately below the leaf blade. In tomato, the lower AZ at the petiole stem
juncture was collected. In soybean, the petiole material was excised from
between the AZ at either end. In tomato, the petiole was collected ∼4 mm
distal to the lower AZ. Leaves excised from the explants described above were
placed on moist paper towels and exposed to 25 μL L−1
ethylene in air at 25 °C in the dark. Tomato fruit were collected from
greenhouse plants at the ripening stages indicated. The entire root systems of
greenhouse tomato plants were collected for RNA extraction. For soybean,
sections of the root relative to the root apex (0–2, 2–7,
7–12 and 12–50 mm proximal to the apex) were collected separately
as previously described (Tucker ).
Sequence identification and protein alignments
IDA-like and HAESA-like genes were identified
in the genomic sequences for soybean and bean assembled by the Joint Genome
Institute (JGI) and made available at . The IDA
genes for tomato were identified in the genomic sequence deposited in the
National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). Sequence alignments were
completed using MacVector ClustalW (MacVector Inc, Cary, NC, USA). Unrooted
dendrograms were prepared using PAUP* Version 4.0 software (Sinauer
Associates, Sunderland, MA, USA). Putative N-terminal signal peptides were
identified using the SignalP 3.0 software available at .
Quantitative polymerase chain reaction
Procedures for quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) and the
PCR primers used to examine gene expression for CWMPs were described previously
(Tucker ). A single bulk cDNA synthesis reaction (5 μg of DNased
RNA) was performed and the cDNA diluted to 2.0 mL to accommodate a large number
of PCR reactions and thereby reduce differences that might occur between cDNA
synthesis reactions. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reactions were
completed using a Brilliant II SYBR Green QPCR Master Mix in an Mx3000P
instrument (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA, USA). Soybean is a tetraploid and most
genes are found as paralogous pairs with highsequence identity. Gene-specific
primers for all the ACS, IDA and
HAE genes were prepared by designing the primers to match
less conserved parts of the sequences so that the 3′-end nucleotide of
the primer was a mismatch between paralogous genes [Additional Information File AI2]. The 3′ mismatch
generally prevents amplification of highly similar sequences. All QPCR Ct values
were normalized to the expression for ubiquitin in soybean (accession AK285252)
and tomato (accession BT012698). In the heat map display only, if the expression
of a gene relative to ubiquitin was <0.0001, the expression value was set
to 0.0001. A relative concentration of 0.0001 represents a PCR product detected
at ∼35 cycles. Setting a lower limit of 0.0001 reduces potential
artefacts associated with numerous PCR cycles and eliminates ratios with a
denominator of zero.
Results
Gene identification and sequence comparisons
We identified in the soybean genomic sequence 12 IDA-like genes
(henceforth referred to simply as IDA). The soybeanIDA genes were identified using a TBLASTN search (six-frame
translation) of the G. max genomic sequence with the
AtIDA (accession NP564941) protein sequence minus its
N-terminal signal peptide. The 12 soybeanIDA sequences were
named GmIDA 1 through 6 with the letter a or b appended to
denote highly similar paralogous genes. A similar approach was used to identify
six IDA-like genes in bean (Phaseolus
vulgaris) and five in tomato. The relatedness of the six
Arabidopsis, 12 soybean, six bean and five tomatoIDA
proteins is displayed in the dendrogram shown in Fig. 1 [nucleotide sequences available in
Additional Information File AI1]. All the IDA
genes include an uninterrupted open reading frame with no introns and encode a
translation product with a predicted N-terminal signal peptide sequence. The
amino acid sequence similarity between AtIDA and other IDA-like proteins minus
the putative signal peptides ranges from 24 % with AtIDL3 to 53 %
with GmIDA1a. All of the IDAs include a variable region immediately after the
signal peptide, and all include the highly conserve EPIP domain (Stenvik )
(Fig. 2).
Fig. 1
An unrooted dendrogram based on per cent amino acid identity
among Arabidopsis, bean, soybean and tomato IDA and
IDA-like protein sequences minus the N-terminal signal
peptides.
Fig. 2
Alignment of translated open reading frames minus a
predicted N-terminal signal peptide for
Identical conserved amino acids
are enclosed in grey boxes and similar amino acids are enclosed in
lighter grey boxes.
An unrooted dendrogram based on per cent amino acid identity
among Arabidopsis, bean, soybean and tomatoIDA and
IDA-like protein sequences minus the N-terminal signal
peptides.Alignment of translated open reading frames minus a
predicted N-terminal signal peptide for
Identical conserved amino acids
are enclosed in grey boxes and similar amino acids are enclosed in
lighter grey boxes.Eukaryotic genomes commonly include many RLK genes (Shiu and Bleecker 2001; Morris and Walker 2003). Assuming
that the translated open reading frames for the soybean genes most similar to
the ArabidopsisHAESA (HAE) and HAESA-like2 (HSL2) peptides
retained IDA-ligand-binding specificity and kinase signalling, we performed a
TBLASTN search of the soybean genomic sequence with the AtHAESA and AtHAESA-like
peptide sequences. Thirteen soybeanHAESA-like genes
(henceforth referred to simply as soybeanHAE) were identified.
The relatedness of the 13 soybeanHAE and the ArabidopsisHAE
and HSL proteins is displayed in the dendrogram shown in Fig. 3 [nucleotide sequences provided as
Additional Information File AI1]. The soybean sequences
identified and selected for study ranged from 82 % amino acid similarity
between GmHAE1a and AtHSL1, and 49 % amino acid sequence similarity
between GmHAE7a and AtHSL2. Within the protein sequences, the most highly
conserved region was in the protein kinase domains in the C-terminal third of
the protein.
Fig. 3
An unrooted dendrogram based on per cent amino acid identity
among Arabidopsis and soybean HAE and HSL protein
sequences.
An unrooted dendrogram based on per cent amino acid identity
among Arabidopsis and soybeanHAE and HSL protein
sequences.
Reference genes
The expression profiles for all the genes analysed here were determined by QPCR.
The choice of a reference gene is important to the interpretation of QPCR
results (Czechowski ; Lilly ). In this regard, we examined the expression of
four commonly used reference mRNAs for soybean and tomato: ubiquitin (AK285252,
BT012698), actin (AK285258, AK322149), elongation factor 1 beta (AK243885,
AK246849) and F-box (Glyma18g51130.1, AK327900) (Czechowski ; Lilly ).
The ubiquitin Ct (threshold value) varied the least among the four; nonetheless,
the expression of all the reference genes was relatively constant in the tissues
examined (Fig. 4). Because
ubiquitin expression varied the least of the four, all the QPCR results were
normalized and made relative to the concentration of ubiquitin in the respective
soybean and tomato RNA populations.
Fig. 4
Heat map displaying the change in gene expression (log
base 2 ratios) for soybean (A) and tomato (B) genes in
abscission zones (AZ), petioles (Pet), leaves, fruit (tomato
only) and roots (soybean only). The soybean root pieces
were collected as 0–2, 2–7, 7–12 and
12–50 mm sections proximal to the root apex. AZ and Pet
treatments were 25 μL L−1 ethylene in air,
air, or 2000 μL L−1 2,5-norbornadiene (NBD)
in air. The QPCR results shown here were all normalized to soybean
and tomato ubiquitin (soybean AK285252, tomato BT012698). A dark box
indicates strong up-regulation of gene expression whereas a white
box indicates strong down-regulation, and no change in expression is
indicated by a neutral grey box (see the scale at the top). The log2
ratios for tissues labelled as AZ or Pet are ratios for the
expression at the indicated time over the zero-time collection (0
h). The log2 ratios labelled AZ/Pet are the ratios for the
expression in the AZ relative to the expression in the petioles at
the indicated time of collection. Gene name abbreviations for the
CWMPs are: cellulase (Cel), expansin (EXP), pectate lyase (PL) and
polygalacturonase (PG). The tomato fruit PG (PG2a) is indicated as
TFPG and the abscission PGs as TAPG. An a, b, c or d after an ACS
gene indicates that this group of genes are highly similar to the
same numbered gene in Arabidopsis (Tucker ).
Heat map displaying the change in gene expression (log
base 2 ratios) for soybean (A) and tomato (B) genes in
abscission zones (AZ), petioles (Pet), leaves, fruit (tomato
only) and roots (soybean only). The soybean root pieces
were collected as 0–2, 2–7, 7–12 and
12–50 mm sections proximal to the root apex. AZ and Pet
treatments were 25 μL L−1 ethylene in air,
air, or 2000 μL L−1 2,5-norbornadiene (NBD)
in air. The QPCR results shown here were all normalized to soybean
and tomatoubiquitin (soybean AK285252, tomato BT012698). A dark box
indicates strong up-regulation of gene expression whereas a white
box indicates strong down-regulation, and no change in expression is
indicated by a neutral grey box (see the scale at the top). The log2
ratios for tissues labelled as AZ or Pet are ratios for the
expression at the indicated time over the zero-time collection (0
h). The log2 ratios labelled AZ/Pet are the ratios for the
expression in the AZ relative to the expression in the petioles at
the indicated time of collection. Gene name abbreviations for the
CWMPs are: cellulase (Cel), expansin (EXP), pectate lyase (PL) and
polygalacturonase (PG). The tomato fruit PG (PG2a) is indicated as
TFPG and the abscission PGs as TAPG. An a, b, c or d after an ACS
gene indicates that this group of genes are highly similar to the
same numbered gene in Arabidopsis (Tucker ).
Expression profiles for soybean IDAs and other genes
For soybean, we monitored the mRNA accumulation of 32 CWMPs (Tucker ),
17 ACC synthases (Tucker ), 12 IDA and 11 HAE proteins. However, for
brevity, we only display here the results for six CWMPs and five genes for ACC
synthases (ACS) that showed significant change in abscission
(Fig. 4). To further
understand how ethylene affects the expression of each of these soybean genes,
we exposed the stem/petiole explants to air without ethylene, air + 25
μL L−1 ethylene or air + 2000 μL
L−1 NBD, a competitive inhibitor of ethylene action (Sisler 2006). After 48 h exposure to
ethylene, 20 % of the AZ had separated (abscised) and after 72 h 100
% had abscised (Fig. 5). In air, separation lagged behind the ethylene-treated explants by
∼48 h, showing only 40 % separation at 96 h and 100 % after
144 h (Fig. 5). An increase in
gene expression for most of the selected cell wall proteins can be seen within
12 h after exposure to ethylene or at 48 h when explants were kept in air
(Figs 5 and 6). 2,5-Norbornadiene completely
blocked abscission for 144 h but only decreased gene expression for the same
cell wall proteins by ∼90 % as compared with similar explants kept
in air (Fig. 6).
Fig. 5
Time-dependent graphs for per cent abscission in soybean
explants and gene expression profiles for genes selected based
on significant change in their expression either in abscission
or roots. Treatments and normalization are described in
Fig. 4. Note
that the scale changes for some graphs in order to better illustrate
differences in gene expression between treatments. The means and
standard error bars for AZ and petioles (Pet) are for two
independent replicate experiments. All others are single experiments
that included many AZ, petioles, leaves and root
pieces.
Fig. 6
Time-dependent graphs for per cent abscission in tomato
explants and gene expression profiles for AZ, petioles (Pet),
leaves and fruit. As in Fig. 4, the QPCR results were all normalized to
ubiquitin. The data points are for a single experiment that included
many AZ, petioles, leaves and fruit. Fruit stages are: mature green
(MG), breaker (BR), pink (PK), red ripe (RD) and over ripe
(OR).
Time-dependent graphs for per cent abscission in soybean
explants and gene expression profiles for genes selected based
on significant change in their expression either in abscission
or roots. Treatments and normalization are described in
Fig. 4. Note
that the scale changes for some graphs in order to better illustrate
differences in gene expression between treatments. The means and
standard error bars for AZ and petioles (Pet) are for two
independent replicate experiments. All others are single experiments
that included many AZ, petioles, leaves and root
pieces.Time-dependent graphs for per cent abscission in tomato
explants and gene expression profiles for AZ, petioles (Pet),
leaves and fruit. As in Fig. 4, the QPCR results were all normalized to
ubiquitin. The data points are for a single experiment that included
many AZ, petioles, leaves and fruit. Fruit stages are: mature green
(MG), breaker (BR), pink (PK), red ripe (RD) and over ripe
(OR).ACC synthase is essential for ethylene synthesis (Yamagami ). The
expression of several ACS genes increased markedly in the
ethylene-treated AZ at approximately the same time as the increase in
Cel1 and PG11 (Figs 4 and 5). The increase in expression of
ACS2 isoforms (a, b, c and d) was particularly marked.
However, the increase in ACS gene expression was not as AZ
specific (expressed in the AZ relative to the petiole) as were the CWMPs
(Figs 4 and 5). In air, the increase in expression
of ACS seemed to lag behind the CWMPs. An increase in
ACS gene expression was not noted in air until 96 h, and
NBD suppressed expression of ACS even more than it did the
CWMPs. However, it is worth noting that ACS gene expression was
easily detected at our 0 h time point in AZ, petioles and leaves. At our 0 h
time point, the expression relative to ubiquitin of ACS2d,
ACS6a, ACS6b, ACS9a,
ACS9b and ACS9d was > 0.001.The expression of IDA2a, IDA2b and
IDA4a increases markedly during abscission in the soybean
explants, and IDA2a and IDA2b were more highly
expressed in the AZ than in petioles (Figs 4 and 5).
Expression of all the soybean IDAs tended to lag behind the
early expression of Cel1 and was more similar to the expression
pattern for the other cellulases and PG11 (Fig. 4). Interestingly, up-regulation of
some of the IDA genes was less affected by the NBD treatment
(Fig. 5).
PG11 expression was also less affected by the NBD treatment
(Fig. 6).Several soybean IDAs were also expressed in roots
(Figs 5 and 6). Interestingly, the
IDAs up-regulated in the AZ were not highly expressed near
the growing root tips but further back in the root, which suggests they might be
associated with lateral root initiation. However, other IDA
genes, i.e. IDA3b, IDA5a and
IDA5b, were most highly expressed immediately behind the
root meristem (Fig. 4) where
cell elongation and vascular differentiation occur (Tucker ). Also of
interest is the observation that IDA expression increased
markedly in senescent soybean leaves after 96 h of ethylene (Figs 4 and 5). IDA1a and IDA1b
displayed especially high expression late during senescence, even more abundant
than ubiquitin (Fig. 5).
Interestingly, although five IDA genes were identified in
tomato, only IDA1 increased significantly in tomato abscission
explants and the increase was equal in both the AZ and petiole
(Fig. 6). Although the
tomato IDA1 transcript was detected in leaves
(Fig. 5B), it did not
display the very large increase in expression observed for soybean after 96 h
exposure to ethylene. IDA gene expression was also detected in the root system
of tomato (results not shown) but a detailed expression relative to the root
apex was not performed.In Arabidopsis, HAE and HSL2 putatively act as redundant
receptors for the IDA peptide in a signalling path that induces gene expression
leading to separation of the floral organs (Cho ; Stenvik ). In soybean, we
identified the genes most similar to the ArabidopsisHAE and
HSL2 genes (Fig. 3) and examined their expression (Figs 4 and 5).
Based on the expression patterns for the soybeanHAE genes,
there is no clear indication that any of these proteins play a special role in
abscission (Fig. 4). Soybean
HAE2a expression was included in Fig. 5 because its expression, like that of
IDA1a and IDA1b, is very strong in
senescent leaves. It is possible that the IDA1a and/or IDA1b peptides interact
with HAE2a to regulate some part of senescence in leaves.
Cell-to-cell signalling
Results with bean leaf abscission indicated that a small molecular signal was
produced in the vascular tissue of bean AZ that diffused out from the stele to
induce cell separation in the cortex (Thompson and Osborne 1994). We hypothesized that this signal might
be the IDA peptide, but we first needed to determine whether cell-to-cell
signalling was required in a system for which we had good markers and that we
could surgically manipulate. We chose to use the tomatopolygalacturonase 1
(TAPG1) and 4 (TAPG4) promoters ligated to
a GUS reporter gene as indicators for cell separation in tomato (Hong ).
Before treatment with ethylene, we sliced off a piece of the cortex at the AZ of
a tomato stem/petiole explant and then either tied the slice back onto its
original position on the explant or placed the slice on agar (Fig. 7). After 90 h of ethylene exposure,
the side slices were collected from the explants and agar, and stained for GUS
expression. If by mistake the cortex slice included some of the vascular bundle,
this was easily detected after ethylene treatment because both
TAPG1 and TAPG4 expression in the vascular
tissue extends up the vascular bundle a few millimetres distal to the separation
layer (Hong ). Vascular expression of TAPG4::GUS in a side slice can be seen
in an example included in Fig. 7. In the case of tomato leaf abscission, cell separation and GUS
expression occurred in both the slices that were tied back onto the AZ or placed
on agar (Fig. 7).
Fig. 7
Protocol and images for GUS-stained tomato leaf AZ.
The TAPG1::GUS and TAPG4::GUS transgenic plants used for these
experiments were described previously (Hong ). Side
slices of AZ cortex were prepared from intact stem/petiole explants
(A). A depiction of how the side slice was prepared to avoid
vascular tissue is shown in the GUS-stained cross-section of an
abscised AZ (B). The slice was either tied back onto the same
position on the explant (C) or placed on agar (D). Explants with
slices tied back on and slices on agar were exposed to 25 μL
L−1 ethylene in air at 25 °C for 90 h.
After 90 h, side slices were collected from explants (tied) and agar
(agar), and stained for GUS activity. An example of a side slice
kept on agar that included some vascular tissue is shown to
demonstrate how slices that included vascular tissue could be
identified and eliminated from analysis.
Protocol and images for GUS-stained tomato leaf AZ.
The TAPG1::GUS and TAPG4::GUS transgenic plants used for these
experiments were described previously (Hong ). Side
slices of AZ cortex were prepared from intact stem/petiole explants
(A). A depiction of how the side slice was prepared to avoid
vascular tissue is shown in the GUS-stained cross-section of an
abscised AZ (B). The slice was either tied back onto the same
position on the explant (C) or placed on agar (D). Explants with
slices tied back on and slices on agar were exposed to 25 μL
L−1 ethylene in air at 25 °C for 90 h.
After 90 h, side slices were collected from explants (tied) and agar
(agar), and stained for GUS activity. An example of a side slice
kept on agar that included some vascular tissue is shown to
demonstrate how slices that included vascular tissue could be
identified and eliminated from analysis.
Discussion
In Arabidopsis, IDA gene expression signals the
beginning of floral organ abscission and appears to be essential for abscission
(Butenko ). IDA::GUS expression in Arabidopsis is generally
localized to the region where abscission will occur but not precisely restricted to
where separation occurs (Butenko , 2006).
IDA-like transcripts in species other than
Arabidopsis were found in EST databases for several different
plant species (Butenko ) but their expression profiles have not been extensively studied.
One objective of the experiments described here was to identify
IDA-like genes in species other than Arabidopsis
and examine their expression to determine whether IDA might perform a similar
function in these species. In soybean, a tetraploid legume, we identified 12
IDA-like genes and in bean, a diploid legume, we identified six
(Figs 1 and 2). We also identified five
IDA-like genes in tomato (Figs 1 and 2).Many years ago, Jackson and Osborne
(1970) demonstrated that ethylene increased in the AZ of petioles, and a
role for ethylene in abscission has been confirmed by many others (Taylor and Whitelaw 2001; Roberts ).
Aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid synthase is essential for the biosynthesis of
ethylene (Yamagami ). Thus, we examined the gene expression profiles for 17 soybean
ACS. Many genes for CWMPs have been demonstrated to increase
during abscission and as a group are essential for cell separation (Roberts ). A
few CWMPs whose expression is highly specific to the AZ were included in the current
study to add perspective to the profiles for IDA,
HAE and ACS gene expression. Although
ACS expression was somewhat higher in the AZ of soybean, it was
not as AZ specific as the genes for the selected CWMPs (Fig. 4). Whether or not ACS is
AZ specific, the rise in ACS gene expression in explants kept in
air and NBD came after the rise in several genes for CWMPs and IDA
(Fig. 4). Of interest in this
regard is that gene expression for several ACS genes was low but
easily detected by QPCR in AZ at the beginning of each treatment (0 h). This
suggests that although ethylene biosynthesis increases during abscission, a change
in the concentration of other abscission-inducing signals must precede the increase
in ethylene that sensitizes the AZ to low levels of pre-abscission ethylene or
activate ethylene synthesis from pre-existing ACC synthases. As noted previously, a
decrease in auxin is essential for abscission to occur and the decrease in auxin
might be the signal for an increase in ethylene synthesis and other early changes in
gene expression (Tucker ; Taylor and
Whitelaw 2001; Roberts ), but are there additional signals, e.g. IDA, that
play a primary role in leaf abscission of soybean and tomato?We monitored the expression of 12 soybean IDAs and for most of the
IDA genes expression increased late in abscission. However, by
far the greatest and earliest increase occurred for GmIDA2a and
GmIDA2b, each increasing by more than 100-fold in the AZ after
24 h of ethylene treatment or 96 h in air. The increase in GmIDA2a
and GmIDA2b transcript was relatively specific to the AZ but
somewhat less AZ specific than the genes for the CWMPs (Figs 4 and 5). However, if you add up expression levels for all the
IDA genes and assume that the secreted peptides are
functionally redundant, there is a fairly high level of total IDA
transcript in both AZ and petioles that could lead to synthesis and secretion of an
active IDA peptide. However, the amount of IDA peptides secreted into the apoplast
may not be directly proportional to the amount of IDA transcript in
the AZ or petiole, and the receptor for these ligands may not be distributed in the
same pattern as the secretion of the IDA peptide. Of interest in this regard is the
finding that overexpression of IDA in Arabidopsis
activated vestigial abscission of leaves (Stenvik ). This suggests that a receptor for
IDA is present in the vestigial leaf AZ that is capable of inducing an AZ-specific
cell separation response. Thus, it may be the receptor that determines AZ-specific
signalling.In Arabidopsis, IDA putatively interacts with the HAE and HSL2 RLKs
(Cho ;
Stenvik ). Expression of AtHAE and AtHSL2
promoter::GUS constructs in Arabidopsis indicated that these genes
are expressed in the floral organ AZ but not the surrounding tissue (Jinn ; Cho ). GUS
expression from the AtHAE promoter was first apparent in floral AZ
when flowers were competent for pollination and its expression was similar in the
ethylene-insensitive mutant etr1-1, which indicates that its
expression was independent of ethylene (Jinn
). Thus, for soybean, we also examined
the expression of potential receptors for the IDA peptide, i.e.
HAE-like genes. None of the soybeanHAE-like genes
identified had a transcript expression pattern that was specific to the AZ
(Fig. 4), and therefore, even
if they might be receptors for an IDA peptide, these RLKs probably do not define a
separation layer within the AZ. Other RLKs or other molecules or proteins must be
responsible for defining those cells within the AZ that can respond to abscission
signals.In addition to soybean, we also quantified the expression of five tomatoIDA-like genes (Fig. 6). Only tomato SlIDA1 increased significantly in leaf
AZ and the increase was mirrored in the petioles. SlIDA1 also
increased slightly during the ripening of tomato fruit but the abundance of the
transcript was considerably less than in the AZ. None of the tomato
IDAs increased in the ethylene-treated leaves, which was
different from soybean. However, after 96 h of ethylene exposure the tomato leaves
were not as yellow as the soybean leaves at the same time point; it is possible that
IDA might have increased in tomato leaves if they were exposed
to ethylene for a longer time.In Arabidopsis, IDA is secreted into the apoplast, where it may be
further processed into an even smaller peptide (Stenvik ). It is possible
that IDA could diffuse short distances in the apoplast of the AZ or be actively
translocated across AZ cells. When onion-skin cells were bombarded with an
IDA–GFP fusion construct, GFP fluorescence was observed in several
neighbouring cells, which indicated diffusion through the apoplast or non-specific
translocation across neighbouring cells (Butenko ). Thompson and Osborne (1994) proposed that the stele in
the AZ of bean produced a diffusible molecule that was necessary for initiation of
cell separation in the cortex. McManus
(2008) extended this earlier result to demonstrate that the diffusible
stelar substance by itself was not sufficient to induce separation in the cortex but
that ethylene was also essential. We hypothesized that the relatively small IDA
peptide might be the diffusible molecule predicted by Thompson and Osborne (1994). However, before testing this
hypothesis, we needed to find a model system that we could use. We already had
transgenic tomato seed that included a GUS reporter gene ligated to the
TAPG1 or TAPG4 promoters (Hong ). We
also had a transgenic soybean which includes a PG11::GUS construct which is
expressed in soybean AZ (Tucker ). The tomato AZ are quite large and it was fairly
easy to slice off the side of the AZ to separate the cortex from the stele; however,
this was not so easy in the much smaller soybean AZ. When we sliced off the tomato
AZ cortex and placed it on agar, the cortex expressed GUS and displayed cell
separation when exposed to ethylene much the same as when the cortex slice was tied
back onto its original position on the side of the AZ (Fig. 7). The result for tomato side slices
indicates that there is no need for a diffusible signal from the stele. We recently
found an older publication by Roy Sexton
(1979) where he dissected the foliar AZ of Impatiens
sultani into many smaller pieces and placed the pieces on agar. After
30 h at 22 °C he examined each piece, many of which did not include vascular
tissue, for cell separation. He concluded that ‘there was little requirement
for cell to cell contact in either the temporal or spatial integration of cell wall
breakdown’ in the AZ of I. sultani. We conclude that a
diffusible stelar signal similar to that discovered in bean is not universally
required for leaf abscission; however, because of experimental limitations with
soybean, we cannot conclude that a diffusible signal is not required for soybean
cortex abscission. This remains to be tested in future experiments.As a part of this project we examined the expression of IDA and
HAE in ethylene-treated leaves. Unexpectedly, expression of
several soybean IDAs increased late in senescing (yellowing) leaves
exposed to ethylene for 96 h. Most notably, GmIDA1a and
GmIDA1b transcripts accumulated to very high levels in
senescent leaves (Figs 4 and 5). Interestingly, there was a
corresponding large increase in the expression of GmHAE2a in
senescent soybean leaves (Figs 4
and 5). What role IDA signalling might
play in senescence is unknown and how much of the gene expression changes observed
in the petiole and AZ of the soybean and tomato explants can be linked to a general
senescence response is also unknown.With regard to identifying a function for IDA signalling in plants other than
Arabidopsis, the dendrogram for the IDAs might shed some light
on this (Fig. 1). The dendrogram
suggests that multiplication of the IDA and
IDA-like genes may have occurred after divergence of
Arabidopsis (Brassicaceae), tomato (Solanaceae) and soybean
(Fabaceae), but before divergence of soybean and bean, both in the Fabaceae family.
The fact that Arabidopsis includes six IDA and
IDL genes, and we identified six genes in bean (a diploid), 12
in soybean (a tetraploid) and five in tomato (a diploid) may be coincidental. It is
possible that the IDA signalling mechanism itself is what is important to the plant,
and the signalling mechanism was duplicated and adapted for use in diverse
developmental processes in different plant families.
Conclusions and forward look
Although ethylene appears to be essential for abscission in many species (Tucker ;
Lanahan ; Roberts ), it is not essential for floral organ abscission in
Arabidopsis (Butenko
). In Arabidopsis,
conversely to ethylene, IDA and its putative binding partners HAE/HSL2 appear to be
essential to floral organ abscission (Jinn
; Butenko ). IDA gene
expression increases many fold during soybean and tomato leaf abscission, but based
on gene expression patterns alone, we cannot conclude that IDA signalling is
required for abscission in these species. In tomato, IDA gene expression was
approximately equal in the AZ and petioles and, in soybean, IDA expression was
slightly more AZ specific but not so obviously specific to the AZ to justify a
conclusion that IDA signalling is necessary for abscission in soybean. In
experiments where we put the soybean explants in water with 10 μM EPIP
peptide and exposed the explants in the peptide solution to air or ethylene, we did
not observe any effect on the rate of abscission (results not shown). Suppression of
IDA gene expression in transgenic plants will be necessary to determine whether or
not IDA signalling plays a primary role in soybean or tomato abscission.Shi
proposed that IDA signalling in Arabidopsis abscission affects cell
enlargement through its regulation of a subset of KNOX transcription factors. In
this regard, Meir showed a strong decrease in two KNOX genes in
tomato pedicel AZ when the flowers were removed, which also occurred in AZ when
ethylene action was inhibited with 1-MCP. The decrease in KNOX gene
expression might be caused by a decrease in auxin but might also be linked to IDA
signalling. A possible link between IDA and regulation of KNOX transcription factors
in soybean and tomato needs to be examined.Assuming sequence conservation between ArabidopsisHAE and HSL2
proteins and RLKs with a similar role in soybean, we attempted to identify RLK
partners for soybean IDAs. Based on gene expression patterns, it is possible that
soybean IDA1a and IDA1b might interact with soybean HAE2a late in senescence, but
none of the expression patterns for the 11 RLKs that we examined seemed to fit with
our expectations for an IDA ligand receptor involved in soybean abscission.
Sequencing of the soybean transcriptome may provide a more refined list of RLK
candidates that might interact with IDA in an abscission response and warrant
further examination.
Additional information
The following additional information is available in the online version of this
article –File AI1. IDA and HAESA sequences.File AI2. Primers used for QPCR experiments.
Contributions by the authors
M.L.T. designed the experiments, conducted some experiments and prepared the
manuscript. R.Y. did all the QPCR experiments and helped with the interpretation of
the results.
Authors: Grethe-Elisabeth Stenvik; Melinka A Butenko; Breeanna Rae Urbanowicz; Jocelyn K C Rose; Reidunn B Aalen Journal: Plant Cell Date: 2006-05-05 Impact factor: 11.277
Authors: Melinka A Butenko; Sara E Patterson; Paul E Grini; Grethe-Elisabeth Stenvik; Silja S Amundsen; Abul Mandal; Reidunn B Aalen Journal: Plant Cell Date: 2003-09-05 Impact factor: 11.277
Authors: Patrizia Tavormina; Barbara De Coninck; Natalia Nikonorova; Ive De Smet; Bruno P A Cammue Journal: Plant Cell Date: 2015-08-14 Impact factor: 11.277
Authors: Daniel Ventimilla; Karelia Velázquez; Susana Ruiz-Ruiz; Javier Terol; Miguel A Pérez-Amador; Mª Carmen Vives; José Guerri; Manuel Talon; Francisco R Tadeo Journal: BMC Plant Biol Date: 2021-05-21 Impact factor: 4.215
Authors: Joonyup Kim; Jinyoung Yang; Ronghui Yang; Richard C Sicher; Caren Chang; Mark L Tucker Journal: Front Plant Sci Date: 2016-02-17 Impact factor: 5.753
Authors: Sara Domingos; Joana Fino; Vânia Cardoso; Claudia Sánchez; José C Ramalho; Roberto Larcher; Octávio S Paulo; Cristina M Oliveira; Luis F Goulao Journal: BMC Plant Biol Date: 2016-02-01 Impact factor: 4.215
Authors: Ida M Stø; Russell J S Orr; Kim Fooyontphanich; Xu Jin; Jonfinn M B Knutsen; Urs Fischer; Timothy J Tranbarger; Inger Nordal; Reidunn B Aalen Journal: Front Plant Sci Date: 2015-10-30 Impact factor: 5.753