Nie Zhiyi1, Kang Guijuan1, Li Yu1, Dai Longjun1, Zeng Rizhong1. 1. Key Laboratory of Biology and Genetic Resources of Rubber Tree, Ministry of Agriculture & Rubber Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences, Danzhou, Hainan 571737, China.
Abstract
The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) proteins or transporters constitute a large protein family in plants and are involved in many different cellular functions and processes, including solute transportation, channel regulation and molecular switches, etc. Through transcriptome sequencing, a transcriptome-wide survey and expression analysis of the ABC protein genes were carried out using the laticiferous latex from Hevea brasiliensis (rubber tree). A total of 46 putative ABC family proteins were identified in the H. brasiliensis latex. These consisted of 12 'full-size', 21 'half-size' and 13 other putative ABC proteins, and all of them showed strong conservation with their Arabidopsis thaliana counterparts. This study indicated that all eight plant ABC protein paralog subfamilies were identified in the H. brasiliensis latex, of which ABCB, ABCG and ABCI were the most abundant. Real-time quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction assays demonstrated that gene expression of several latex ABC proteins was regulated by ethylene, jasmonic acid or bark tapping (a wound stress) stimulation, and that HbABCB15, HbABCB19, HbABCD1 and HbABCG21 responded most significantly of all to the abiotic stresses. The identification and expression analysis of the latex ABC family proteins could facilitate further investigation into their physiological involvement in latex metabolism and rubber biosynthesis by H. brasiliensis.
The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) proteins or transporters constitute a large protein family in plants and are involved in many different cellular functions and processes, including solute transportation, channel regulation and molecular switches, etc. Through transcriptome sequencing, a transcriptome-wide survey and expression analysis of the ABC protein genes were carried out using the laticiferous latex from Hevea brasiliensis (rubber tree). A total of 46 putative ABC family proteins were identified in the H. brasiliensislatex. These consisted of 12 'full-size', 21 'half-size' and 13 other putative ABC proteins, and all of them showed strong conservation with their Arabidopsis thaliana counterparts. This study indicated that all eight plant ABC protein paralog subfamilies were identified in the H. brasiliensislatex, of which ABCB, ABCG and ABCI were the most abundant. Real-time quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction assays demonstrated that gene expression of several latexABC proteins was regulated by ethylene, jasmonic acid or bark tapping (a wound stress) stimulation, and that HbABCB15, HbABCB19, HbABCD1 and HbABCG21 responded most significantly of all to the abiotic stresses. The identification and expression analysis of the latexABC family proteins could facilitate further investigation into their physiological involvement in latex metabolism and rubber biosynthesis by H. brasiliensis.
The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) protein family, especially the intrinsic membrane subfamilies, mediates a large number of fundamental cellular functions and processes that utilize ATP hydrolysis to energize the transport of solutes across membranes. These include substrate translocation, lipid trafficking, protein targeting and phytohormone transport [1-5], etc. The plant ABC proteins constitute one of the largest and most diverse protein families, and can be organized phylogenetically into eight clusters, namely the ABCA-ABCI subfamilies (ABCH is not found in plants) [6]. Two major types of ABC proteins can be characterized in plants. One is the membrane-integrated ABC protein, including the ABCA–ABCD and ABCG subfamilies, which contain both a nucleotide binding domain (NBD) and a trans-membrane domain (TMD), and the other is the soluble ABC proteins, which mainly cluster in the ABCE, ABCF and ABCI subfamilies and only contain a NBD domain [7, 8]. Whole genome sequencing has led to complete inventories of plant ABC transporters for model plants, such as Arabidopsis thaliana [9], rice (Oryza sativa L.) [10] and other plant species [11, 12], whereas little is known about ABC proteins in Hevea brasiliensis (Willd. ex Adr. de Juss.) Muell.-Arg. (para rubber tree), which is the most important natural rubber (NR)-producing plant in the world.NR is a long chain cis-1,4-polyisoprene polymer and is a strategically indispensable industrial raw material for more than 40,000 products. H. brasiliensis, a member of the Euphorbiaceae, is almost the only species that can produce commercially viable quantities of high-quality NR [13]. NR synthesis is a typical plant secondary metabolism process that occurs in the latex vessels of rubber trees via glycolysis, followed by the mevalonate or 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol 4-phosphate pathways, which provide the direct precursor of isopentenyl diphosphate (IPP) [14]. On the rubber particle, NR is formed through sequential condensation of hundreds of thousands of IPP units and is finally compartmentalised within a special organelle that is suspended in the latex of the laticiferous cells of rubber trees [15-17]. The increasing demand for NR by the world economy has prompted investigations into the underlying molecular mechanisms behind latex metabolism and NR biosynthesis [18-20], which may lead to an improvement in the latex yield of rubber trees.One of the latex yield-limiting factors is the regeneration potential of the latex in the H. brasiliensis laticifers between two consecutive tappings. Latex regeneration consists of several biological and molecular events, including sucrose importation into laticifers from neighboring cells [21, 22], ontogenesis, the development of rubber particles derived from endoplasmic reticulum [23] and the assembly and breakdown of complex lipids in the latex [24], etc. All the biological processes involve substrate transportation and trafficking or the turnover of intracellular components. Much less is known about the related process of solute transportation that occurs within the highly specialized and mature laticifer system, which has no plasmodesmata and is therefore apoplastically isolated from the adjacent cells in the inner bark of H. brasiliensis [25].A hallmark biological feature of rubber trees is their reticulate network of laticiferous cells, within which NR biosynthesis is carried out. The latex collected through bark tapping is actually the pure cytoplasm of the laticiferous vessels [26]. Therefore, the latex, together with the laticiferous cells of H. brasiliensis, is a good experimental system for biochemical and molecular investigations into a particular type of cell that has specially evolved for NR biosynthesis. Characterization of the ABC transporters in the laticifers would help reveal the physiological and molecular processes underlying latex metabolism and NR biosynthesis in rubber trees. Recently, 270 ABC transporter gene contigs were identified from the bark transcriptome of rubber trees [27], but no more information is available about the ABC transporters in rubber trees. In this study, the global inventory of the ABC proteins in the laticifers of H. brasiliensis was first identified by sequencing the latex transcriptome and then the expression patterns of several ABC proteins genes were analyzed using real-time quantitative reverse transcript-polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). This research provides valuable information for further investigations into the physiological roles of the ABC transporters during latex metabolism and NR biosynthesis in rubber trees.
Materials and Methods
Latex Collection and Total Latex RNA Preparation for Transcriptome Sequencing
Rubber trees (Clone Reyan 7–33–97) were planted on the experimental farm at the Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences in Hainan, P.R. China. Trees that had homogeneous stem girths and had been tapped for 2 years using an S/2 d/3 system (tapped every 3 days in a half spiral), were selected. The fresh latex sample was collected in a thermo bottle containing liquid nitrogen for 10 min and then immediately stored at—80°C. Total RNAs were isolated from the collected latex using our previously described method [28] and treated with DNase I (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) to remove genomic DNA. The quality and integrity of the RNAs were evaluated using Nanodrop 2000 (Thermo Scientific, Wilmington, DE, USA) and Bioanalyzer Chip RNA 7500 series II (Agilent, Santa Clara, USA) instruments.
Construction of the cDNA Library and Transcriptome Sequencing
Sequencing of the latex transcriptome was performed using an Illumina mRNA-Seq Sample Prep kit (Illumina Inc., San Diego, CA), according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Briefly, poly (A) mRNA was isolated from total RNA using oligo (dT) magnetic beads and fragmented into small pieces using divalent cations at an elevated temperature. The cleaved mRNA fragments were used for the first strand cDNA synthesis, together with reverse transcriptase and random hexamer-primers. The second strand cDNAs were synthesized using RNaseH and DNA polymerase I. The double-stranded cDNA fragments were purified with a QiaQuick PCR extraction kit and eluted with EB buffer for end repair and the ligation of sequencing adapters. The products were purified by agarose gel electrophoresis and the fragments that were around 200 bp in length were selected as templates and enriched by linear PCR amplification, which created the final cDNA library for transcriptome paired end sequencing via the Illumina HiSeq-2000 sequencing platform. Image analysis, base calling and quality value calculations were conducted using the Illumina/Solexa data processing pipeline.
De novo Assembly of the Latex Transcriptome
Before assembly, the raw reads that contained adaptors or unknown nucleotides larger than 5% with quality scores of Q ≤ 10 were trimmed using software found in Filter-fq (BGI, Shenzhen, China). The clean reads, which were randomly split into 25 bp K-mers for assembly into contigs using the de Bruijn graph, were then used for transcriptome de novo assembly using the Trinity software short reads assembly program (Release-20130225) [29]. The resultant contigs were further joined into scaffolds using the paired-end reads and gap filling was carried out in order to complete the scaffolds. To obtain non-redundant unigenes, the scaffolds were assembled together and clustered using the Gene Indices Clustering Tools (TGICL, version 2.1) [30] and Phrap software (Release-23.0) [31], which finally produced the assembled consensus sequences of the H. brasiliensislatex transcriptome. The transcriptome data have been submitted to the SRA database with an accession number of SRR1648124.
Functional Annotation and Classification of the Latex Transcriptome
All the assembled unigenes were used in a BLAST search and for annotation against the NCBI nr database with an E-value cut-off of 10-5. Functional categorization by Gene Ontology (GO; http://www.geneontology.org) was performed using Blast2GO software (http://www.blast2go.de/) with an E-value threshold of 10-5. Analyses of the Cluster of Orthologous Groups (COG) identifications and the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway annotations were conducted using Blastall software (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/staff/tao/URLAPI/blastall/) against the COG database in the NCBI (COG; ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/pub/wolf/COGs/) and the KEGG database using the BLASX algorithm with an E-value threshold of 10-5.
Identification of ABC Protein Genes in the Latex Transcriptome
A reciprocal best hits (two-direction) blast search was performed to identify the latexABC protein genes. First, A. thalianaABC protein sequences were retrieved from the A. thaliana Information Resource (TAIR) database. Putative ABC proteins obtained from the H. brasiliensislatex were searched by performing a tBLASTN analysis (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast) against the generated latex transcriptome data using A. thalianaABC protein sequences as queries. Second, the best hits were blasted again against the entire A. thaliana TAIR10 transcripts (http://www.arabidopsis.org/Blast/index.jsp). Non-complete latexABC protein genes were manually assembled into complete unigenes using the CAP3 program (http://doua.prabi.fr/software/cap3). The open reading frames (ORFs) of the latexABC protein unigenes were verified by searching the H. brasiliensis genome DNA sequences that have just been sequenced and assembled by the Rubber Research Institute of China using the Vector NTI Advance program (version 11.5.2). The polypeptide sequences corresponding to the latexABC proteins were analyzed for the presence of ABC conserved domains using the Conserved Domain Database (CDD) at NCBI (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Structure/cdd/wrpsb.cgi) and the Pfam27.0 web server (http://pfam.xfam.org/) [32, 33]. The cDNA sequences of all the latexABC protein genes have been deposited in the NCBI database with accession numbers ranging from KM035282–035324.
Sequence Analysis and Phylogenetics
The deduced amino acid sequences of the latexABC proteins, together with those of the A. thalianaABC proteins, were aligned by a multiple sequence comparison using the log-expectation (MUSCLE) alignment tool (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/msa/muscle) with the default program options [34]. Then they were subjected to phylogenetic analysis using the neighbor-joining method and 1000 bootstrap replicates were employed in each analysis to maximize the statistical significance [35]. The phylogenetic trees were constructed and visualized by MEGA5.05 software [36].
Treatment of Rubber Trees Used for Gene Expression Analysis
Field experiments were performed using mature, 7-year-old virgin rubber trees (Clone Reyan 7–33–97) that had never been tapped. Stimulation assays with exogenous methyl jasmonate (Me-JA) or Ethrel (an ethylene releaser) were carried out according to the method described in a previous paper [28]. Briefly, 0.3% (w/w) Me-JA (Sigma–Aldrich, USA) in lanoline or 0.5% (w/w) Ethrel (Sigma–Aldrich, USA) in water was applied to the bark below the half spiral of the tapping cut. Lanoline or water was used as the mock stimulation for the control samples. The trunks of the treated trees were wrapped with black plastic film around the tapping cut and stimulated for 0, 0.5, 1.5, 4.0, 8.0 or 24.0 h, after which they were tapped for latex early in the morning on the same day. For the tapping assays, the rubber trees were sequentially tapped seven times using an S/2 d/3 system and fresh latex was collected at each tapping time for analysis. Each sample included three independent biological replicates, and the latex collected from six rubber trees was pooled to make one biological replicate for each sample.
Transcript Abundance Analysis of Latex ABC Protein Genes by RT-qPCR
Total RNA from H. brasiliensislatex was isolated using an RNeasy Plant Mini-Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Reverse transcription was performed with SuperScript III reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen, CA), followed by incubation with RNase H (Invitrogen, CA). RT-qPCR analysis was performed using the method described by Duan et al. [37]. Primers were designed for the selected genes by DNAMAN 7.02 software with a PCR product of ~200 bp. The forward and reverse primer sequences used to detect each mRNA and their efficiencies are shown in S1 Table. The cDNAs were synthesized by reverse transcriptase and quantitative gene expression analysis was carried out by RT-qPCR using a LightCycler 2.0 (Roche, Basel, Switzerland) and the following parameters: 30 s at 94°C for denaturation, followed by 45 cycles of 94°C for 5 s, 60°C for 20 s and 72°C for 20 s. Each RT-qPCR reaction was replicated three times. For normalization purposes, the H. brasiliensis 18S rRNA gene was taken as the internal reference for all RT-qPCR analyses.
Results/Discussion
Sequencing and de novo Assembly of the H. brasiliensis Latex Transcriptome
The H. brasiliensislatex transcriptome was generated using the latex collected from rubber trees that had been regularly tapped for 2 years in an S/2 d/3 system. These rubber trees had a sustainable and higher latex yield than newly tapped trees due to their regular bark tapping, which represents a mechanical stress for the rubber tree. Latex production is a natural response to mechanical wounding and studies have reported that it activates latex metabolism, which then leads to an increase in latex production [38]. The complicated biological process leading to latex production involves several biochemical reactions that occur in the laticifers and many genes or proteins may contribute to the final results. The complex biological mechanism underlying latex metabolism requires a global transcriptic survey to improve understanding of the process. Therefore, the latex transcriptome was first sequenced using the Illumina HiSeq-2000 platform. Approximately 6.17 Gb of total nucleotides were obtained, and the 6.85 Mb clean reads were assembled into 182,956 contigs and 60,909 unigenes, respectively.
Identification of ABC Proteins in the H. brasiliensis Latex Transcriptome
A reciprocal best hits (two-direction) blast search was performed in order to identify the orthologs of the ABC protein genes in the H. brasiliensislatex transcriptome. The results demonstrated that the identified latexABC protein genes from the two blasts closely matched each other (data available in S2 Table). A total of 46 putative latexABC protein genes were finally identified via the reciprocal search approach. The details can be found in Table 1, but only the results obtained by using the A. thalianaABC protein sequences as queries are shown. The complete ORFs of the 46 latexABC proteins were further verified by searching the H. brasiliensis genome DNA sequences that have recently been completed by the Rubber Research Institute of China. The genome DNA sequences for each latexABC protein gene are shown S3 Table, which also shows the corresponding exons and introns for each latexABC protein gene. Aligning all the transcripts of the 46 latexABC proteins to the H. brasiliensis genome did not reveal any alternative transcripts from the same locus, since each transcript of the 46 ABC proteins was definitively located on different scaffolds of the H. brasiliensis genome, as shown in S3 Table.
Table 1
Detailed inventory of the 46 ABC transporter genes identified in the H. brasiliensis latex.
ABC subfamily
Gene name
NCBI accession no.
Length (aa)
Topology
A. thaliana homolog
Common name
Identity (%)
Subfamily A (ABCA*)
AOH; ABCA
HbABCA1
KM035282
1883
(TMD-NBD)2
At2g41700
AtABCA1
74
ATH; ABCA
HbABCA2
KM035283
970
TMD-NBD
At3g47730
AtABCA2
71
HbABCA7
KM035284
939
TMD-NBD
At3g47780
AtABCA7
67
Subfamily B (ABCB)
MDR; DPL(PGP)
HbABCB1
KM035285
1363
(TMD-NBD)2
At2g36910
AtABCB1
88
HbABCB11
KM035286
1283
(TMD-NBD)2
At1g02520
AtABCB11
74
HbABCB13
KM035287
1135
(TMD-NBD)2
At1g27940
AtABCB13
71
HbABCB15
HQ917533
1250
(TMD-NBD)2
At3g28345
AtABCB15
77
HbABCB19
KM035288
1259
(TMD-NBD)2
At3g28860
AtABCB19
89
HbABCB20
KM035289
1404
(TMD-NBD)2
At3g55320
AtABCB20
86
ATM; DPL(HMT)
HbABCB25
KM035290
739
TMD-NBD
At5g58270
AtABCB25
83
TAP; DPL(TAP)
HbABCB26
KM035291
702
TMD-NBD
At1g70610
AtABCB26
75
HbABCB28
KM035292
660
TMD-NBD
At4g25450
AtABCB28
70
DPL(LLP)
HbABCB29
KM035293
650
TMD-NBD
At5g03910
AtABCB29
65
Subfamily C (ABCC)
MRP; OAD(MRP)
HbABCC2
KM035294
1624
(TMD-NBD)2
At2g34660
AtABCC2
79
HbABCC5
KM035295
1499
(TMD-NBD)2
At1g04120
AtABCC5
81
HbABCC13
KM035296
1480
(TMD-NBD)2
At2g07680
AtABCC13
66
Subfamily D (ABCD)
PMP; FAE
HbABCD1
KF701641
1337
(TMD-NBD)2
At4g39850
AtABCD1
78
HbABCD2
KM035297
746
TMD-NBD
At1g54350
AtABCD2
69
Subfamily E (ABCE)
RLI
HbABCE2
KM035298
605
NBD-NBD
At4g19210
AtABCE2
93
Subfamily F (ABCF)
GCN; ART(REG)
HbABCF1
JX109943
605
NBD-NBD
At5g60790
AtABCF1
85
HbABCF3
KM035299
715
NBD-NBD
At1g64550
AtABCF3
82
HbABCF4
KM035300
726
NBD-NBD
At3g54540
AtABCF4
79
HbABCF5
KM035301
709
NBD-NBD
At5g64840
AtABCF5
79
Subfamily G (ABCG)
WBC; EPD(WHITE)
HbABCG3
KM035302
723
NBD-TMD
At2g28070
AtABCG3
81
HbABCG5
KM035303
626
NBD-TMD
At2g13610
AtABCG5
73
HbABCG7
KM035304
720
NBD-TMD
At2g01320
AtABCG7
78
HbABCG11
KM035305
649
NBD-TMD
At1g17840
AtABCG11
53
HbABCG15
KM035306
714
NBD-TMD
At3g21090
AtABCG15
68
HbABCG20
KM035307
715
NBD-TMD
At3g53510
AtABCG20
75
HbABCG21
KM035308
680
NBD-TMD
At3g25620
AtABCG21
68
HbABCG22
KM035309
738
NBD-TMD
At5g06530
AtABCG22
78
HbABCG28
KM035310
980
NBD-TMD
At5g60740
AtABCG28
68
PDR; EPD(PDR)
HbABCG40
KM035311
1438
(NBD-TMD)2
At1g15520
AtABCG40
72
Subfamily I (ABCI)
NAP; CCM
HbABCI1
KM035312
229
NBD
At1g63270
AtABCI1
86
NAP; ISB
HbABCI6
KM035313
335
NBD
At3g10670
AtABCI6
82
HbABCI7
KM035314
492
CYT
At1g32500
AtABCI7
62
HbABCI8
KM035315
553
CYT
At4g04770
AtABCI8
81
NAP; CBY(Y179)
HbABCI10
KM035316
261
NBD
At4g33460
AtABCI10
71
HbABCI11
KM035317
277
NBD
At5g14100
AtABCI11
72
NAP; MKL; TGD
HbABCI13
KM035318
343
NBD
At1g65410
AtABCI13
80
HbABCI14
KM035319
325
TMD
At1g19800
AtABCI14
77
HbABCI15
KM035320
385
SSA
At3g20320
AtABCI15
73
NAP; NO
HbABCI17
KM035321
283
NBD
At1g67940
AtABCI17
73
HbABCI18
KM035322
280
NBD
At1g03900
AtABCI18
76
NAP; NO(ADT)
HbABCI19
KM035323
300
NBD
At1g03905
AtABCI19
80
HbABCI20
KM035324
329
NBD
At5g02270
AtABCI20
87
*ABCA: Similar to human abca1 protein; NBD: Nucleotide binding domain (ATP binding cassette domain); TMD: transmembrane domain; SSA: substrate binding protein; CYT: conserved soluble protein that interacts with ABC domain; DPL: Drug, peptide and lipid exporters; PGP: Similar to p-glycoprotein; LLP: Lipid A-like exporters, putative; OAD: Organic anion and drug exporters; HMT: Similar to yeast heavy metal transporters; TAP: Similar to the human transporters associated with antigen presentation; WHITE: Similar to Drosophila white protein; CCM: cytochrome C biogenesis family; ISB: iron sulfur center biogenesis family; CBY: family similar to putative cobalt uptake systems; Y179: similar to the M. janaschii Y179 protein subfamily; MKL: similar to the M. leprae MKL protein family; TGD: trigalactosyldiacyl glycerol: TGD1, 2 and 3 are components of a chloroplast phospholipid translocator; NO: proteins of unknown function, apparently unrelated to existing families and ADT: proteins of unknown function.
*ABCA: Similar to humanabca1 protein; NBD: Nucleotide binding domain (ATP binding cassette domain); TMD: transmembrane domain; SSA: substrate binding protein; CYT: conserved soluble protein that interacts with ABC domain; DPL: Drug, peptide and lipid exporters; PGP: Similar to p-glycoprotein; LLP: Lipid A-like exporters, putative; OAD: Organic anion and drug exporters; HMT: Similar to yeast heavy metal transporters; TAP: Similar to the human transporters associated with antigen presentation; WHITE: Similar to Drosophilawhite protein; CCM: cytochrome C biogenesis family; ISB: ironsulfur center biogenesis family; CBY: family similar to putative cobalt uptake systems; Y179: similar to the M. janaschii Y179 protein subfamily; MKL: similar to the M. leprae MKL protein family; TGD: trigalactosyldiacyl glycerol: TGD1, 2 and 3 are components of a chloroplast phospholipid translocator; NO: proteins of unknown function, apparently unrelated to existing families and ADT: proteins of unknown function.Most subfamilies of plant ABC proteins have corresponding counterparts in the human genome, so that the latex ABC transporters were also denominated using the Human Genome Organization (HUGO) nomenclature for humanABC proteins [39] in order to obtain a unified nomenclature of plant ABC proteins, as suggested by Verrier et al. in 2008 [1]. According to the HUGO nomenclature, all the eight subfamilies of plant ABC transporters were identified in the H. brasiliensislatex, among which ABCB, ABCG and ABCI were the most abundant (Table 1). By comparing the mapped reads (reads per kilobase of exon model per million mapped reads), the top five latex ABC transporters were HbABCF1, HbABCG21, HbABCI18, HbABCB15 and HbABCG11. One representative linear comparison of the exon–intron structures of two selected ABCE2 and ABCI7 genes in the genome sequences of A. thaliana, H. brasiliensis and Ricinus communis is shown in Fig. 1. The alignment analysis revealed that the H. brasiliensislatexABC protein genes were highly conserved compared with those of a closely related species, R. communis, and a distantly related species, A. thaliana.
Figure 1
Linear representation of the exon–intron structures of the selected ABCE2 and ABCI7 genes in the genome sequences of A. thaliana, H. brasiliensis and R. communis.
Exons and introns of the ABCE2 and ABCI7 genes were predicted and mapped by the Vector NTI Advance program (version 11.5.2). The accession numbers for the ABCE2 homolog genome sequences are NC_003075.7 (10501200..10505217) for A. thaliana and NW_002994591.1 for R. communis. The accession numbers for the ABCI7 homolog genome sequences are NC_003070.9 (11749823..11752106) for A. thaliana and NW_002995814.1 for R. communis.
Linear representation of the exon–intron structures of the selected ABCE2 and ABCI7 genes in the genome sequences of A. thaliana, H. brasiliensis and R. communis.
Exons and introns of the ABCE2 and ABCI7 genes were predicted and mapped by the Vector NTI Advance program (version 11.5.2). The accession numbers for the ABCE2 homolog genome sequences are NC_003075.7 (10501200..10505217) for A. thaliana and NW_002994591.1 for R. communis. The accession numbers for the ABCI7 homolog genome sequences are NC_003070.9 (11749823..11752106) for A. thaliana and NW_002995814.1 for R. communis.Of the 46 latex ABC transporters, 12 members were full-size transporters, containing two TMDs and two NBDs, 21 members were half-size transporters and contained one TMD and one NBD or two NBDs, and the other 13 members could be called quarter-size ABC molecules with only one NBD or TMD domain. All 12 full-size transporters, with the exception of one protein (HbABCG40), exhibited a forward topology orientation in which the TMDs preceded the NBDs, but most of the 21 half-size transporters had a reverse orientation where NBD preceded TMD. The cDNA sequences of the 46 latex putative ABC transporter genes were submitted to GenBank. Their accession numbers are shown in Table 1 and the predicted amino acid sequences of the putative ABC proteins are listed in S4 Table.
Phylogeny of the H. brasiliensis Latex ABC Proteins
The amino acid sequences of the 46 latex putative ABC transporters were aligned using the MUSCLE alignment tool and the phylogenetic tree was generated by MEGA5.05 software as outlined in the Materials and Methods section. The phylogenetic tree for all 46 latexABC proteins is shown in Fig. 2. With the exceptions of the ABCI and ABCE subfamilies, which only have one HbABCE2 member that was grouped on its own, the other six subfamilies of the latexABC proteins were clustered tightly within their respective subfamilies with bootstrap values of at least 90%. The HbABCI subfamily had 13 members and they were clustered into four different clades. HbABCI7, 8, 15, 17 and 18 were grouped within the same clade, whereas HbABCI1, 6 and 11 formed their own clade and HbABCI10, 13 and 14 were in the same clade. HbABCI19 and 20 were clustered together and were closely related to the HbABCG subfamily. The lack of a coherent phylogeny within the HbABCI subfamily was consistent with the clustering patterns of the ABCI subfamilies in A. thaliana [2] and Vitis vinifera [5]. Of the 46 latexABC proteins, 42, excluding four HbABCI members (HbABCI14, 15, 17 and 18), contained at least one NBD. The NBD phylogeny of the 42 latex ABC transporters is shown in S1 Fig.
Figure 2
Phylogenetic tree for H. brasiliensis latex ABC proteins.
The amino acid sequences of the 46 latex ABC proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using the MEGA5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. The HUGO nomenclature was followed and the ABC protein abbreviations are as follows: AOH: ABC1 homolog; ATH: ABC-two homolog; MDR: multi-drug resistance; ATM: ABC transporter of mitochondria; TAP: transporter associated with antigen processing; LLP: Lipid A-like exporter; MRP: multi-drug resistance-associated protein; PMP: peroxisomal membrane protein; RLI: RNase L inhibitor; GCN: general control non-repressible; WBC: white-brown complex; PDR: pleiotropic drug resistance; NAP: non-intrinsic ABC protein. AOH and ATH, which belong to the ABCA subfamily; MDR, TAP, ATM and LLP, which belong to the ABCB subfamily; MRP, which belongs to the ABCC subfamily; PMP, which belongs to the ABCD subfamily; RLI, which belongs to the ABCE subfamily; GCN, which belongs to the ABCF subfamily; WBC, which belongs to the ABCG subfamily and NAP, which belongs to the ABCI subfamily.
Phylogenetic tree for H. brasiliensis latex ABC proteins.
The amino acid sequences of the 46 latexABC proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using the MEGA5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. The HUGO nomenclature was followed and the ABC protein abbreviations are as follows: AOH: ABC1 homolog; ATH: ABC-two homolog; MDR: multi-drug resistance; ATM: ABC transporter of mitochondria; TAP: transporter associated with antigen processing; LLP: Lipid A-like exporter; MRP: multi-drug resistance-associated protein; PMP: peroxisomal membrane protein; RLI: RNase L inhibitor; GCN: general control non-repressible; WBC: white-brown complex; PDR: pleiotropic drug resistance; NAP: non-intrinsic ABC protein. AOH and ATH, which belong to the ABCA subfamily; MDR, TAP, ATM and LLP, which belong to the ABCB subfamily; MRP, which belongs to the ABCC subfamily; PMP, which belongs to the ABCD subfamily; RLI, which belongs to the ABCE subfamily; GCN, which belongs to the ABCF subfamily; WBC, which belongs to the ABCG subfamily and NAP, which belongs to the ABCI subfamily.
Characteristics of the H. brasiliensis Latex ABC Family Transporters
HbABCA subfamily. Three members were identified in the HbABCA subfamily. These were one full-size HbABCA1 member and two half-size members: HbABCA2 and HbABCA7. Until recently, only one full-size ABCA transporter gene has been identified in plants and was designated as AtABCA1 or AOH (the ABC one homolog) in the A. thaliana genome [2]. HbABCA1 was the largest latexABC transporter, consisting of 1,883 amino acid residues, and shared 74% similarity with AtABCA1. The phylogenetic relationship between A. thaliana and H. brasiliensis ABCA proteins is shown in Fig. 3. The ABCA1 gene is conserved in humans and other animals. Its human counterpart (ABCA1) is involved in cellular transportation [40, 41], but the function and the localization of the plant ABCA1 transporter remains unclear.
Figure 3
Phylogenetic relationship between A. thaliana and H. brasiliensis latex ABCA, ABCC and ABCD proteins.
The amino acid sequences of all the A. thaliana ABCA, ABCC, ABCD and H. brasiliensis latex proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using MEGA5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. Accession numbers for the A. thaliana sequences are AtABCA1 (NP_850354.2), AtABCA2 (NP_190357.2), AtABCA3 (NP_190358.3), AtABCA4 (NP_190359.5), AtABCA5 (NP_190360.2), AtABCA6 (NP_190361.2), AtABCA7 (NP_190362.2), AtABCA8 (NP_190363.3), AtABCA9 (NP_200981.1), AtABCA10 (NP_200982.1), AtABCA11 (NP_200977.2), AtABCA12 (NP_200978.1), AtABCC1 (NP_174329.1), AtABCC2 (NP_181013.1), AtABCC3 (NP_187915.1), AtABCC4 (NP_182301.1), AtABCC5 (NP_171908.1), AtABCC6 (NP_187916.3), AtABCC7 (NP_187917.3), AtABCC8 (NP_001189944.1), AtABCC9 (NP_191575.2), AtABCC10 (NP_191473.2), AtABCC11 (NP_174331.2), AtABCC12 (Q9C8H0.1), AtABCC13 (Q9SKX0.3), AtABCC14 (NP_191829.1), AtABCC15 (NP_191656.2), AtABCD1 (NP_568072.1) and AtABCD2 (NP_175837.2). AtSKD1 (AEC08019.1) and HbSKD1 (AIN75626.1) were used as outgroups. The H. brasiliensis latex ABC proteins are marked with a dot.
Phylogenetic relationship between A. thaliana and H. brasiliensis latex ABCA, ABCC and ABCD proteins.
The amino acid sequences of all the A. thaliana ABCA, ABCC, ABCD and H. brasiliensislatex proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using MEGA5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. Accession numbers for the A. thaliana sequences are AtABCA1 (NP_850354.2), AtABCA2 (NP_190357.2), AtABCA3 (NP_190358.3), AtABCA4 (NP_190359.5), AtABCA5 (NP_190360.2), AtABCA6 (NP_190361.2), AtABCA7 (NP_190362.2), AtABCA8 (NP_190363.3), AtABCA9 (NP_200981.1), AtABCA10 (NP_200982.1), AtABCA11 (NP_200977.2), AtABCA12 (NP_200978.1), AtABCC1 (NP_174329.1), AtABCC2 (NP_181013.1), AtABCC3 (NP_187915.1), AtABCC4 (NP_182301.1), AtABCC5 (NP_171908.1), AtABCC6 (NP_187916.3), AtABCC7 (NP_187917.3), AtABCC8 (NP_001189944.1), AtABCC9 (NP_191575.2), AtABCC10 (NP_191473.2), AtABCC11 (NP_174331.2), AtABCC12 (Q9C8H0.1), AtABCC13 (Q9SKX0.3), AtABCC14 (NP_191829.1), AtABCC15 (NP_191656.2), AtABCD1 (NP_568072.1) and AtABCD2 (NP_175837.2). AtSKD1 (AEC08019.1) and HbSKD1 (AIN75626.1) were used as outgroups. The H. brasiliensislatexABC proteins are marked with a dot.HbABCB subfamily. The latex HbABCB subfamily contains ten members. Six are full-size molecules, conventionally named multi-drug resistance (MDRs) [2] or drug, peptide and lipid exporters (DPLs)/PGP (similar to p-glycoprotein) [3] and four are half-size proteins, consisting of one ABC transporter in mitochondria (ATM) [2], two TAPs (similar to the human transporter associated with antigen presentation) [2] and one LLP (lipid A-like exporters, putative) [3]. All 21 full-size ABCB transporters in the A. thaliana genome have been shown to be localized on the plasma membrane [6, 42, 43] and AtABCB1, AtABCB4, AtABCB14, AtABCB15 and AtABCB19, have been characterized as auxin transporters or are associated with polar auxin transport in A. thaliana [44-46]. Furthermore, ABCB14-mediated auxin transport was recently reported to be involved in Fe homeostasis in rice [47]. Orthologs of AtABCB1, AtABCB15 and AtABCB19 were also identified in H. brasiliensislatex (Fig. 4), but it remains to be determined whether they are implicated in auxin transport in the H. brasiliensis laticifers that are apoplastically isolated from the neighboring cells [25].
Figure 4
Phylogenetic tree for A. thaliana and H. brasiliensis latex ABCB protein sequences.
The amino acid sequences of all A. thaliana ABCB and H. brasiliensis latex proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using MEGA5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. Accession numbers for the A. thaliana sequences are AtABCB1 (NP_181228.1), AtABCB2 (NP_194326.2), AtABCB3 (NP_192091.1), AtABCB4 (NP_182223.1), AtABCB5 (NP_192092.1), AtABCB6 (NP_181480.1), AtABCB7 (NP_199466.1), AtABCB8 (Q9LHK4.1), AtABCB9 (NP_193539.6), AtABCB10 (NP_172538.1), AtABCB11 (NP_171753.1), AtABCB12 (NP_171754.1), AtABCB13 (NP_174115.1), AtABCB14 (NP_174122.1), AtABCB15 (NP_189475.1), AtABCB16 (NP_189477.4), AtABCB17 (NP_189479.1), AtABCB18 (NP_189480.1), AtABCB19 (NP_189528.1), AtABCB20 (NP_191092.1) AtABCB21 (NP_191774.2), AtABCB22 (NP_683599.1), AtABCB23 (NP_567813.1), AtABCB24 (NP_194591.1), AtABCB25 (NP_200635.1), AtABCB26 (NP_177218.3), AtABCB27 (NP_198720.2), AtABCB28 (NP_194275.2) and AtABCB29 (NP_196011.1). AtSKD1 (AEC08019.1) and HbSKD1 (AIN75626.1) were used as outgroups. The H. brasiliensis latex ABC proteins are marked with a dot.
Phylogenetic tree for A. thaliana and H. brasiliensis latex ABCB protein sequences.
The amino acid sequences of all A. thaliana ABCB and H. brasiliensislatex proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using MEGA5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. Accession numbers for the A. thaliana sequences are AtABCB1 (NP_181228.1), AtABCB2 (NP_194326.2), AtABCB3 (NP_192091.1), AtABCB4 (NP_182223.1), AtABCB5 (NP_192092.1), AtABCB6 (NP_181480.1), AtABCB7 (NP_199466.1), AtABCB8 (Q9LHK4.1), AtABCB9 (NP_193539.6), AtABCB10 (NP_172538.1), AtABCB11 (NP_171753.1), AtABCB12 (NP_171754.1), AtABCB13 (NP_174115.1), AtABCB14 (NP_174122.1), AtABCB15 (NP_189475.1), AtABCB16 (NP_189477.4), AtABCB17 (NP_189479.1), AtABCB18 (NP_189480.1), AtABCB19 (NP_189528.1), AtABCB20 (NP_191092.1) AtABCB21 (NP_191774.2), AtABCB22 (NP_683599.1), AtABCB23 (NP_567813.1), AtABCB24 (NP_194591.1), AtABCB25 (NP_200635.1), AtABCB26 (NP_177218.3), AtABCB27 (NP_198720.2), AtABCB28 (NP_194275.2) and AtABCB29 (NP_196011.1). AtSKD1 (AEC08019.1) and HbSKD1 (AIN75626.1) were used as outgroups. The H. brasiliensislatexABC proteins are marked with a dot.Less information is available about the function and the localization of the half-size members of the plant ABCB subfamily. Among the four half-size ABCB proteins in the H. brasiliensislatex, one member, HbABCB25, is a close homolog of A. thalianaABCB25/ATM3, which is a mitochondrial ABC transporter involved in the biogenesis of iron-sulfur proteins and molybdenum-containing enzymes in plants [48, 49]. Proteomic data from previous studies have demonstrated that A. thalianaABCB26/TAP1 is localized to the chloroplast [50] and the results of this study suggest that the latex HbABCB26, a homolog of At ABCB26/TAP1, might possibly be localized to the Frey-Wyssling particles, which are very specialized chromoplasts in rubber treelatex [51]. However, this needs to be verified.HbABCC subfamily. In plants, ABCC subfamily transporters belong to the multidrug resistance-associated proteins (MRPs) that were originally identified in human drug-resistant cell lines [52]. They only have full-size ABC proteins that contain an additional N-terminal extension (NTE or TMD0) of around 220 amino acids [53]. Three members of the ABCC subfamily were identified in the H. brasiliensislatex transcriptome, whereas 15 ABCC protein genes were determined in the A. thaliana genome [2]. Their sequence similarity was confirmed by the phylogenetic analysis (as shown in Fig. 3). Until recently, only the full-size ABCC subfamily transporters have been shown to be localized on the vacuolar membrane in plants [54]. Furthermore, their localization to the tonoplasts gives ABCC subfamily transporters an important function in the general vacuolar sequestration of conjugated metabolites, such as anthocyanidin 3-O-glucosides [55], abscisic acid (ABA) glucosyl ester [56] and phenolic compounds [57], etc. In the case of the H. brasiliensis laticifers, no typical central vacuoles have been observed, although polydispersed microvacuoles called lutoids are present, and laticifers have been implicated in pH regulation and solute accumulation [58, 59]. It has not been confirmed whether the latexABCC transporters are intrinsic lutoid membrane proteins that are involved in the maintenance of ion homeostasis between lutoids and cytosol, which is crucial for lutoid-mediated rubber particle aggregation and sequential latex coagulation.HbABCD subfamily. The ABCD subfamily transporters are conventionally designated as PMPs (peroxisomal membrane protein), which are intrinsic membrane proteins of peroxisomes and are mainly involved in fatty acid β-oxidation through the importation of acyl-CoA esters into the peroxisome [60]. Only half-size ABCD proteins have been detected in mammals and fungi, whereas both half-size and full-size ABCD transporters have been detected in plants. The prototypical plant member of the ABCD subfamily is the A. thaliana protein, Comatose (CTS; also known as AtABCD1) [61, 62]. Until recently, only one half-size and one full-size member of the ABCD subfamily have been identified in the A. thaliana genome and their orthologs were also present in the H. brasiliensislatex transcriptome (as shown in Fig. 3). Loss-of-function AtABCD1 mutants are significantly impaired in several important metabolic and developmental processes, such as germination, fertility, seedling establishment and root growth. These studies provided evidence that, besides the involvement in fatty acid β-oxidation, the plant ABCD transporters are also involved in auxin and jasmonic acid (JA) metabolism via the importation of the auxin precursor, indolbutyric acid (IBA), and the JA precursor, 12-oxophytodienoic acid (OPDA), into the peroxisome [63, 64]. Several attempts have now been made to elucidate the physiological and molecular characteristics of JA in H. brasiliensis since recent reports demonstrated that JA and its conjugate, methyl jasmonic acid (Me-JA), are key inducers of laticifer differentiation [65] and are regulators of rubber biosynthesis-related genes in rubber trees [28]. Further investigation is needed to ascertain whether the latexABCD transporters mediate JA biosynthesis in the H. brasiliensis laticifers, which are the natural rubber-producing cells of rubber trees.HbABCE and HbABCF subfamilies. The members of the ABCE and the ABCF subfamilies are thought to be soluble proteins that contain only two NBDs and no TMDs. The A. thaliana genome contains three ABCE and five ABCF members, whereas only one ABCE protein and four ABCF proteins were identified in the H. brasiliensislatex transcriptome (Fig. 5). However, information is relatively scarce about these soluble ABC proteins compared with other intrinsic membrane ABC transporters. They are probably involved in non-transport processes, as is the case for their yeast and human orthologs, which participate in ribosome recycling and translational control [54]. Only one ABC transporter, which is a member of the ABCF subfamily, was identified in rubber particles through proteome analysis [66], but it is unclear whether this protein is related to biogenesis or to the biosynthesis of rubber particles.
Figure 5
Phylogenetic relationship between A. thaliana and H. brasiliensis latex ABCE/ABCF proteins.
The amino acid sequences of A. thaliana ABCE/ABCF proteins and H. brasiliensis latex proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using MEGA5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. Accession numbers for the A. thaliana sequences are AtABCE1 (NP_187973.1), AtABCE2 (NP_193656.2), AtABCE3 (NP_194759.1), AtABCF1 (NP_200887.1), AtABCF2 (NP_196555.2), AtABCF3 (NP_176636.1), AtABCF4 (NP_567001.1) and AtABCF5 (NP_201289.1). AtSKD1 (AEC08019.1) and HbSKD1 (AIN75626.1) were used as outgroups. The H. brasiliensis latex ABC proteins are marked with a dot.
Phylogenetic relationship between A. thaliana and H. brasiliensis latex ABCE/ABCF proteins.
The amino acid sequences of A. thaliana ABCE/ABCF proteins and H. brasiliensislatex proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using MEGA5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. Accession numbers for the A. thaliana sequences are AtABCE1 (NP_187973.1), AtABCE2 (NP_193656.2), AtABCE3 (NP_194759.1), AtABCF1 (NP_200887.1), AtABCF2 (NP_196555.2), AtABCF3 (NP_176636.1), AtABCF4 (NP_567001.1) and AtABCF5 (NP_201289.1). AtSKD1 (AEC08019.1) and HbSKD1 (AIN75626.1) were used as outgroups. The H. brasiliensislatexABC proteins are marked with a dot.HbABCG subfamily. The largest ABC subfamily is ABCG, which consists of 28 half-size (WBC) and 15 full-size (PDR) transporters in the A. thaliana genome. All the ABCG subfamily transporters have a unique reverse “NBD-TMD” orientation and are reported to be plasma membrane-localized proteins, except for AtABCG19, which has been localized to the vacuolar membrane and confers kanamycin-resistance in plants [67]. In the H. brasiliensislatex transcriptome, nine WBC-type ABCG proteins and one PDR-type ABCG protein were detected. The phylogenetic analyses of A. thaliana and H. brasiliensislatex ABCG proteins are shown in Fig. 6.
Figure 6
Phylogenetic relationship between A. thaliana and H. brasiliensis latex ABCG proteins.
The amino acid sequences of all the A. thaliana ABCG proteins and H. brasiliensis latex proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using MEGA 5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. Accession numbers for the A. thaliana sequences are AtABCG1 (NP_181467.1), AtABCG2 (NP_181272.1), AtABCG3 (NP_850111.1), AtABCG4 (NP_194305.1), AtABCG5 (NP_178984.1), AtABCG6 (NP_196862.1), AtABCG7 (NP_178241.1), AtABCG8 (NP_200098.1), AtABCG9 (NP_194472.3), AtABCG10 (NP_175734.1), AtABCG11 (NP_173226.2), AtABCG12 (NP_175561.1), AtABCG13 (NP_175557.1), AtABCG14 (NP_564383.1), AtABCG15 (NP_188746.2), AtABCG16 (NP_191069.2), AtABCG17 (NP_191070.1), AtABCG18(NP_191071.1), AtABCG19 (NP_191073.1), AtABCG20 (NP_190919.1), AtABCG21 (NP_189190.2), AtABCG22 (NP_568169.1), AtABCG23 (NP_197442.1), AtABCG24 (NP_175745.4), AtABCG25 (NP_565030.1), AtABCG26 (NP_187928.2), AtABCG27 (NP_190799.2), AtABCG28 (NP_200882.4), AtABCG29 (NP_566543.1), AtABCG30 (NP_193258.3), AtABCG31 (NP_180555.2), AtABCG32 (NP_180259.1), AtABCG33 (NP_181265.1), AtABCG34 (NP_181179.2), AtABCG35 (NP_172973.1), AtABCG36 (NP_176196.1), AtABCG37 (NP_190916.1), AtABCG38 (Q7PC85.1), AtABCG39 (NP_176867.2), AtABCG40 (NP_173005.1), AtABCG41 (NP_680692.1), AtABCG42 (NP_680693.5) and AtABCG43 (NP_680694.2). AtSKD1 (AEC08019.1) and HbSKD1 (AIN75626.1) were used as outgroups. The H. brasiliensis latex ABC proteins are marked with a dot.
Phylogenetic relationship between A. thaliana and H. brasiliensis latex ABCG proteins.
The amino acid sequences of all the A. thaliana ABCG proteins and H. brasiliensislatex proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using MEGA 5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. Accession numbers for the A. thaliana sequences are AtABCG1 (NP_181467.1), AtABCG2 (NP_181272.1), AtABCG3 (NP_850111.1), AtABCG4 (NP_194305.1), AtABCG5 (NP_178984.1), AtABCG6 (NP_196862.1), AtABCG7 (NP_178241.1), AtABCG8 (NP_200098.1), AtABCG9 (NP_194472.3), AtABCG10 (NP_175734.1), AtABCG11 (NP_173226.2), AtABCG12 (NP_175561.1), AtABCG13 (NP_175557.1), AtABCG14 (NP_564383.1), AtABCG15 (NP_188746.2), AtABCG16 (NP_191069.2), AtABCG17 (NP_191070.1), AtABCG18(NP_191071.1), AtABCG19 (NP_191073.1), AtABCG20 (NP_190919.1), AtABCG21 (NP_189190.2), AtABCG22 (NP_568169.1), AtABCG23 (NP_197442.1), AtABCG24 (NP_175745.4), AtABCG25 (NP_565030.1), AtABCG26 (NP_187928.2), AtABCG27 (NP_190799.2), AtABCG28 (NP_200882.4), AtABCG29 (NP_566543.1), AtABCG30 (NP_193258.3), AtABCG31 (NP_180555.2), AtABCG32 (NP_180259.1), AtABCG33 (NP_181265.1), AtABCG34 (NP_181179.2), AtABCG35 (NP_172973.1), AtABCG36 (NP_176196.1), AtABCG37 (NP_190916.1), AtABCG38 (Q7PC85.1), AtABCG39 (NP_176867.2), AtABCG40 (NP_173005.1), AtABCG41 (NP_680692.1), AtABCG42 (NP_680693.5) and AtABCG43 (NP_680694.2). AtSKD1 (AEC08019.1) and HbSKD1 (AIN75626.1) were used as outgroups. The H. brasiliensislatexABC proteins are marked with a dot.ABCG half-transporters have been implicated in several plant functions. A. thalianaAtABCG25 and AtABCG40 are involved in abscisic acid (ABA) transport and responses [68, 69]. Recent studies have indicated that ABCG9, ABCG11 and ABCG14 are involved in lipid/sterol homeostasis regulation, which is required for proper vascular development in A. thaliana [70]. Finally, some members of ABCG subfamily confer plant resistance to various biotic and abiotic stresses [71, 72].HbABCI subfamily. The ABCI subfamily proteins consist of bacteria-type soluble or peripheral ABC components with a single NBD and are designated as non-intrinsic ABC proteins (NAPs) [2]. Genetic evidence has demonstrated that the ABCI subfamily protein subunits include not only NBD and TMD domains, but also homologues of established soluble cytosolic proteins that interact with NBDs and putative substrate-binding proteins and are similar to the periplasmic-binding proteins in bacteria [3, 73, 74]. A total of 13 ABCI proteins were identified in the H. brasiliensislatex transcriptome and there were 21 orthologs in the A. thaliana genome (Fig. 7). Three A. thaliana ABCI proteins: AtABCI19, 20 and 21 have been shown to translate into cytosolic proteins [75], whereas several other ABCI subfamily members are predicted to be localized to the chloroplast or mitochondria [1, 76].
Figure 7
Phylogenetic relationship between A. thaliana and H. brasiliensis latex ABCI proteins.
The amino acid sequences of all the A. thaliana ABCI proteins and H. brasiliensis latex proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using MEGA 5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. Accession numbers for the A. thaliana sequences are AtABCI1 (NP_176516.1), AtABCI2 (NP_085482.1), AtABCI3 (NP_085546.2), AtABCI4 (NP_565344.2), AtABCI5 (NP_973435.1), AtABCI6 (NP_187678.1), AtABCI7 (NP_564404.1), AtABCI8 (NP_192386.1), AtABCI9 (NP_680390.1), AtABCI10 (NP_195072.2), AtABCI11 (NP_196914.1), AtABCI12 (NP_566688.4), AtABCI13 (NP_564850.1), AtABCI14 (NP_973869.1), AtABCI15 (NP_566659.1), AtABCI16 (NP_181270.1), AtABCI17 (NP_176961.1), AtABCI18 (NP_563693.1), AtABCI19 (NP_563694.1), AtABCI20 (NP_195847.1), and AtABCI21 (NP_199224.1). AtSKD1 (AEC08019.1) and HbSKD1 (AIN75626.1) were used as outgroups. The H. brasiliensis latex ABC proteins are marked with a dot.
Phylogenetic relationship between A. thaliana and H. brasiliensis latex ABCI proteins.
The amino acid sequences of all the A. thaliana ABCI proteins and H. brasiliensislatex proteins were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method using MEGA 5.05 software. The numbers on the nodes indicate the bootstrap values after 1000 replicates. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site. Accession numbers for the A. thaliana sequences are AtABCI1 (NP_176516.1), AtABCI2 (NP_085482.1), AtABCI3 (NP_085546.2), AtABCI4 (NP_565344.2), AtABCI5 (NP_973435.1), AtABCI6 (NP_187678.1), AtABCI7 (NP_564404.1), AtABCI8 (NP_192386.1), AtABCI9 (NP_680390.1), AtABCI10 (NP_195072.2), AtABCI11 (NP_196914.1), AtABCI12 (NP_566688.4), AtABCI13 (NP_564850.1), AtABCI14 (NP_973869.1), AtABCI15 (NP_566659.1), AtABCI16 (NP_181270.1), AtABCI17 (NP_176961.1), AtABCI18 (NP_563693.1), AtABCI19 (NP_563694.1), AtABCI20 (NP_195847.1), and AtABCI21 (NP_199224.1). AtSKD1 (AEC08019.1) and HbSKD1 (AIN75626.1) were used as outgroups. The H. brasiliensislatexABC proteins are marked with a dot.The functional significance of the ABCI proteins remains to be determined. Previous studies have suggested that A. thaliana ABCI subfamily proteins can be assembled into multi-subunit ABC transporters, which is similar to the way that ABC proteins are formed in prokaryotes. Five members of the A. thaliana ABCI proteins: AtABCI1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, have been reported to be involved in cytochrome c biogenesis [77], AtABCI6, 7 and 8 were responsible for Fe-S cluster assembly and iron homeostasis regulation [78, 79] and AtABCI13, 14 and 15 have been shown to be involved in plastid lipid formation [80-83].
Expression Profiling of the Latex ABC Protein Genes
Plant ABC family proteins have been shown to be involved in many physiological processes that allow the plant to adapt to changing environments and to cope with biotic and abiotic stresses. To investigate further the possible roles played by latex ABC transporters during latex metabolism in rubber trees, the gene expression patterns of all the latex ABC transporters were first ascertained using rubber trees, which were treated with Ethrel or Me-JA for 24 h or tapped at the seventh times. The results demonstrated that the most of the latexABC transporter genes were controlled by Ethrel, Me-JA or bark tapping to varying degrees (S5 Table), among which HbABCB15, HbABCB19, HbABCD1 and HbABCG21 were significantly up-regulated by the three different stimulations.The gene expression time courses for HbABCB15, HbABCB19, HbABCD1 and HbABCG21 were further analyzed using rubber trees that had been treated with Ethrel or Me-JA at different time points. The data indicated that although the four HbABC genes were highly regulated by Ethrel or Me-JA, their individual expression profiling was different from each other (Fig. 8). Bark tapping, as a simulated wound stress, could also induce expression of the four selected ABC transporter genes, but in different ways (Fig. 9). Several studies reported that salicylic acid (SA), Me-JA/JA and ABA could modulate the gene expression of plant ABC transporters [84-86]. However, information about the responses of ABC protein genes to ethylene and bark tapping (a wound stress) is still relatively limited.
Figure 8
Regulatory effects of ethylene and JA on the gene expressions of the four HbABC transporters in the H. brasiliensis latex.
Mature, virgin (untapped) rubber trees were treated with Ethrel (ET) or methyl-jasmonate (Me-JA) for 0.5, 1.5, 4.0, 8.0 or 24.0 h. The controls were rubber trees that had not been treated with stimulants. Three independent biological replicates were included in each sample. Fresh latex from each sample was collected and used to isolate the total RNA. The transcript abundance of each gene was detected by RT-qPCR and the values are shown as the mean ± S.D. Statistical significance was determined using Students t-test using SPSS 19.0 software (Chicago, U.S.A.). When compared with the control, one asterisk shows a significant difference with a P-value < 0.05 and two asterisks show a very significant difference with a P-value < 0.01.
Figure 9
Effects of bark tapping on the gene expressions of the four HbABC transporters in the H. brasiliensis latex.
Mature, virgin rubber trees were tapped sequentially seven times using an S/2 d/3 tapping system. Each sample contained three independent biological replicates. Fresh latex from each tapping was collected and used to isolate the total RNA. The transcript abundance of each gene was detected by RT-qPCR and the values are shown as the mean ± S.D. One-way ANOVA was performed using SPSS 19.0 software (Chicago, U.S.A.). The Student–Newman–Keuls test was used for multiple comparisons testing to investigate the significant differences between groups. Bars with different letters are significantly different at the p < 0.05 level. The values represent the mean ± SD of three biological replicates.
Regulatory effects of ethylene and JA on the gene expressions of the four HbABC transporters in the H. brasiliensis latex.
Mature, virgin (untapped) rubber trees were treated with Ethrel (ET) or methyl-jasmonate (Me-JA) for 0.5, 1.5, 4.0, 8.0 or 24.0 h. The controls were rubber trees that had not been treated with stimulants. Three independent biological replicates were included in each sample. Fresh latex from each sample was collected and used to isolate the total RNA. The transcript abundance of each gene was detected by RT-qPCR and the values are shown as the mean ± S.D. Statistical significance was determined using Students t-test using SPSS 19.0 software (Chicago, U.S.A.). When compared with the control, one asterisk shows a significant difference with a P-value < 0.05 and two asterisks show a very significant difference with a P-value < 0.01.
Effects of bark tapping on the gene expressions of the four HbABC transporters in the H. brasiliensis latex.
Mature, virgin rubber trees were tapped sequentially seven times using an S/2 d/3 tapping system. Each sample contained three independent biological replicates. Fresh latex from each tapping was collected and used to isolate the total RNA. The transcript abundance of each gene was detected by RT-qPCR and the values are shown as the mean ± S.D. One-way ANOVA was performed using SPSS 19.0 software (Chicago, U.S.A.). The Student–Newman–Keuls test was used for multiple comparisons testing to investigate the significant differences between groups. Bars with different letters are significantly different at the p < 0.05 level. The values represent the mean ± SD of three biological replicates.Ethrel, Me-JA and bark tapping are three efficient stimulants of latex production and laticifer differentiation in rubber trees, but the underlying molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. The identification and expression analyses of the latexABC transporter genes provide some valuable insights into how the related latex ABC transporters regulate latex metabolism/regeneration and rubber biosynthesis by H. brasiliensis.
Concluding Remarks
The physiological functions of plant ABC transporters have only been marginally characterized compared to human ABC transporters. The whole latex transcriptome survey has produced an inventory of the laticifer-specific ABC transporters of H. brasiliensis. Laticiferous cells are where natural rubber is synthesized and stored. To date, the transportation of various substrates related to latex metabolism and rubber biosynthesis inside the laticiferous cells has been poorly understood. Several latex ABC transporters were transcriptionally induced by ethylene, JA and bark tapping (a wound stress), all of which activate latex metabolism or laticifer differentiation in rubber trees. The identification and expression analysis of the latex ABC transporters may facilitate further studies into their possible involvement in latex metabolism and rubber biosynthesis by both H. brasiliensis and other latex-producing plants.
NBD phylogeny of the H. brasiliensis latex ABC proteins containing a NBD domain.
The conserved NBD and TMD domains in the H. brasiliensislatex ABC transporters were predicted by Pfam 27.0 (http://pfam.xfam.org/). The amino sequences of the latexABC protein NBDs were aligned using the MUSCLE program and subjected to phylogenetic analysis by the distance with neighbor-joining method (1000 bootstrap replicates) using MEGA5.05 software. The scale bar indicates the estimated number of amino acid substitutions per site.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.
Oligonucleotide primers used for RT-qPCR analysis of the ABC protein genes in the H. brasiliensis latex.
(DOC)Click here for additional data file.
Identification of ABC protein genes in the H. brasiliensis latex through a reciprocal best hits blast search.
(DOC)Click here for additional data file.
The genome DNA sequences of the 46 ABC protein genes identified in the H. brasiliensis latex.
(DOC)Click here for additional data file.
The amino acid sequences of the 46 ABC proteins identified in the H. brasiliensis latex.
(DOC)Click here for additional data file.
Gene expression analyses of the H. brasiliensis latex ABC transporters by RT-qPCR.
Authors: M Kaneda; M Schuetz; B S P Lin; C Chanis; B Hamberger; T L Western; J Ehlting; A L Samuels Journal: J Exp Bot Date: 2011-01-14 Impact factor: 6.992
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