| Literature DB >> 32270203 |
Bin Wang1,2,3,4, Ruiqiu Fang1,5, Jia Zhang1,4, Jingluan Han1,2,3,4, Faming Chen1,4, Furong He1,4, Yao-Guang Liu1,3,4, Letian Chen1,2,3,4.
Abstract
The temporary callose layer surrounding the tetrads of microspores is critical for male gametophyte development in flowering plants, as abnormal callose deposition can lead to microspore abortion. A sophisticated signaling network regulates callose biosynthesis but these pathways are poorly understood. In this study, we characterized a rice male-sterile mutant, oslecrk5, which showed defective callose deposition during meiosis. OsLecRK5 encodes a plasma membrane-localized lectin receptor-like kinase, which can form a dimer with itself. Moreover, normal anther development requires the K-phosphorylation site (a conserved residue at the ATP-binding site) of OsLecRK5. In vitro assay showed that OsLecRK5 phosphorylates the callose synthesis enzyme UGP1, enhancing callose biosynthesis during anther development. Together, our results demonstrate that plasma membrane-localized OsLecRK5 phosphorylates UGP1 and promotes its activity in callose biosynthesis in rice. This is the first evidence that a receptor-like kinase positively regulates callose biosynthesis.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Oryza sativazzm321990 ; Callose; UGPase; lectin receptor-like kinase; pollen development; rice
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32270203 PMCID: PMC7475243 DOI: 10.1093/jxb/eraa180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Bot ISSN: 0022-0957 Impact factor: 6.992
Fig. 1.Phenotypic analyses and map-based cloning of oslecrk5. (A) Wild-type (WT) and oslecrk5 plants after heading. Bar=30 cm. (B) WT (left) and oslecrk5 (right) flowers. st, Stamen; pi, pistil. Bar=1 mm. (C) WT (left) and oslecrk5 (right) panicles. Bar=4 cm. (D, E) I2–KI-stained stage 12 pollen grains from WT (D) and oslecrk5 (E) anthers. Bars=50 µm. (F) Fine mapping of OsLecRK5 on chromosome 2. Molecular marker names and positions are indicated. OSJNBa0078K05 and P0644G05 are genomic DNA accession numbers. The OsLecRK5 locus was mapped to a 154 kb region between two molecular markers (216103 and 216257). The Os02g0459600 coding sequence (intron free) in oslecrk5 had a deleted C in the coding sequence at the +144 bp position and formed an mRNA with a premature stop codon. The arrow indicates the target site for CRISPR/Cas9 editing (see Fig. 2C).
Fig. 2.Phenotypes of OsLecRK5 complemented and knockout plants. (A) Diagrams of OsLecRK5gDNA (pNP::OsLecRK5) and OsLecRK5cDNA-FLAG (pNP::OsLecRK5-F) constructs. The native promoter consisted of 3 kb of the OsLecRK5 5′ upstream sequence. (B) I2–KI-stained stage 12 pollen grains from anthers of oslecrk5 (left) and OsLecRK5-complemented plants (center and right), showing that expression of OsLecRK5 in oslecrk5 recovered pollen deformities. Bars=50 μm. (C) Sequencing of two OsLecRK5-KO knockout lines (T0) created by CRISPR-Cas9 editing, showing homozygous (#1) and biallelic (#2) mutations. The PAM (protospacer adjacent motif) is boxed. WT, wild type. (D) I2-KI-stained stage 12 pollen grains from WT (left) and OsLecRK5-KO (center and right), showing that both knockout lines produced deformed pollen. Bars=50 μm.
Fig. 3.OsLecRK5 expression analysis. (A) OsLecRK5 expression analysis by qRT–PCR. Relative expression levels indicate the ratios of OsLecRK5 to OsActin1 expression. Error bars show SD (n=3). (B) Histochemical staining of anthers expressing the GUS reporter gene driven by the OsLecRK5 promoter. Bar=2 mm. (C) Immunoblot of OsLecRK5 in anthers and leaves. HSP82 is the loading control. (D) OsLecRK5 subcellular localization detected OsLecRK5-GFP predominantly in the plasma membrane (as indicated by the plasma membrane marker Rac3-mCherry). Bars=10 µm.
Fig. 4.Loss of function of OsLecRK5 causes defective callose deposition during anther development. (A–D) Callose (stained with aniline blue) in wild-type (WT) and oslecrk5 anther sections from stage 7 (S7) to stage 9 (S9). (E–H) Magnified views of the boxed regions in (A–D) to show details. Arrows indicate callose layers. Bars=10 µm.
Fig. 5.OsLecRK5 homodimerizes and forms a complex with UGP1. (A) Bimolecular fluorescence complementation in tobacco leaves, illustrating the interactions among OsLecRK5, UGP1, and GSL5. Yn, N terminus of yellow fluorescent protein (YFP; amino acids 1–158); Yc, C terminus of YFP (amino acids 155–239). Bars=50 µm. (B) In vitro pull-down assay of recombinant MBP-LecRK5-KD (the OsLecRK5 protein kinase domain) and His-UGP1. Maltose binding protein (MBP) alone and His alone served as negative controls. (C) In vitro pull-down assay of recombinant MBP-Lectin (the OsLecRK5 lectin domain) and His-Lectin (the OsLecRK5 lectin domain). MBP alone and His alone served as negative controls.
Fig. 6.OsLecRK5 phosphorylates UGP1, increasing its activity. (A) I2–KI-stained pollen in wild-type (WT, left) and point-mutated transgenic lines (center and right). Bars=50 µm. (B) Phosphorylation assays with OsLecRK5 and UGP1 in vitro. Asterisks indicate phosphorylated UGP1 (lower) and phosphorylated OsLecRK5 (upper). (C) UGP1 activity (as µg NADPH) in response to phosphorylation by OsLecRK5.
Fig. 7.Model of OsLecRK5 regulation in the callose synthesis pathway. OsLecRK5 proteins dimerize in response to a currently unidentified ligand and are activated by autophosphorylation. Active OsLecRK5 then phosphorylates UGP1 to enhance its activity in callose synthesis.