Skip to main content
Journal of Experimental Botany logoLink to Journal of Experimental Botany
. 2014 Dec 10;66(5):1355–1368. doi: 10.1093/jxb/eru483

Abscission of flowers and floral organs is closely associated with alkalization of the cytosol in abscission zone cells

Srivignesh Sundaresan 1,2, Sonia Philosoph-Hadas 1, Joseph Riov 2, Eduard Belausov 3, Betina Kochanek 1, Mark L Tucker 4, Shimon Meir 1,*
PMCID: PMC4339595  PMID: 25504336

Highlight

A novel insight is provided into the abscission process, showing for the first time that pH changes in abscission zone cells are involved in execution of floral abscission.

Key words: Abscission zone, alkalization, Arabidopsis mutants, cytosol, ethylene, flower organs, pH regulation, tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), wild rocket (Diplotaxis tenuifolia).

Abstract

In vivo changes in the cytosolic pH of abscission zone (AZ) cells were visualized using confocal microscopic detection of the fluorescent pH-sensitive and intracellularly trapped dye, 2’,7’-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5(and-6)-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF), driven by its acetoxymethyl ester. A specific and gradual increase in the cytosolic pH of AZ cells was observed during natural abscission of flower organs in Arabidopsis thaliana and wild rocket (Diplotaxis tenuifolia), and during flower pedicel abscission induced by flower removal in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum Mill). The alkalization pattern in the first two species paralleled the acceleration or inhibition of flower organ abscission induced by ethylene or its inhibitor 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP), respectively. Similarly, 1-MCP pre-treatment of tomato inflorescence explants abolished the pH increase in AZ cells and pedicel abscission induced by flower removal. Examination of the pH changes in the AZ cells of Arabidopsis mutants defective in both ethylene-induced (ctr1, ein2, eto4) and ethylene-independent (ida, nev7, dab5) abscission pathways confirmed these results. The data indicate that the pH changes in the AZ cells are part of both the ethylene-sensitive and -insensitive abscission pathways, and occur concomitantly with the execution of organ abscission. pH can affect enzymatic activities and/or act as a signal for gene expression. Changes in pH during abscission could occur via regulation of transporters in AZ cells, which might affect cytosolic pH. Indeed, four genes associated with pH regulation, vacuolar H+-ATPase, putative high-affinity nitrate transporter, and two GTP-binding proteins, were specifically up-regulated in tomato flower AZ following abscission induction, and 1-MCP reduced or abolished the increased expression.

Introduction

Abscission is a process by which plants shed their organs, such as leaves, flowers, and fruits. Abscission occurs in specialized cells known as the abscission zone (AZ), which develops at the base of the organ to be shed. The AZ is comprised of a few layers of cells that are typically smaller than adjacent cells in the non-AZ (NAZ), and have a denser cytoplasm. The AZ cells are predisposed to respond to abscission signals. Upon induction, these cells secrete cell wall-modifying and hydrolysing enzymes, that loosen the cell wall and degrade the middle lamella between adjacent cells (Sexton and Roberts, 1982; Osborne, 1989; Bleecker and Patterson, 1997; Roberts et al., 2000 2002; Patterson, 2001; Stenvik et al., 2006). In many plant species, the abscission process is induced by ethylene; nonetheless, the rate and degree of abscission depend upon the balance between the levels of auxin and ethylene in the AZ. Thus, the auxin concentration in the AZ must be reduced to render the AZ cells responsive to ethylene (Sexton and Roberts, 1982; Patterson, 2001; Taylor and Whitelaw, 2001; Roberts et al., 2002; Meir et al., 2006 2010). Indeed, it was demonstrated that acquisition of ethylene sensitivity in tomato flower AZ correlated with altered expression of auxin-regulated genes evoked by flower removal, which are the source of auxin (Meir et al., 2010).

Although Arabidopsis does not abscise its leaves or fruit, its floral organs (petals, sepals, and anthers) do abscise. Over the last two decades, abscission of Arabidopsis flower organs has served as a model for abscission research. Recently, by employing different strategies to manipulate auxin levels in the AZs of Arabidopsis floral organs, it was shown that auxin signalling is essential for floral organ abscission (Basu et al., 2013). Both ethylene-dependent pathways and an ethylene-independent pathway acted in parallel in Arabidopsis floral organ abscission, but were to some degree interdependent. In wild-type (WT) plants, ethylene accelerated the senescence and abscission of floral organs. In ethylene-insensitive mutants, such as ethylene receptor 1 (etr1) and ethylene-insensitive 2 (ein2), abscission was significantly delayed (Bleecker and Patterson, 1997; Patterson, 2001; Butenko et al., 2003 2006; Patterson et al., 2003; Patterson and Bleecker, 2004; Chen et al., 2011; Kim et al., 2013b ). However, although ethylene-insensitive mutants display delayed floral organ abscission, they eventually abscise and exhibit a separation process similar to that of the WT. These observations led to the conclusion that although ethylene accelerates abscission, the perception of ethylene is not essential for floral organ abscission. This indicated that an ethylene-independent pathway exists in Arabidopsis floral organ abscission (Bleecker and Patterson, 1997; Patterson et al., 2003; Patterson and Bleecker, 2004).

An ethylene-independent pathway has been characterized for Arabidopsis floral organ abscission. This signalling pathway is comprised of several components identified by means of genetic mutations that delayed abscission. A model of the proteins involved in the signal transduction of the ethylene-independent pathway in abscission is presented in the review of Estornell et al. (2013). Briefly, INFLORESENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION (IDA) (Butenko et al., 2003) encodes a peptide ligand (Stenvik et al., 2006 2008) that putatively binds to the redundant receptor-like kinases HAESA (HAE) and HAESA-LIKE2 (HSL2), which activate downstream KNOX-like transcription factors (Cho et al., 2008; Stenvik et al., 2008). Another ethylene-independent mutant is nevershed (nev) (Liljegren et al., 2009). The NEVERSHED (NEV) gene encodes an ADP-ribosylation factor-GTPase-activating protein (ARF-GAP) involved in Golgi transport.

Additional genes that affect abscission include the DELAYED IN ABSCISSION (DAB) genes. Five independent mutants, dab1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, were identified by screening for delayed floral organ abscission (Patterson et al., 2003; Patterson and Bleecker, 2004). While DAB1, 2, and 3 have not been cloned, DAB4 was found to be allelic to the jasmonic acid co-receptor CORONATINE INSENSITIVE1 (COI1), and its novel allele, coi1-37 (Kim et al., 2013a, b ). Many metabolic and enzymatic processes depend on a specific range of pH, due to regulation of protein structure and function. Various cellular processes are compartmentalized within the organelles, cytosol, and apoplast, each with a distinct function and distinct pH requirements (Casey et al., 2010; Orij et al., 2011; Pittman, 2012). pH has a major role in secretory functions, in which it regulates post-translational modification and sorting of proteins and lipids as they move along the secretory pathway (Paroutis et al., 2004). pH can be a signal and/or a messenger, and changes in pH and H+ ions act as a signal for gene expression in various physiological processes (Savchenko et al., 2000; Felle, 2001; Miyara et al., 2010; Orij et al., 2011). Dynamic changes in cytosolic and/or apoplastic pH occur in many plant cell types and in response to stress conditions (Felle, 2001, 2005, 2006; Couldwell et al., 2009; Swanson et al., 2011) and environmental signals, such as pathogen infection (Alkan et al., 2008; Miyara et al., 2010) and gravitropic stimulation (Felle, 2001; Roos et al., 2006). In addition, pH changes can activate several different transporters (Pittman et al., 2005).

Although the possible involvement of pH changes in the abscission process was suggested many years ago by Osborne (1989), no experimental evidence has been provided to support this hypothesis. Osborne proposed that a change in pH occurs during abscission, based on studies in which a decrease in the pH of the cell wall activated cell wall-associated enzymes, such as polygalacturonase (PG), which are considered to operate at a low pH range between 4.5 and 5.5 (Riov, 1974; Ogawa et al., 2009).

Using a pH-sensitive fluorescent indicator, 2’,7’-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5(and-6)-carboxyfluorescein-acetoxymethyl (BCECF-AM), an AZ-specific change was observed in the cytosolic pH during abscission, which correlated with both ethylene-dependent and ethylene-independent abscission signalling. Moreover, a strong correlation was demonstrated between pH changes in the AZ cells and execution of organ abscission in three different abscission systems: A. thaliana, wild rocket (Diplotaxis tenuifolia), and tomato (Solanum lycopersicum Mill), and in response to ethylene or its inhibitor, 1 methylcyclopropene (1-MCP). The possible role of pH changes in the abscission process is discussed.

Materials and methods

Plant materials and growth conditions

Arabidopsis

Arabidopsis thaliana Columbia (Col) WT and mutant lines of the Col ecotype, constitutive triple response 1 (ctr1), ein2, ethylene overproducer 4 (eto4), dab5, ida, and nev7, used in this research were generously provided by Dr Sara E. Patterson, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA. Seeds were surface sterilized for 5min in 1% (v/v) sodium hypochlorite containing 0.05% Triton X-100, followed by five rinses in sterile double-distilled water (DDW). The seeds were placed in Petri dishes with Murashige and Skoog medium (Duchefa Biochemie) containing 2.3g l–1 vitamins, 8g l–1 plant agar, and 15g l–1 sucrose, pH 5.7, and incubated at 4 °C for 4 d in the dark. The dishes were then transferred to a controlled environment room at 24 °C under 16h light, and grown for 10 d before transplanting. The seedlings were transplanted into pots containing Klassman 686 peat:perlite (85:15, v/v) medium with 0.1% (w/v) of a slow release fertilizer (Osmocote, The Scotts Company, Marysville, OH, USA), and covered with Saran polyethylene for 3–5 d, which was then removed. The seedlings were transferred to a controlled growth chamber and grown at 24 °C with supplementary light (100 μmol m–2 s–1) to maintain a 16h photoperiod until maturity.

Wild rocket

Wild rocket (D. tenuifolia) seedlings were grown in 10 litre pots in tuff:peat (50:50, v/v) medium containing 0.1% (w/v) Osmocote slow release fertilizer. Plants were grown under a 30% shade net during July to November.

Tomato

Cherry tomato (S. lycopersicum) inflorescences cv. ‘VF-36’ or cv. ‘Shiran’ 1335 (Hazera Genetics Ltd, Israel) were harvested for BCECF fluorescence analyses or microarray experiments (Meir et al., 2010), respectively, from greenhouse-grown plants between 09:00h and 11:00h. Bunches containing at least 2–4 freshly open flowers were brought to the laboratory under high humidity conditions. Closed young flower buds and senesced flowers were removed, and the stem ends were trimmed. Groups of 3–4 bunch explants were placed in vials containing 10ml of 50mg l–1 organic chlorine (TOG-6, Gadot Agro, Ltd, Israel) in water to prevent contamination by microorganisms. The vials were divided into two groups: one was incubated at 20 °C after flower removal with a sharp razor blade (control), and the second group was exposed to 1-MCP (0.4 μl l–1) in a sealed 200 litre chamber at 20 °C for 2h before flower removal, followed by incubation at 20 °C. Pedicel abscission was monitored in the two groups of explants at various time intervals during a 60h period after flower removal.

Application of ethylene and 1-MCP, and determination of flower petal abscission in wild rocket

Wild rocket flowering shoots, in which P0–P3 flowers were marked, were exposed to ethylene, 1-MCP, or both. For ethylene treatment, the flowering shoots were placed in vials containing DDW and incubated for 24h under 10 μl l–1 ethylene in a 200 litre air-tight chamber at 20 °C. For 1-MCP treatment, the flowering shoots in water were incubated for 2h in 0.4 μl l–1 1-MCP (EthylBloc™, Rohm and Haas, USA) in a 200 litre air-tight chamber at 20 °C. For the combined treatment, the flowering shoots were first exposed for 2h to 1-MCP and then for 22h to ethylene under the same conditions detailed above. After treatment, the flowering shoots were transferred to a controlled observation room maintained at 20±1 °C, 60±10% relative humidity, and a photoperiod of 12h at a light intensity of 14 μmol m–2 s–2 provided by cool white fluorescent tubes. The rate of flower petal abscission in response to a very delicate finger touch was recorded during incubation until 100% of the petals abscised. Experiments were repeated three times, with 10 flowering shoots each, and analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used for statistical analysis of the data of the three experiments.

Ethylene production in flowers and siliques at different positions along the inflorescence of Arabidopsis Col WT and ctr1 and eto4 mutants

Arabidopsis plants were grown as described above, and the experiments were conducted when the inflorescences had ~20–23 flowers. Samples of 6–8 whole flowers and/or siliques at specified positions along the inflorescence (P2–P17) of Col (WT) and ctr1 and eto4 mutants were excised, weighed, and placed in air-tight sealed 23ml vials that were incubated for 1h at 20 °C under light. Air samples of 3ml were withdrawn from the vials and the ethylene concentration was determined by gas chromatography.

BCECF fluorescence analyses by confocal microscopy

BCECF-AM probe stock and working solutions

BCECF-AM (Cat-B1150; www.invitrogen.com) was used. A stock solution of the BCECF-AM was dissolved in a high quality anhydrous dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO) to a final concentration of 10mM. The DMSO stock solution was stored at –20 °C in the dark. The working solution was prepared by adding 1 μl of stock solution to 1ml of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), pH 7.4, to a final concentration of 10 μM.

Sample preparation for microscopic experiments

Arabidopsis and wild rocket. Inflorescences with flowers located at various positions along the inflorescence were harvested ~1h before assaying, placed in DDW, and immediately used for the imaging experiments. Flowers at different developmental stages were excised separately from the inflorescences and placed on microscopic slides. Generally, flower sepals, petals, and stamens were removed using forceps without damaging the carpel, receptacles, and peduncles.

Tomato. Samples were collected at specific time points (0, 4, 8, and 14h or 0, 2, 4, and 8h) after flower removal for cross- or longitudinal section images, respectively. Flower AZ (FAZ) tissues were collected from each side of the abscission fracture by excising 3mm thick tissue (proximal and distal) of the AZ and NAZ regions for preparing longitudinal sections. The longitudinal sections were made by cutting down the middle of the tissues with a sharp razor blade, without causing injury, and placing them on microscopic slides. For cross-section preparation, 1mm sections were collected from the middle of the FAZ fracture.

Probe loading for microscopic observations

The BCECF-AM working solution (25 μl for Arabidopsis and wild rocket and 10 μl for tomato) was applied onto the surface of the tissue samples, which were then incubated under darkness for 20min. The samples were rinsed four times with PBS to remove excess BCECE-AM. The Z-stack images were taken with an Olympus IX-81 confocal laser scanning microscope (CLSM) (FV 500, Olympus Optical Co., Tokyo, Japan), equipped with a 488nm argon-ion laser. Samples were excited by 488nm light and the emission was detected through a BA 505–525 filter. A BA 660 IF emission filter was used to detect chlorophyll autofluorescence. Transmitted light images were obtained using Nomarski differential interference contrast (DIC) microscopy. The relative fluorescence intensity was quantified in the CLSM images using MICA (Multi Image Co-Localization Analysis) software (Cytoview Company, Israel; http://www.cytoview.com/). All experiments were repeated three times with different biological samples from different inflorescences, and representative images are presented.

Microarray analysis of tomato flower AZ

AZ tissue of tomato flowers was sampled at five time points (0, 2, 4, 8, and 14h) following flower removal, and the pedicel NAZ tissue was sampled at four time points (0, 2, 4, and 14h), with or without 1-MCP pre-treatment as previously described (Meir et al., 2010). RNA extraction and microarray analysis of tomato flower AZ were performed as detailed in Meir et al. (2010).

Results

A specific increase of cytosolic pH in Arabidopsis flower organ AZ cells coincided with floral organ abscission

A specific occurrence of BCECF green fluorescence in the cytoplasm of Arabidopsis flower organ AZ cells, indicating an increased pH, was observed by confocal microscopy. The increased green fluorescence in the WT occurred mainly in P4 flowers, declined in P5–P7 flowers (Fig. 1A), and was barely detectable in P8 flowers (data not shown). A magnified BCECF image of a P5 flower (Supplementary Fig. S1A, B available at JXB online) showed that the green fluorescence was located in the cytosol. This observation was further confirmed by the magnified BCECF image of a cross-section of tomato flower pedicel AZ cells (Supplementary Fig. S1C), showing a strong specific green fluorescence in the cytosol of the AZ cells. In WT flowers, the petals of P6 flowers abscised in response to a very slight touch, while those of P7 and P8 flowers had already abscised (Supplementary Fig. S2). Thus, activation of abscission occurred in P4 and P5 flowers, which is consistent with earlier reports showing that the abscission process in Arabidopsis WT, expressed in decreased petal break strength, is initiated in P4 flowers (González-Carranza et al., 2002; Patterson and Bleecker 2004; Butenko et al., 2006; Basu et al., 2013). Based on the pattern of increased fluorescence in the cytosol of AZ cells (Fig. 1A), it is likely that the increase in pH coincides with the abscission processes in Arabidopsis flowers.

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1.

Fluorescence micrographs of BCECF images of flower organ AZ of Arabidopsis Col WT (A) and Arabidopsis ethylene-related mutants ctr1 (B), ein2 (C), and eto4 (D), showing pH changes in P3–16 flowers. Intact Arabidopsis Col WT and mutant flowers defined according to their position on the inflorescence were sampled separately, incubated in BCECF solution, and examined by CLSM. The microscopic fluorescence images represent merged images of BCECF fluorescence with chlorophyll autofluorescence and bright field images. The increase in pH is shown by green fluorescence, which is distinguished from the red chlorophyll autofluorescence. The arrows in the P5 panel in the first row indicate the location of the flower organ AZ, based on Patterson (2001). PeAZ, petal AZ; StAZ, stamen AZ; SeAZ, sepal AZ. Scale bars=100 μm. The images presented for each plant type (WT or mutant) and positions are representative images out of 3–6 replicates. P1 represents a flower with petals that are first visible (not shown) and P3 represents a fully open flower.

To correlate further the pH changes in the AZ cells with flower organ abscission, the changes in the BCECF fluorescence were examined in several Arabidopsis mutants displaying different flower abscission phenotypes. Three ethylene-related mutants, ctr1, ein2, and eto4, as well as three ethylene-independent mutants, ida, nev7, and dab5, were used. In ctr1, the green fluorescence intensity was already high in P3 flowers and remained relatively high up to P7 flowers, in which the fluorescence began to decline (Fig. 1B). The ctr1 mutant showed an early abscission of petals and sepals starting in P5 flowers, while the stamen remained attached even in P9 flowers (Supplementary Fig. S3 at JXB onlline). In ein2, a delayed abscission mutant, the BCECF fluorescence intensity was very low or barely detected in P3–P16 flowers (Fig. 1C) as compared with the WT (Fig. 1A). Flower organ abscission in ein2 occurred in P10–P14 flowers (data not shown), similar to previously reported data for this mutant (Patterson and Bleecker, 2004; Chen et al., 2011). However, it is important to emphasize that the abscission process in the ethylene-insensitive mutants, ein2 and etr1, started in P6 flowers and proceeded gradually until completion in P14 flowers, as evidenced by the decrease in petal break strength (Patterson and Bleecker, 2004). Therefore, the gradual decrease in petal break strength in ein2 (Patterson and Bleecker, 2004) correlated well with the low but prolonged BCECF fluorescence intensity detected in P5–P10 flowers (Fig. 1C). Conversely, in the ethylene-overproducing mutant, eto4, the BCECF fluorescence started to increase in P2 flowers, peaked in P5 and P6 flowers, and declined between P7 and P9 flowers (Fig. 1D). In eto4, the abscission rate was significantly faster, and all the floral organs were already abscised in P5 flowers (Supplementary Fig. S4). Thus, the results of the ethylene-related Arabidopsis mutants support the correlation between floral organ abscission and alkalization of the cytosol (Supplementary Figs S3, S4).

BCECF fluorescence intensity in the floral organ AZ of the ethylene-independent mutants, ida (Fig. 2B) and nev7 (Fig. 2C), and in the delayed abscission mutant dab5 (Fig. 2D) was very low as compared with the WT (Fig. 2A). The ida mutant is characterized by a decrease in petal break strength from P6 to P10 flowers, followed by an increase from P12 to P20 flowers (V-shape pattern) (Butenko et al., 2003; Stenvik et al., 2008; Liu et al., 2013). This V-shape pattern could be seen in ida plants, as the P10 flower petals abscised during handling in the BCECF fluorescence experiments. No abscission was observed along the inflorescence of ida (data not shown), which is consistent with previous reports (Butenko et al., 2003; Stenvik et al., 2008). Although the BCECF fluorescence in ida was low, a low intensity fluorescence could be observed in P5–P14 flowers (Fig. 2B), which coincided with the gradual decrease in petal break strength in P5–P10 flowers. Similar to ida, no abscission was observed along the inflorescence of nev7 (data not shown), which is consistent with previous reports (Liljegren et al., 2009; Liu et al., 2013). The nev7 mutant is also characterized by a V-shape pattern in petal break strength. However, the decrease in break strength is very moderate and the lowest value is detected in P6 flowers (Liu et al., 2013). The fluorescence intensity in P3–P18 flowers was very low (Fig. 2C) compared with the WT (Fig. 2A). Yet, some fluorescence was observed in P3–P6 flowers (Fig. 2C) that correlated with the moderate decrease in petal break strength in these flower positions (Liu et al., 2013). It should be noted that in dab5 no BCECF fluorescence could be observed in P3–P14 flowers (Fig, 2D). The BCECF fluorescence was detected only in P15–P17 flowers (Fig. 2D), when organ separation was first observed (Supplementary Fig. S5 at JXB online), which is consistent with previous observations (S.E. Patterson and A.B. Bleecker, unpublished data). Similar to the ethylene-insensitive mutants, ein2 and etr1, a gradual decrease in petal break strength occurred in dab5, starting from P8 flowers until the completion of abscission (S.E. Patterson, personal communication). This decrease in petal break strength from P12 flowers until the completion of abscission was less significant than in the WT, and the low BCECF fluorescence detected in P15–17 flowers (Fig. 2D) coincided with the moderate change in break strength.

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2.

Fluorescence micrographs of BCECF images of flower organ AZ of Arabidopsis Col WT (A) and Arabidopsis abscission-related mutants ida (B), nev7 (C), and dab5 (D), showing pH changes in P3–P18 flowers. PeAZ, petal AZ; StAZ, stamen AZ; SeAZ, sepal AZ. Scale bars=100 μm. The experiment was performed as detailed in Fig. 1. The images presented for each plant type (WT or mutant) and flower position are representative images out of 3–6 replicates.

Quantification of the BCECF fluorescence in P3–P7 flowers in Arabidopsis WT and the mutants is presented in Fig. 3. The data confirm the pattern of changes presented in Figs 1 and 2, showing a decreased fluorescence in P4 and P7 flowers in the WT, a relatively moderate fluorescence in P3 in ctr1, a barely detected fluorescence in ein2, a marked increase in fluorescence in P3 and P6 flowers in eto4, and an almost undetectable fluorescence in ida, nev7, and dab5. In summary, the pattern of AZ-specific BCECF fluorescence correlates well with the abscission process in Arabidopsis WT and in both ethylene-dependent and -independent abscission mutants.

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3.

Relative fluorescence intensity quantified for the micrographs of BCECF images presented in Figs 1 and 2 of flower organ AZ of Arabidopsis Col WT and ethylene- and abscission-related mutants showing pH changes in P3–P7 flowers. The relative fluorescence intensity of flower organ AZ of the WT and the indicated mutants was quantified by confocal microscope MICA software. The data represent means of 3–4 replicates ±SE.

A specific increase of the cytosolic pH in flower organ AZ cells coincided with flower organ abscission in control and ethylene- and 1-MCP-treated wild rocket flowers

Wild rocket belongs to the same family as Arabidopsis, the Brassicaceae. Wild rocket is useful for comparison, not only because it is a different genus of Brassicaceae, but also because its plants are larger and easier to work with. The inflorescence architecture of wild rocket is similar to that of Arabidopsis, exhibiting a gradient of flower development down the inflorescence (Fig. 4A), with P3, P4, P5, P6, P7, and P8 representing a freshly open flower, a fully open flower, a senescing flower, a flower with abscising petals, an early developed silique, and a developed silique in which the floral organs abscised, respectively. It was observed that BCECF fluorescence was detected only in the AZ of flower organs in P4–P6 flowers, in which abscission was in progress (Fig. 4B). In P3 flowers, which just opened, and in P7 or P8 flowers, in which the abscission of floral organs was complete, BCECF fluorescence was barely detected (Fig. 4B).

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4.

Flower developmental stages in wild rocket (Diplotaxis tenuifolia) according to flower position (P) on the shoot (A), and fluorescence micrographs of BCECF images of flower organ AZ (B) showing pH changes in P3–P8 flowers. The arrows in the P4 flower indicate the location of the flower organ AZ, based on a scanning electron micrograph of Arabidopsis flowers (Patterson, 2001). PeAZ, petal AZ; StAZ, stamen AZ; SeAZ, sepal AZ. Scale bar=200 μm. The BCECF fluorescence examination was performed as detailed in Fig. 1. The experiment was repeated twice with 2–4 different biological samples of different flowering shoots, and similar results were obtained.

To examine the effects of ethylene and/or 1-MCP on petal abscission of wild rocket flowers, cut inflorescences were used, in which the flower positions P0–P3 were marked before exposure to 10 μl l–1 ethylene for 24h. Flowers at positions P0–P3 responded to ethylene treatment, resulting in enhanced petal abscission; conversely, the combined treatment of 1-MCP and ethylene delayed petal abscission (data not shown). The effects of ethylene and 1-MCP on the timing of petal abscission in P3 flowers are presented in Fig. 5A, with ethylene accelerating abscission by 5h. However, in P0–P2 flowers the effect of ethylene on abscission was even more pronounced, accelerating abscission by 41, 29, or 17h in P0, P1, and P2 flowers, respectively (data not shown). Confocal fluorescent imaging of freshly open and non-abscising P3 flowers demonstrated that BCECF green fluorescence was barely detectable (Fig. 5B, G). After 24h, the intensity of the BCECF fluorescence, which increased slightly in the AZ of control flowers (Fig. 5C, G), significantly increased in the AZ of ethylene-treated flowers (Fig. 5D, G). Pre-treatment with 1-MCP inhibited the slight increase in fluorescence observed in control flowers after 24h (Fig. 5E, G), and completely abolished the ethylene-increased green fluorescence (Fig. 5F, G). These data indicate that the pH changes preceded the onset of petal abscission in both the control and ethylene-treated flowers. Thus, a moderate pH increase in the AZ cells of control P3 flowers was already observed 24h after the initiation of the experiment (Fig. 5C, G), before petal abscission was detected, whereas a complete petal abscission occurred only after 33h (Fig. 5A). Similarly, the ethylene-induced pH changes in the AZ cells of P3 flowers were observed 24h after the initiation of the experiment (Fig. 5D, G), while complete petal abscission in response to ethylene was obtained only after 28h (Fig. 5A). The results indicate that, similar to Arabidopsis, AZ-specific changes in pH occurred during abscission in wild rocket, and the changes in pH preceded the onset of organ abscission.

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5.

Effects of ethylene, 1-MCP, and a combined treatment of both on wild rocket petal abscission (A) and the expression of intracellular BCECF fluorescence in the AZ of P3 flower organs at zero time (B) and 24h after the initiation of the experiment (C–F), and on the level of the relative BCECF fluorescence intensity (G). The time for reaching complete petal abscission in response to the treatments was monitored in (A). For the fluorescence measurements, wild rocket inflorescences, in which P3 flowers were marked at zero time (B), were kept untreated at 20 °C for 24h as control (C), or exposed to ethylene (D), 1-MCP (E), or a combined treatment (F). Intact flowers were sampled from the inflorescences before or 24h after the ethylene/1-MCP treatments, incubated in BCECF solution, and examined by CLSM. The BCECF fluorescence analysis was performed as detailed in Fig. 1. The white arrows in (D) indicate the location of the flower organ AZs. StAZ, stamen AZ; PeAZ, petal AZ; SeAZ, sepal AZ. Scale bar=200 μm. The relative fluorescence intensity in (G) was quantified by confocal microscope MICA software, and the data represent means of four replicates ±SE. The results in (A) represent means of three biological experiments with 10 replicates each. Different letters above the bars in graphs A and G represent significant differences between treatments at P≤0.01.

1-MCP blocked abscission and the increase in cytosolic pH in tomato flower AZ after flower removal

The kinetics of pedicel abscission in non-treated and 1-MCP-treated tomato inflorescence explants after flower removal was described previously (Meir et al., 2010). Similar results were obtained in the present research (data not shown). Briefly, if tomato inflorescences, the panicle, were excised from the plant but the flowers remained attached, no pedicel abscission was observed during a 60h period following cluster detachment. Flower removal induced pedicel abscission within 10h, when ~15% of the pedicels abscised following a very slight touch. After 8h, no abscission was visible, but cell separation was already initiated. This indicates that the abscission process actually started earlier than 8h after flower removal. After 16h, 75% of the pedicels abscised. Pre-treatment with 1-MCP completely blocked pedicel abscission induced by flower removal for at least 20h after flower removal.

The tomato FAZ is easily distinguished as a swollen node in the pedicel tissue (Roberts et al., 1984; André et al., 1999). In median cross-sections of the tomato FAZ, the BCECF green fluorescence appeared first in the swollen node 4h after flower removal, as a discrete peripheral spot of cells that included the vascular bundle and the surrounding parenchyma cells in the cortical side of the AZ (Fig. 6B). At 8h (Fig. 6C) and 14h (Fig. 6D) following flower removal, when separation occurred, the BCECF fluorescence was more intense and covered the entire cross-section. However, the most intense fluorescence appeared in the ring of cortical parenchyma cells between the vascular bundle and the epidermis (Fig. 6C, D). In the centre of the AZ node there is a region of relatively large parenchyma pith cells, which developed a weak fluorescence 14h after flower removal, just before abscission occurred. Nonetheless, the fluorescence intensity decreased 8h and 14h after flower removal in regions in which cell separation had already occurred and also in the vascular bundle (Fig. 6C, D). Magnification of the image in Fig. 6D, taken from parenchyma cells surrounding the vascular bundle 14h after flower removal (Supplementary Fig. S1C at JXB online), clearly shows that the intense fluorescence was located in the cytosol of the AZ of living cells, while the dead AZ cells (indicated by the white arrow in Supplementary Fig. S1C) displayed a much lower fluorescence, which appeared only in the vacuole. These results are in agreement with previous observations (Lampl et al., 2013), showing that the BCECF fluorescence rapidly accumulated in the cytoplasm of the living epidermal cells, but when cells began to die the BCECF fluorescence was detected in the vacuole.

Fig. 6.

Fig. 6.

Fluorescence micrographs of BCECF, and chlorophyll autofluorescence, bright field, and merged images of cross-sections of the AZ of tomato flower pedicels showing pH changes at 0 (A), 4 (B), 8 (C), and 14 (D) h after flower removal. At the indicated time points after flower removal, cross-sections were made of the AZ of tomato flower explants held in water, incubated in BCECF solution, and examined by CLSM. Samples of zero time were excised from explants without flower removal. C, cortex; Vb, vascular bundles; Ip, interfascicular parenchyma; P, pith; S marked with arrows indicates regions in which cell separation already occurred. Scale bars=200 μm. The experiment was repeated twice with 3–4 different biological samples of different flowering shoots, and similar results were obtained.

Visualization of BCECF fluorescence in longitudinal sections of the FAZ displayed an increase in fluorescence in the vascular bundle and the cortex across the entire AZ (Fig. 7A). In this experiment, the fluorescence was observed in the FAZ at 0h. However, pre-treatment with 1-MCP, which completely abolished the tomato pedicel abscission for up to 38h after flower removal (Meir et al., 2010), also completely abolished the increase in the BCECF fluorescence at all time points after flower removal (Fig. 7B). These results indicate that there is a correlation between pedicel abscission and alkalization of the cytosol in the tomato FAZ cells.

Fig. 7.

Fig. 7.

Fluorescence micrographs of BCECF images in longitudinal sections of tomato flower AZ showing pH changes in response to flower removal (A) and 1-MCP applied before flower removal (B) at the indicated time points after flower removal. Tomato flower explants held in water were exposed to 1-MCP (0.4 μl l–1 for 2h at 20 °C) prior to flower removal. Control flower explants were kept under similar conditions for the same period, and then flowers were removed. Samples of zero time were excised from explants without flower removal. At the indicated time points after flower removal, longitudinal sections of the AZ were prepared and incubated in BCECF solution as detailed in Fig. 1. C, cortex; Vb, vascular bundles; P, pith. The location of the AZ is indicated by a white dashed line. Scale bars=200 μm. The experiment was repeated twice with 3–5 different biological samples of different flowering shoots, and similar results were obtained.

Changes in the expression of genes that regulate cellular pH in tomato FAZ cells in response to flower removal and 1-MCP

A major regulatory mechanism of cellular pH is through the control of H+-related transport across membranes, including membrane transport of H+ between the cytosol and the two main acidic compartments, the apoplast and the vacuole. This is primarily facilitated by directly energized H+ pumps, including P-type H+-ATPase, V-type H+-ATPase, H+-pyrophosphatase (H+-PPase), and plant ion/H+ exchangers (Felle, 2005; Ortiz-Ramirez et al., 2011; Pittman, 2012). Additional processes that could markedly affect cellular pH are nitrate and/or ammonium transporters and GTP-binding proteins (Lee and Yang, 2008; Bloch et al., 2011a, b ; Luo et al., 2013).

Microarray analysis of the abscission-related transcriptome in the tomato FAZ in response to auxin depletion revealed changes in expression of many genes occurring prior to and during pedicel abscission (Meir et al., 2010). Some of these genes may be involved in the regulation of cellular pH, such as vacuolar H + -ATPase (BG628620), a gene encoding a putative high-affinity nitrate transporter (AF092654), and two genes encoding GTP-binding proteins (U38464 and L12051). Microarray analysis revealed an increase in expression of these four genes in the FAZ. Thus, vacuolar H + -ATPase (BG628620) expression increased by ~2-fold within 2h after flower removal and continued to increase slightly until 14h only in the AZ (Fig. 8A), indicating that it is AZ-specific. In 1-MCP-pre-treated flower clusters, the expression of this gene in the FAZ decreased after 2h and was significantly lower than that of the control (Fig. 8A). The expression of the high-affinity nitrate transporter gene (AF092654), which was transiently up-regulated specifically in the FAZ 2h after flower removal, was inhibited by 1-MCP pre-treatment (Fig. 8B). The two GTP-binding genes showed a transient increase in expression 2h after flower removal, which was not AZ-specific, followed by a more steady increase in expression between 4h and 14h, which was AZ-specific (Fig. 8C, D). The expression of both GTP-binding genes was inhibited or reduced by 1-MCP pre-treatment (Fig. 8C, D).

Fig. 8.

Fig. 8.

Effects of flower removal, 1-MCP pre-treatment, and tissue type on the kinetics of changes in array-measured expression levels of genes encoding pH regulatory transporters in tomato flower pedicels. Expression levels were measured for tomato vacuolar H + -ATPase (A), putative high-affinity nitrate transporter (B), Ras-related GTP-binding protein (C), and GTP-binding protein (D) transcripts. RNA samples were extracted from flower AZ or NAZ tissues taken from untreated (control) or 1-MCP-pre-treated tomato flower explants at the indicated time points after flower removal. The results are means of 2–3 biological replicates ±SD. Transcript identities are indicated by their tentative consensus sequence (TC) numbers in The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) and/or accession numbers. The microarray experiment was performed as described in Meir et al. (2010).

Discussion

The AZ-specific increase in pH coincides with the execution of natural organ abscission

It is well established that pH controls a variety of processes in plant cells, and might also serve as a signal for gene expression (Savchenko et al., 2000; Felle, 2005, 2006; Couldwell et al., 2009). Although it was hypothesized many years ago that pH changes might be involved in the abscission process (Osborne, 1989), this hypothesis was not experimentally tested and confirmed until now. The pH-sensitive BCECF dye exhibits an increase in green fluorescence at 488nm when the intracellular pH is in the range of pH 6.5–9 (Li et al., 2008; Mumm et al., 2011). Esterification of the carboxylic acid groups in BCECF with acetoxymethyl (AM) results in a non-fluorescent, uncharged molecule that can permeate cell membranes. Once inside the cell, the ester groups are cleaved by non-specific esterases, resulting in a fluorescent, charged BCECF molecule that is ion-trapped within the cell (Supplementary Fig. S1 at JXB online).

The concept of the AZ being a pre-determined site for specific inter- and intracellular signalling events is well established. There is convincing morphological, biochemical, and molecular evidence that cells which constitute the AZ respond to hormonal, developmental, and environmental cues differently from the neighbouring cells (Osborne, 1989; Roberts et al., 2000 2002; Taylor and Whitelaw, 2001; González-Carranza et al., 2002; Agusti et al., 2009; Meir et al., 2010). AZ cells, classified as type II ethylene-responsive target cells, exhibit a specific response to auxin and ethylene application as compared with NAZ cells, which are classified as type I cells (Osborne, 1982, 1989). The results presented herein show for the first time that pH changes are AZ-specific and coincide with the execution of abscission in three different abscission systems. The present data indicate a gradual specific increase in the cytosolic pH of AZ cells during natural abscission of flower organs in Arabidopsis (Fig. 1A) and wild rocket (Fig. 4B). A similar increase in pH was observed during pedicel abscission in tomato (Figs 6, 7), but the pH changes were less AZ-specific (Fig. 7A).

Abscission of Arabidopsis flower organs has been well characterized by using light and scanning microscopy and studies of AZ-specific GUS (β-glucuronidase) reporter gene expression, which included PG, CHITINASE, HAE, EVERSHED, and BEAN ABSCISSION CELLULASE (Bleecker and Patterson, 1997; González-Carranza et al., 2002; Patterson and Bleecker, 2004; Butenko et al., 2006; Liljegren et al., 2009). The pattern of BCECF fluorescence, which indicates a change in pH in Arabidopsis P4–P7 flowers (Fig. 1A), was similar to the GUS staining pattern of the above AZ-specific genes. A similar AZ-specific fluorescence was observed in the AZ of wild rocket flower organs, which also coincided with cell separation (Fig. 4B). The tomato FAZ is typically composed of 5–10 rows of small cells, which traverse the pedicel at the site of an indentation of the epidermis. The FAZ cells, however, are not lined up, and there are regions that can contain >20 rows of cells (Rančić et al., 2010; Iwai et al., 2013). Nonetheless, the pattern of fluorescence changes during tomato flower pedicel abscission, as seen in cross- and longitudinal sections of the FAZ (Figs 6, 7), were similar to the pattern of GUS staining of the Tomato Abscission PG4 (TAPG4) gene in cross- and longitudinal sections of the tomato FAZ following ethylene-induced abscission (Hong et al., 2000). The similarity between TAPG4::GUS expression and BCECF fluorescence indicates that a specific pH increase in the AZ cells coincides in time and location with the AZ-specific PG expression that reflects execution of cell separation in the AZ.

Ethylene induces abscission and increases the pH in AZ cells

To demonstrate a close correlation between ethylene-induced abscission and the alkalization of AZ cells, we used three experimental systems: ethylene-associated mutants of Arabidopsis (ctr1, ein2, and eto4), ethylene- and/or 1-MCP-treated wild rocket flowers, and 1-MCP-pre-treated tomato explants. The results obtained for these systems demonstrate a clear positive correlation between ethylene-induced abscission and an increase in the pH that is specific to the AZ cells.

The ein2 Arabidopsis mutant displays a delayed abscission phenotype (Patterson and Bleecker, 2004), but the abscission of ctr1 and eto4 mutants has not been well studied. In the ein2 mutant, BCECF fluorescence was barely seen along the inflorescence (Fig. 1C), indicating that almost no change in pH occurred as compared with the WT. Conversely, the results presented in Supplementary Fig. S4 at JXB online show that floral organ abscission was significantly faster in eto4, as all floral organs in P5 flowers abscised, and alkalization in the AZ cells correlated with abscission (Figs 1D, 3). It was hypothesized that the enhanced abscission in eto4 resulted from ethylene overproduction in the flowers. Monitoring ethylene production in flowers and siliques along the inflorescence of eto4 in comparison with Col WT and the ctr1 mutant indeed showed a significantly higher ethylene production rate in eto4 P2–P7 flowers compared with the WT (Supplementary Fig. S6). On the other hand, the ethylene production rate in the siliques in eto4 P10–P17 flowers was lower than that of the WT. It is interesting to note that the ethylene production rate in flowers and siliques along the inflorescence of the ctr1 mutant was significantly lower than those of the WT in all flower stages (Supplementary Fig. S6).

Earlier studies indicated that in eto1, 2, and 3 mutants, the post-transcriptional regulation of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) synthase (ACS) was affected (Woeste et al., 1999; Chae et al., 2003). Ethylene overproduction in the eto1 and 3 mutants was limited mainly to etiolated seedlings, while light-grown seedlings and various adult tissues, including flowers, produced ethylene levels close to those of the WT (Woeste et al., 1999). The eto4 mutant, on the other hand, overproduced ethylene in P2–P5 flowers and P6–P7 young siliques of light-grown plants (Supplementary Fig. S6 at JXB online). However, the mechanism for overproduction of ethylene in eto4 is unknown.

The floral organ abscission phenotype of ctr1 is unique. In most ethylene-responsive systems examined, ctr1 manifests itself as constitutively ethylene responsive (Keiber et al., 1993). One report was found regarding floral organ abscission in ctr1, which indicated that floral senescence/abscission in this mutant was similar to that of WT flowers (Chen et al., 2011). The present results demonstrate that petals and sepals abscised earlier in the ctr1 mutant, starting in the P5 flower (Supplementary Fig. S3 at JXB online); however, their abscission was incomplete, and some flower organs, mainly anthers, remained attached even in P9 flowers. The BCECF fluorescence in ctr1 correlated with the abscission pattern, and a significant fluorescence intensity could be observed in P3 flowers (Figs 1B, 3), earlier than in the WT (Fig. 1A). The earlier abscission was not induced by ethylene, since the ethylene production rate in flowers and siliques along the inflorescence of ctr1 was very low (Supplementary Fig. S6).

Exposure of Arabidopsis WT to ethylene enhances floral organ abscission (Butenko et al., 2003). These authors observed that ethylene treatment (10 μl l–1 for 48h) of mature plants induced abscission in P1 flowers. Ethylene enhanced petal abscission of wild rocket, which started in P0–P3 flowers, while 1-MCP delayed it (Fig. 5A), suggesting that endogenous ethylene plays a role in wild rocket abscission. However, the floral organs of 1-MCP-treated flowers eventually abscised (Fig. 5A), indicating the involvement of an ethylene-independent abscission pathway in this species, similar to Arabidopsis.

As shown for Arabidopsis, ethylene treatment that enhanced flower petal abscission in wild rocket (Fig. 5A) significantly enhanced the increase in cytosolic pH, which was AZ-specific (Fig. 5D, G). Conversely, 1-MCP, which delayed petal abscission (Fig. 5A), completely inhibited the ethylene-induced pH increase after 24h (Fig. 5F, G). The pH changes preceded the onset of petal abscission (Fig. 5A) in both the control and ethylene-treated flowers (Fig. 5C, D, G), suggesting that they might be involved in the regulation of the abscission process. Similar to the results obtained with wild rocket, pre-treatment of tomato explants with 1-MCP, which inhibited pedicel abscission after flower removal (Meir et al., 2010), also abolished the pH increase in the AZ cells (Fig. 7).

pH changes in AZ cells of Arabidopsis flower organs also occur in an ethylene-independent abscission system

Since an ethylene-independent signalling pathway has been established in Arabidopsis floral organ abscission (Patterson and Bleecker, 2004), it was examined whether the AZ-specific pH changes also correlated with abscission in ethylene-independent mutants. Thus, in Arabidopsis ida and nev7 mutants, in which floral organs do not abscise, the BCECF fluorescence was significantly lower than that detected in the WT (Figs 2B, C, 3). The low intensity of BCECF fluorescence in P4–P10 flowers in ida and in P3–P6 flowers in nev7 does not contradict the general correlation between abscission and the increase in pH. In fact, these pH changes correlated well with the V-shape changes in the petal break strength in ida (ligand), hae/hsl2 (receptors), and nev7 (Butenko et al., 2003; Cho et al., 2008; Stenvik et al. 2008; Chen et al., 2011; Liu et al., 2013). The expression of hydrolytic and cell wall-modifying genes increased in flower stages 12–15 (Smyth et al., 1990), although their expression was generally lower in ida and hae/hsl2 than in the WT (Neiderhuth et al., 2013). The decrease in petal break strength suggests that cell wall-modifying enzymes and proteins are active in these mutants, but at a lower level than in the WT. Thus, the pH changes correlate well with the abscission-related changes in break strength and cell wall-modifying gene expression in these mutants, as well as in the WT and the ethylene-insensitive mutants (Figs 13). In addition, dab5, whose abscission starts only in P15 flowers (Supplementary Fig. S5 at JXB online), also showed BCECF fluorescence only in the AZ cells of P15–P17 flowers (Fig. 2D). However, this fluorescence was much lower than that of the WT (Fig. 2A) and eto4 (Fig. 1D), whose abscission process occurred very rapidly. These results suggest that alkalization of the AZ cells is important for cell separation in both ethylene-dependent and -independent abscission processes.

Changes in expression of genes that might regulate pH changes in AZ cells following abscission induction

The present results show a correlation between the increase in cytosolic pH and abscission in the AZ cells (Supplementary Fig. S1 at JXB online). A change in pH can affect many physiological processes and responses in plant cells (Savchenko et al., 2000). The increase in intracellular pH in the AZ cells might be regarded as a component of the signal transduction pathway, leading to acquisition of abscission competence, and might serve in turn as a signal for abscission-related gene expression. In addition, alkalization of the cytosol might be reflected in the acidification of the apoplast, as apoplast acidification involves H+ extrusion from the cytoplasm by H+-ATPases and specific transporters (Grignon and Sentenac, 1991). The acidification of the apoplast might activate cell wall-modifying enzymes (Osborne, 1989). Indeed, it was recently reported that when ethephon-treated leaf petioles of Phaseolus vulgaris were subjected to pH 3.5 or 5.5, which altered the apoplast pH, abscission occurred, whereas at pH 7 abscission was inhibited (Fukuda et al., 2013). However, these authors obtained opposite results in roots of Azolla filiculoides, in which a decrease in pH inhibited abscission. The authors suggest that the striking difference in pH sensitivity between A. filiculoides and P. vulgaris might be ascribed to a different pH optimum of pectin-degrading enzymes in these species.

Here, it was clearly demonstrated that intracellular alkalization correlates with abscission, but it is also important to determine how the increase in pH occurs. In this regard, microarray results might provide clues for the regulation of pH in the AZ cells. One possible mechanism could be via modified expression of AZ-specific transporter genes, such as vacuolar-type H + -translocating ATPase, plasma membrane H + -ATPase, nitrate and/or ammonium transporter, and GTP-binding proteins (Fig. 8). All of the above gene families that might regulate pH changes showed AZ-specific expression changes during organ abscission in microarray analyses of various abscission systems, such as Arabidopsis stamens (Cai and Lashbrook, 2008), citrus leaves (Agusti et al., 2009), apple flowers (Zhu et al., 2011), mature fruits of olive (Gil-Amado and Gomez-Jimenez, 2013) and melon (Corbacho et al., 2013), and tomato flower pedicels (Meir et al., 2010; Wang et al., 2013). In the tomato flower pedicel system (Wang et al., 2013) and citrus leaves (Agusti et al., 2009), abscission was induced by exogenous ethylene, but in all the other systems the abscission was dependent on endogenous ethylene. Thus, the transcriptome data clearly show that ethylene-dependent changes in expression of many genes are involved in abscission regulation and execution, including genes encoding proteins that regulate the pH in AZ cells. ATPases and membrane transporters could be regulated post-transcriptionally by a variety of signals; but some might be regulated transcriptionally. To verify this possibility, earlier microarray results (Meir et al., 2010) were examined for changes in H+-translocating ATPases, nitrate and/or ammonium transporters, and GTP-binding proteins. Four genes were discovered in the FAZ whose expression increased during abscission in an AZ-specific manner and was inhibited by 1-MCP treatment (Fig. 8). The role of these genes in abscission remains to be studied. It is interesting to note that recently the orthologues of these genes were expressed in Arabidopsis floral organ AZ, and the gene encoding the high-affinity nitrate transporter (At1g08090, Fig. 8B) significantly increased in flower stages 12–15, in which floral organ abscission occurred (Neiderhuth et al., 2013). An additional support for these findings was recently reported, showing that several genes encoding various H+-ATPases, ammonium transporter, and Rab GTP-binding were up-regulated during ethylene-induced tomato flower abscission (Wang et al., 2013). Taken together, the above data provide further evidence for the involvement of pH changes in the process of organ abscission, which might be regulated via specific modification of transporters in AZ cells.

Conclusions

The present novel results demonstrate that AZ-specific pH changes occur in the cytosol of AZ cells, which are induced by both ethylene-sensitive and -insensitive signalling pathways. These changes coincide with the execution of floral organ abscission following abscission induction in all the examined systems, as well as with the decreased break strength in Arabidopsis. pH can affect enzymatic activities and/or act as a signal for gene expression. Therefore, the results open a new and challenging direction for abscission research.

Supplementary data

Supplementary data are available at JXB online.

Figure S1. Fluorescence micrographs of BCECF images of flower organ AZ of Arabidopsis Col WT in P5 flower and of a cross-section of tomato flower pedicel AZ excised 14h after flower removal, showing a high intensity of green fluorescence in the cytosol.

Figure S2. Abscission phenotypes of flowers and siliques in P3–P8 flowers of Arabidopsis Col WT.

Figure S3. Abscission phenotypes of flowers and siliques in P1–P10 flowers of Arabidopsis ctr1 mutant.

Figure S4. Abscission phenotypes of flowers and siliques in P1–P6 flowers and in four representative replicates of the upper inflorescences of the Arabidopsis eto4 mutant.

Figure S5. Abscission phenotypes of flowers and siliques in P3–P16 flowers of the Arabidopsis dab5 mutant.

Figure S6. Ethylene production rates in P2–P17 flowers and siliques of Arabidopsis Col WT and ctr1 and eto4 mutants.

Supplementary Data

Acknowledgements

Contribution No. 697/14 from the ARO, The Volcani Center, Bet Dagan, Israel. We would like to thank Dr Sara E. Patterson (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA), for generously providing the Arabidopsis mutant lines. SS would like to thank the Indian Council of Agricultural Research for providing him with an International Fellowship (ICAR-IF), as partial support of his PhD studies. This work was supported by the United States–Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund (BARD) [grant no. US-4571-12C to SM, MLT, and SP-H], and the Chief Scientist of the Israeli Ministry of Agriculture Fund [grant no. 203-0898-10 to SM and SP-H].

Glossary

Abbreviatons:

AZ

abscission zone

BCECF-AM

2’,7’-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5(and-6)-carboxy-fluorescein-acetoxymethyl

CLSM

confocal laser scanning microscope

COI1

CORONATINE INSENSITIVE 1

ctr1

constitutive triple response 1

DAB

delayed in abscission

DDW

double distilled water

DMSO

dimethyl sulphoxide

ein2

ethylene-insensitive 2

eto4

ethylene overproducer 4

etr1

ethylene receptor 1

FAZ

flower abscission zone

HAE

HAESA

HSL2

HAESA-LIKE2

IDA

INFLORESCENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION

1-MCP

1-methylcyclopropene

NAZ

non-abscission zone

NEV

nevershed

PBS

phosphate-buffered saline

PG

polygalacturonase

TAPG4

Tomato Abscission PG4

WT

wild type.

References

  1. Agusti J, Merelo P, Cercós M, Tadeo FR, Talón M. 2009. Comparative transcriptional survey between laser-microdissected cells from laminar abscission zone and petiolar tissue during ethylene-promoted abscission in citrus leaves. BioMed Central Plant Biology 9, 127. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  2. Alkan N, Fluhr R, Sherman A, Prusky D. 2008. Role of ammonia secretion and pH modulation on pathogenicity of Colletotrichum coccodes on tomato fruits. Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions 21, 1058–1066. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  3. André JP, Catesson AM, Liberman M. 1999. Characters and origin of vessels with heterogeneous structure in leaf and flower abscission zones. Canadian Journal of Botany 77, 253–261. [Google Scholar]
  4. Basu MM, González-Carranza ZH, Azam-Ali S, Tang S, Shahid AA, Roberts JA. 2013. The manipulation of auxin in the abscission zone cells of Arabidopsis flowers reveals that indoleacetic acid signaling is a prerequisite for organ shedding. Plant Physiology 162, 96–106. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  5. Bleecker AB, Patterson SE. 1997. Last exit: senescence, abscission, and meristem arrest in Arabidopsis. The Plant Cell 9, 1169–1179. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  6. Bloch D, Monshausen G, Gilroy S, Yalovsky S. 2011a. Co-regulation of root hair tip growth by ROP GTPases and nitrogen source modulated pH fluctuations. Plant Signaling and Behavior 6, 426–429. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  7. Bloch D, Monshausen G, Singer M, Gilroy S, Yalovsky S. 2011b. Nitrogen source interacts with ROP signaling in root hair tip-growth. Plant, Cell and Environment 34, 76–88. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  8. Butenko MA, Patterson SE, Grini PE, Stenvik GE, Amundsen SS, Mandal A, Aalen RB. 2003. INFLORESCENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION controls floral organ abscission in Arabidopsis and identifies a novel family of putative ligands in plants. The Plant Cell 15, 2296–2307. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  9. Butenko MA, Stenvik GE, Alm V, Sather B, Patterson SE, Aalen RB. 2006. Ethylene-dependent and -independent pathways controlling floral abscission are revealed to converge using promoter::reporter gene constructs in the ida abscission mutant. Journal of Experimental Botany 57, 3627–3637. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  10. Cai S, Lashbrook CC. 2008. Stamen abscission zone transcriptome profiling reveals new candidates for abscission control: enhanced retention of floral organs in transgenic plants overexpressing Arabidopsis ZINC FINGER PROTEIN2 . Plant Physiology 146, 1305–1321. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  11. Casey JR, Grinstein S, Orlowski J. 2010. Sensors and regulators of intracellular pH. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 11, 50–61. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  12. Chae HS, Faure F, Kieber JJ. 2003. The eto1, eto2, and eto3 mutations and cytokinin treatment increase ethylene biosynthesis in Arabidopsis by increasing the stability of ACS protein. The Plant Cell 15, 545–549. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  13. Chen MK, Hsu WH, Lee PF, Thiruvengadam M, Chen HL, Yang CH. 2011. The MADS box gene, FOREVER YOUNG FLOWER, acts as a repressor controlling floral organ senescence and abscission in Arabidopsis. The Plant Journal 68, 168–185. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  14. Cho SK, Larue CT, Chevalier D, Wang H, Jinn TL, Zhang S, Walker JC. 2008. Regulation of floral organ abscission in Arabidopsis thaliana . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 105, 15629–15634. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  15. Corbacho J, Romojaro F, Pech J-C, Latché, Gomez-Jimenez MC. 2013. Transcriptomic events involved in melon mature-fruit abscission comprise the sequential induction of cell-wall degrading genes coupled to a stimulation of endo and exocytosis. PLoS One 8, e58363. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  16. Couldwell DL, Dunford R, Kruger NJ, Lloyd DC, Ratcliffe RG, Smith AMO. 2009. Response of cytoplasmic pH to anoxia in plant tissues with altered activities of fermentation enzymes: application of methyl phosphonate as an NMR pH probe. Annals of Botany 103, 249–258. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  17. Estornell LH, Agusti J, Merelo P, Talón M, Tadeo FR. 2013. Elucidating mechanisms underlying organ abscission. Plant Science 199–200, 48–60. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  18. Felle HH. 2001. pH: signal and messenger in plant cells. Plant Biology 3, 577–591. [Google Scholar]
  19. Felle HH. 2005. pH regulation in anoxic plants. Annals of Botany 96, 519–532. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  20. Felle HH. 2006. Apoplastic pH during low-oxygen stress in barley. Annals of Botany 98, 1085–1093. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  21. Fukuda K, Yamada Y, Miyamoto K, Ueda J, Uheda E. 2013. Separation of abscission zone cells in detached Azolla roots depends on apoplastic pH. Journal of Plant Physiology 170, 18–24. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  22. Gil-Amado JA, Gomez-Jimenez MC. 2013. Transcriptome analysis of mature fruit abscission control in olive. Plant and Cell Physiology 54, 244–269. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  23. González-Carranza ZH, Whitelaw CA, Swarup R, Roberts JA. 2002. Temporal and spatial expression of a polygalacturonase during leaf and flower abscission in Brassica napus and Arabidopsis thaliana . Plant Physiology 128, 534–543. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  24. Grignon C, Sentenac H. 1991. pH and ionic conditions in the apoplast. Annual Review of Plant Physiology Plant Molecular Biology 42, 3–28. [Google Scholar]
  25. Hong SB, Sexton R, Tucker ML. 2000. Analysis of gene promoters for two tomato polygalacturonases expressed in abscission zones and the stigma. Plant Physiology 123, 869–881. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  26. Iwai H, Tarao A, Satoh S. 2013. Changes in distribution of cell wall polysaccharides in floral and fruit abscission zones during fruit development in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum). Journal of Plant Research 126, 427–437. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  27. Kieber JJ, Rothenberg M, Roman G, Feldmann KA, Ecker JR. 1993. CTR1, a negative regulator of the ethylene response pathway in Arabidopsis, encodes a member of the raf family of protein kinases. Cell 72, 427–441. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  28. Kim J, Dotson B, Rey C, Lindsey J, Bleecker AB, Binder BM, Patterson SE. 2013a. New clothes for the jasmonic acid receptor COI1: delayed abscission, meristem arrest and apical dominance. PLoS One 8, e60505. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  29. Kim J, Patterson SE, Binder BM. 2013b. Reducing jasmonic acid levels causes ein2 mutants to become ethylene-responsive. FEBS Letters 587, 226–230. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  30. Lampl N, Alkan N, Davydov O, Fluhr R. 2013. Set-point control of RD21 protease activity by AtSerpin1 controls cell death in Arabidopsis. The Plant Journal 74, 498–510. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  31. Lee YJ, Yang Z. 2008. Tip growth: signaling in the apical dome. Current Opinion in Plant Biology 11, 662–671. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  32. Li BB, Gao ZH, Zhou XY, Ren HB, Xie M, Fan YJ, Hu JF, Jia WS. 2008. A confocal technique applicable to studies of cellular pH-related signaling in plants. Journal of Integrative Plant Biology 50, 682–690. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  33. Liljegren SJ, Leslie ME, Darnielle L, et al. 2009. Regulation of membrane trafficking and organ separation by the NEVERSHED ARF-GAP protein. Development 136, 1909–1918. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  34. Liu B, Butenko MA, Shi C-L, et al. 2013. NEVERSHED and INFLORESCENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION are differentially required for cell expansion and cell separation during floral organ abscission in Arabidopsis thaliana. Journal of Experimental Botany 64, 5345–5357. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  35. Luo J, Qin J, He F, Li H, Liu T, Polle A, Peng C, Luo Z-B. 2013. Net fluxes of ammonium and nitrate in association with H+ fluxes in fine roots of Populus popularis . Planta 237, 919–931. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  36. Meir S, Hunter DA, Chen JC, Halaly V, Reid MS. 2006. Molecular changes occurring during acquisition of abscission competence following auxin depletion in Mirabilis jalapa. Plant Physiology 141, 1604–1616. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  37. Meir S, Philosoph-Hadas S, Sundaresan S, Selvaraj KS, Burd S, Ophir R, Kochanek B, Reid MS, Jiang C-Z, Lers A. 2010. Microarray analysis of the abscission-related transcriptome in tomato flower abscission zone in response to auxin depletion. Plant Physiology 154, 1929–1956. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  38. Miyara I, Shafran H, Davidzon M, Sherman A, Prusky D. 2010. pH regulation of ammonia secretion by colletotrichum gloeosporioides and its effect on appressorium formation and pathogenicity. Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions 23, 304–316. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  39. Mumm P, Wolf T, Fromm J, Roelfsema MRG, Marten I. 2011. Cell type-specific regulation of ion channels within the maize stomatal complex. Plant and Cell Physiology 52, 1365–1375. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  40. Niederhuth CE, Patharkar OR, Walker JC. 2013. Transcriptional profiling of the Arabidopsis abscission mutant hae hsl2 by RNA-Seq. BioMed Central Genomics 14, 37–49. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  41. Ogawa M, Kay P, Wilson S, Swain SM. 2009. ARABIDOPSIS DEHISCENCE ZONE POLYGALACTURONASE1 (ADPG1), ADPG2, and QUARTET2 are polygalacturonases required for cell separation during reproductive development in Arabidopsis. The Plant Cell 21, 216–233. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  42. Orij R, Brul S, Smits GJ. 2011. Intracellular pH is a tightly controlled signal in yeast. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1810, 933–944. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  43. Ortiz-Ramirez C, Mora S, Trejo J, Pantoja O. 2011. PvAMT1;1, a highly selective ammonium transporter that functions as H+/NH4 + symporter. Journal of Biological Chemistry 286, 31113–31122. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  44. Osborne DJ. 1982. The ethylene regulation of cell growth in specific target tissues of plants. In: Wareing PF, ed. Plant growth substances. New York: Academic Press, 279–290. [Google Scholar]
  45. Osborne DJ. 1989. Abscission. Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences 8, 103–129. [Google Scholar]
  46. Paroutis P, Touret N, Grinstein S. 2004. The pH of the secretory pathway: measurement, determinants, and regulation. Physiology (Bethesda, Md.) 19, 207–215. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  47. Patterson SE. 2001. Cutting loose. Abscission and dehiscence in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiology 126, 494–500. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  48. Patterson SE, Bleecker AB. 2004. Ethylene-dependent and -independent processes associated with floral organ abscission in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiology 134, 194–203. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  49. Patterson SE, Lindsey JD, Rey C, Bleecker AB. 2003. The role of ethylene in floral organ abscission in Arabidopsis thaliana . In: Vendrell M, Klee H, Pech JC, Romojaro F, eds. Biology and biotechnology of the plant hormone ethylene III. Amsterdam: IOS Press, 347–349. [Google Scholar]
  50. Pittman JK. 2012. Multiple transport pathways for mediating intracellular pH homeostasis: the contribution of H+/ion exchanger. Frontiers in Plant Science 3, 11. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  51. Pittman JK, Shigaki T, Hirschi KD. 2005. Evidence of differential pH regulation of the Arabidopsis vacuolar Ca2+/H+ antiporters CAX1 and CAX2. FEBS Letters 579, 2648–2656. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  52. Rančić D, Quarrie SP, Radošević R, Terzić M, Pećinar I, Stikić R, Jansen S. 2010. The application of various anatomical techniques for studying the hydraulic network in tomato fruit pedicels. Protoplasma 246, 25–31. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  53. Riov J. 1974. A polygalacturonase from Citrus leaf explants: role in abscission. Plant Physiology 53, 312–316. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  54. Roberts JA, Elliott KA, González-Carranza ZH. 2002. Abscission, dehiscence, and other cell separation processes. Annual Review of Plant Biology 53, 131–158. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  55. Roberts JA, Schindler CB, Tucker GA. 1984. Ethylene-promoted tomato flower abscission and the possible involvement of an inhibitor. Planta 160, 159–163. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  56. Roberts JA, Whitelaw CA, González-Carranza ZH, McManus M. 2000. Cell separation processes in plants: models, mechanisms and manipulation. Annals of Botany 86, 223–235. [Google Scholar]
  57. Roos W, Viehweger K, Dordschbal B, Schumann B, Evers S, Steighardt J, Schwartze W. 2006. Intracellular pH signals in the induction of secondary pathways—the case of Eschscholzia californica . Journal of Plant Physiology 163, 369–381. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  58. Savchenko G, Wiese C, Neimanis S, Hedrich R, Heber U. 2000. pH regulation in apoplastic and cytoplasmic cell compartments of leaves. Planta 211, 246–255. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  59. Sexton R, Roberts JA. 1982. Cell biology of abscission. Annual Review of Plant Physiology 33, 133–162. [Google Scholar]
  60. Smyth DR, Bowman JL, Meyerowitz EL. 1990. Early flower development in Arabidopsis. The Plant Cell 2, 755–767. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  61. Stenvik GE, Butenko MA, Urbanowicz BR, Rose JKC, Aalen RB. 2006. Overexpression of INFLORESCENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION activates cell separation in vestigial abscission zones in Arabidopsis. The Plant Cell 18, 1467–1476. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  62. Stenvik GE, Tandstad NM, Guo Y, Shi CL, Kristiansen W, Holmgren A, Clark SE, Aalen RB, Butenko MA. 2008. The EPIP peptide of INFLORESCENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION is sufficient to induce abscission in Arabidopsis through the receptor-like kinases HAESA and HAESA-LIKE2. The Plant Cell 20, 1805–1817. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  63. Swanson SJ, Choi WG, Chanoca A, Gilroy S. 2011. In vivo imaging of Ca2+, pH, and reactive oxygen species using fluorescent probes in plants. Annual Review of Plant Biology 62, 273–297. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  64. Taylor JE, Whitelaw CA. 2001. Signals in abscission. New Phytologist 151, 323–339. [Google Scholar]
  65. Wang X, Liu D, Li A, Sun X, Zhang R, Wu L., Liang Y, Mao L. 2013. Transcriptome analysis of tomato flower pedicel tissues reveals abscission zone-specific modulation of key meristem activity genes. PLoS One 8, e55238. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  66. Woeste KE, Ye C, Kieber JJ. 1999. Two Arabidopsis mutants that overproduce ethylene are affected in the posttranscriptional regulation of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid synthase. Plant Physiology 119, 521–529. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  67. Zhu H, Dardick CD, Beers EP, Callanhan AM, Xia R, Yuan R. 2011. Transcriptomics of shading-induced and NAA-induced abscission in apple (Malus domestica) reveals a shared pathway involving reduced photosynthesis, alterations in carbohydrate transport and signaling and hormone crosstalk. BioMed Central Plant Biology 11, 138. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

Supplementary Data

Articles from Journal of Experimental Botany are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

RESOURCES