Arabidopsis seedlings mutated in the phenylalanine biosynthetic enzyme ADT3 cannot buffer reactive oxygen species, produce a defective cuticle, and display impaired cotyledon development.
Abstract
During the transition from seed to seedling, emerging embryos strategically balance available resources between building up defenses against environmental threats and initiating the developmental program that promotes the switch to autotrophy. We present evidence of a critical role for the phenylalanine (Phe) biosynthetic activity of AROGENATE DEHYDRATASE3 (ADT3) in coordinating reactive oxygen species (ROS) homeostasis and cotyledon development in etiolated Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seedlings. We show that ADT3 is expressed in the cotyledon and shoot apical meristem, mainly in the cytosol, and that the epidermis of adt3 cotyledons contains higher levels of ROS. Genome-wide proteomics of the adt3 mutant revealed a general down-regulation of plastidic proteins and ROS-scavenging enzymes, corroborating the hypothesis that the ADT3 supply of Phe is required to control ROS concentration and distribution to protect cellular components. In addition, loss of ADT3 disrupts cotyledon epidermal patterning by affecting the number and expansion of pavement cells and stomata cell fate specification; we also observed severe alterations in mesophyll cells, which lack oil bodies and normal plastids. Interestingly, up-regulation of the pathway leading to cuticle production is accompanied by an abnormal cuticle structure and/or deposition in the adt3 mutant. Such impairment results in an increase in cell permeability and provides a link to understand the cell defects in the adt3 cotyledon epidermis. We suggest an additional role of Phe in supplying nutrients to the young seedling.
During the transition from seed to seedling, the coordination of defense and development is critical for early survival (Finch-Savage and Leubner-Metzger, 2006; Holdsworth et al., 2008). After emerging from the seed coat, the embryo pushes through the soil to reach the surface; at this time, it is more vulnerable to biotic and abiotic stresses (Raven et al., 2005), and underlying actors of this transition are relatively unstudied (Warpeha and Montgomery, 2016). Phe-derived compounds, the phenylpropanoids, play an important role in the first line of defense by contributing to the reinforcement of the external cuticle layer and by conferring UV light protection properties to epicuticular waxes (Steyn et al., 2002; Pollard et al., 2008); in addition, phenylpropanoids influence wax production in response to UV light exposure (Rozema et al., 2002; Pollard et al., 2008; Warpeha et al., 2008). The activity of the phenylpropanoid pathway provides an additional line of defense, as phenolic compounds take part in a nonenzymatic mechanism to efficiently scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS), whose levels increase as a result of metabolic reactions and when plants initiate a stress response (Sharma et al., 2012; Agati et al., 2013). Moreover, by influencing the cell’s ability to balance and modulate ROS production and scavenging, phenylpropanoids allow fluctuations in ROS levels that are required to elicit stress signaling pathways for specific defense strategies (Apel and Hirt, 2004; Mittler et al., 2011).
AROGENATE DEHYDRATASE3 (ADT3)/PREPHENATE DEHYDRATASE1 belongs to the arogenate dehydratase protein family, whose members catalyze the last steps of the biosynthesis of Phe (Warpeha et al., 2006; Cho et al., 2007; Tzin and Galili, 2010; Bross et al., 2011). Activation of ADT3 leads to an increase in Phe content and in the production of phenylpropanoids (Warpeha et al., 2006). Accordingly, loss of ADT3 results in an enhanced sensitivity to UV irradiation in etiolated seedlings due to the reduced synthesis of photoprotective compounds and UV light-scattering epicuticular waxes (Warpeha et al., 2008). However, the physiological and molecular bases of this phenotype and the function of ADT3 in the seed-to-seedling transition remain to be elucidated.
We sought to understand the role of ADT3 postgermination, in the seed-to-seedling transition. ADT3 is expressed early in seedling growth (Warpeha et al., 2006; Hruz et al., 2008). Localization studies in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) using protoplasts from cell suspension and light-grown rosette leaves have placed this enzyme within the chloroplast (Rippert et al., 2009), while we have reported ADT3 activity in the cytosolic fraction in young etiolated seedlings (Warpeha et al., 2006). These reports differ likely due to the different age and growth conditions of the studied plant material. Cytosolic forms of chorismate mutase, which act at the first committed step in the Phe and Tyr biosynthesis pathway, were found in Arabidopsis and other plants (d’Amato et al., 1984; Benesova and Bode, 1992; Eberhard et al., 1996), suggesting the possibility of extraplastidic Phe biosynthesis.
Here, we report in transgenic complementation experiments that ADT3 is expressed widely in the young shoot and largely accumulates in the cytosol. Based on the role of phenylpropanoids in plant defense, we hypothesize that the ADT3 regulation of Phe supply is required to coordinate defense and development at the seed-to-seedling transition. We found that, without ADT3, the cells of the epidermis cannot buffer and restrict ROS; moreover, adt3 cotyledons enter an aberrant developmental program that results in abnormal morphology and patterning as well as several alterations at the subcellular level. Proteomic analysis of adt3 seedlings provided insights into the molecular basis of adt3 phenotypes, as it uncovered a chronic inability to buffer an excess of ROS and maintain plastid integrity. It also revealed a failed attempt to control cell rheology through up-regulation of the biochemical pathway for cuticle biosynthesis and assembly, as indicated by the increase in the permeability of adt3 epidermal cells; we propose that this also could be the cause of the defecting epidermal patterning in adt3 cotyledons. In addition, we suggest an additional role of Phe in nutrient supply in etiolated seedlings.
RESULTS
ADT3 Is Expressed in Cotyledons of Young Etiolated Seedlings, Where Its Loss Causes an Imbalance in ROS Homeostasis
To investigate the impact of the loss of ADT3, we generated transgenic plants where native ADT3 fused to cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) was driven by its native promoter (ADT3::ADT3-CFP) in the adt3-1 mutant background to examine the ADT3 spatial expression pattern in 4-d-old dark-grown seedlings (Fig. 1). ADT3 is expressed in the shoot in developing mesophyll and in shoot apical meristem (SAM [leaf primordia and dome]; Fig. 1A) and epidermal cells, especially pavement cells (Fig. 1B). In particular, ADT3 appeared to accumulate mainly in the cytosol (Fig. 1, insets). An additional transgenic line harboring the ADT3::ADT3-GFP fusion in the adt3-1 mutant background recapitulated the ADT3::ADT3-CFP expression pattern and showed complementation of all adt3 defects reported herein (Supplemental Fig. S1; see below) and elsewhere (Warpeha et al., 2008). A similar expression pattern of ADT3::ADT3-GFP was observed in the wild-type background, where a more intense GFP signal was observed compared with the mutant background. ADT3 expression also was observed in the developing guard cells (Supplemental Fig. S2).
The adt3 mutation has been shown previously to make etiolated seedlings vulnerable to UV irradiation, and the defect was proposed to be due to a decrease in the production of phenylpropanoids upon exposure to both blue light and UV light (Warpeha et al., 2006, 2008). To elucidate the physiological basis of UV light sensitivity in relation to phenylpropanoids, we examined the accumulation of ROS in the epidermis of adt3-1 cotyledons before and after UV light treatment, as these compounds are produced in response to short-wavelength light (Wituszyńska and Karpiński, 2013; Consentino et al., 2015). Six-day-old dark-grown wild-type and adt3-1 seedlings were irradiated with a sublethal dose of UV-C radiation, and the CellRox Deep Red cell-permeable fluorescent probe was used to detect ROS (Fig. 2). This probe only fluoresces when in contact with ROS, and the signal can be captured when excited by the Cy5 light-emitting diode (LED; false-colored pink).
Interestingly, probe fluorescence in the epidermis was detected in dark-grown unirradiated adt3-1 compared with unirradiated wild-type (control) seedlings, indicating that basal ROS levels are elevated in adt3-1 (Fig. 2). Irradiation with a sublethal UV-C light dose caused an increase in CellRox basal signal from both wild-type and adt3-1 pavement cells (Fig. 2, bar graph). An additional ADT3 mutant (adt3-6) tested responded similarly to adt3-1 (Supplemental Fig. S3). Since ADT3 catalyzes the last step of the biosynthesis of Phe (Maeda and Dudareva, 2012), we assessed the requirement of Phe in counteracting ROS by transferring living, whole 6-d-old wild-type, adt3-1, and adt3-6 seedlings to Phe-supplemented medium for 3 h before subjecting them to a sublethal dose of UV-C radiation, immediately followed by incubation with CellRox, where preincubation with Phe restored the seedling to control (wild-type unirradiated) levels of ROS in both adt3 alleles (Fig. 2; Supplemental Fig. S3). Another probe for ROS detection, Singlet Oxygen Sensor Green (SOSG), indicated similar results for adt3-1 compared with the wild type, confirming that ROS production is elevated significantly as a consequence of the loss of ADT3 (Supplemental Fig. S4), whereas adt3-6 ROS production was not elevated significantly.
To test whether Phe metabolism is required to scavenge ROS, we UV-C irradiated 6-d-old, dark-grown seedlings of the fah1-7/tt4-1 double mutant (Li et al., 1993; Landry et al., 1995; Peer et al., 2001), which cannot metabolize Phe to produce flavonoids. Indeed, we observed that pretreatment with Phe was able to prevent UV light-induced ROS production in the fah1-7/tt4-1 background (Supplemental Fig. S3). Accordingly, pretreatment with Phe had the same effect as potassium iodide, a known ROS scavenger (Tsukagoshi et al., 2010), which also was able to prevent a ROS increase upon UV-C irradiation (Supplemental Fig. S5). Likewise, treatment with a nonmetabolizable Phe analog, p-f-dl-Phe (Conway et al., 1963), caused a significant decrease in Cy5 fluorescence in UV-C-irradiated pavement cells (but not in guard cells) in the adt3-1 epidermis (Supplemental Fig. S5). Taken together, these results indicate that ROS homeostasis is altered in dark-grown adt3 seedlings. In addition, we observed that Phe per se could prevent significant ROS accumulation as a result of UV-C irradiation.
Loss of ADT3 Disturbs Epidermis Development in the Cotyledons of Dark-Grown Seedlings
To further investigate the consequences of the loss of ADT3, we examined the cellular makeup of the cotyledon’s epidermis. DAPI illumination of the epidermis of live 6-d-old dark-grown wild-type and adt3-1 seedlings enabled a clear distinction of cell lineages (pavement cells largely reflect, and guard cells largely absorb, DAPI) and revealed that adt3-1 mutants produced fewer but larger pavement cells than the wild type (Fig. 3A); however, adt3-1 cotyledons are wider than wild-type cotyledons (Fig. 3). In addition, a reduced number of guard cells was observed for the adt3 mutant cotyledons (Fig. 3). Addition of Phe to the growth medium from sowing rescued both the pavement cell and guard cell phenotypes in adt3-1 mutants (Fig. 3). adt3-6 seedlings also presented similar phenotypes, which could be rescued by Phe (Supplemental Fig. S6A). The defects persisted when exogenous l-Tyr or l-Trp (which derive from the shikimate pathway like Phe) was supplied instead of Phe (Supplemental Fig. S7).
To address whether the guard cell defect was due to failure to specify the stomatal lineage, we supplied Phe to the mutants speechless and mute, which disrupt early and late steps of the stomata lineage progression, respectively (MacAlister et al., 2007; Pillitteri et al., 2007). Phe did not prevent the guard cell defects in these mutants, indicating that Phe is required upstream of these guard cell specification factors (Supplemental Fig. S7).
In summary, we observed ADT3 expression in the cytoplasm of epidermal cells of the cotyledons and of the SAM. Loss of ADT3 severely affects the number and morphogenesis of pavement cells and disrupts guard cell development. The defects were rescued by supplementing Phe but not other amino acids, indicating that the metabolism of ADT3-supplied Phe impacts cotyledon patterning in etiolated seedlings.
adt3 Cotyledons Exhibit Abnormal Subcellular Features
We also examined the ultrastructure of the epidermis and mesophyll cells in cotyledons of 6-d-old, dark-grown adt3-1 seedlings by transmission electron microscopy (TEM; Fig. 4A). A prominent feature we observed was the reduction in the number of globular oil bodies in adt3-1 mesophyll cells compared with the wild type (Fig. 4A, insets c and f). In addition, adt3-1 cells were hypervacuolated (especially the epidermis), while most wild-type cells contained a large central vacuole (Fig. 4A). Developing plastids were identified in the wild type, as they stain densely and contain prolamellar bodies with stromal strands extending from the thylakoid membrane (Fig. 4A, inset b), whereas the adt3-1 plastids displayed atypical prolamellar bodies and loose stromal thylakoids (Fig. 4A, inset e). The cytoplasm of adt3-1 epidermal cells had a blackened appearance, indicating a possible accumulation of osmiophilic material, and exhibited numerous round organelles, which are likely to be mitochondria, as suggested by the ribbed structure (Fig. 4A, insets a and c).
The distribution of oil bodies in the wild type and adt3-1 was further investigated using the lipophilic stain Nile Red (Greenspan et al., 1985). Optical sections of adt3 cotyledons showed a paucity of scattered oil bodies (Fig. 4B), while in the wild type, these organelles were more abundant, particularly at the tip (Fig. 4B). Addition of Phe to the germination medium increased oil body production in adt3-1 (Fig. 4B), rescuing the deficiency. This phenotype also was observed for the adt3-6 allele (Supplemental Fig. S6). Thus, ADT3 activity is required to preserve the subcellular structure of the cells of the cotyledons in etiolated seedlings.
The adt3 Proteome Reveals the Molecular Basis of the adt3 Mutant Phenotypes
In order to uncover the molecular phenotype underlying the adt3 phenotypes, we obtained a comparative protein expression profile of the aerial portions (upper hypocotyl and cotyledon) of adt3-1 and wild-type seedlings. We used the bioinformatics platform Virtual Plant for Gene Ontology (GO) term analyses (Katari et al., 2010) and the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) database for metabolic pathways (http://www.genome.jp/kegg/).
The proteomic analysis revealed that adt3-1 mutation caused alteration of the expression of 1,333 proteins, 608 of which were down-regulated and 725 of which were up-regulated (Supplemental Table S1). The maximum fold change was 1.69 for up-regulation and 0.646 for down-regulation, a dynamic range of expression in accordance with other proteomics studies (Supplemental Table S1; Alvarez et al., 2011, 2014). Given the high number of statistically significantly misregulated proteins in the adt3-1 proteome, we investigated whether small changes in expression could be biologically significant by asking whether they occur in a specific tissue or at multiple steps within the same process, as conceptualized by metabolic control analysis (Kacser and Burns, 1995; Fell and Cornish-Bowden, 1997). First, we queried the Plant Ontology (PO) database in Virtual Plant to assess the enrichment of proteins of different cell and organ types. For both adt3-1 up-regulated and down-regulated proteins, the most significant PO enrichment was observed for guard cell, shoot epidermal cell, and epidermal cell (Table I), indicating that the changes in protein expression were relevant to the cell types of the cotyledons where we observed ADT3 expression (Fig. 1A). Next, plant-specific overrepresented terms for cellular compartment, molecular function, and biological process were assessed by GO term analysis using a P value of 0.01 as the cutoff. The results of this analysis are summarized in Tables I and II and Supplemental Tables S2 to S11.
Table I. GO term and PO term analysis of up-regulated and down-regulated proteins in the adt3 proteome.
Term |
P |
---|---|
Up-regulated proteins in the adt3 mutant | |
PO term | |
Guard cell | 1.28 × 10−78 |
Shoot epidermal cell | 2.08 × 10−77 |
Epidermal cell | 1.33 × 10−76 |
Transport | 1.17 × 10−16 |
Carboxylic acid/oxoacid metabolic process | 6.54 × 10−10 |
Fatty acid metabolic process | 3.42 × 10−06 |
GO term | |
Plasma membrane | 5.70 × 10−109 |
Transport | 5.92 × 10−27 |
Vacuole | 2.05 × 10−34 |
Transport | 2.03 × 10−15 |
Cell wall | 7.98 × 10−32 |
Cell wall organization or biogenesis | 3.76 × 10−06 |
Xylan catabolic process | 1.18 × 10−3 |
Glucan metabolic process | 4.37 × 10−3 |
Hydrolase activity | 5.39 × 10−14 |
Growth | 2.78 × 10−11 |
Primary metabolic process | 1.94 × 10−14 |
Down-regulated proteins in the adt3 mutant | |
PO term | |
Shoot epidermal cell | 1.19 × 10−86 |
Guard cell | 4.38 × 10−86 |
Epidermal cell | 3.35 × 10−84 |
Oxidoreductase activity | 1.92 × 10−14 |
GO term | |
Plastid | 5.61 × 10−128 |
Plastid stroma | 6.38 × 10−127 |
Envelope | 2.77 × 10−50 |
Thylakoid | 6.28 × 10−46 |
Stromule | 1.18 × 10−19 |
Plastoglobule | 3.15 × 10−10 |
Nitrogen compound metabolic process | 1.8 × 10−17 |
Primary metabolic process | 7.25 × 10−25 |
Table II. KEGG pathway analysis for up- and down-regulated proteins in the adt3 mutant.
Term | No. of Genes |
||
---|---|---|---|
Totala | Down-Regulated | Up-Regulated | |
Carbohydrate metabolism | |||
Glycolysis/gluconeogenesis | 29 | 19 | 10 |
Pyruvate metabolism | 27 | 14 | 13 |
Starch and Suc metabolism | 27 | 6 | 21 |
Glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism | 26 | 23 | 3 |
Amino sugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism | 19 | 4 | 15 |
Ascorbate and aldarate metabolism | 15 | 7 | 8 |
Pentose and glucuronate interconversions | 15 | 2 | 13 |
Citrate cycle (tricarboxylic acid) | 14 | 9 | 5 |
Pentose phosphate pathway | 11 | 10 | 1 |
Fru and Man metabolism | 11 | 7 | 4 |
Inositol phosphate metabolism | 7 | 2 | 5 |
Gal metabolism | 6 | 1 | 5 |
Energy metabolism | |||
Carbon fixation in photosynthetic organisms | 32 | 27 | 5 |
Oxidative phosphorylation (ATP synthase) | 17 | 6 | 11 |
Photosynthesis | 11 | 10 | 1 |
Nitrogen metabolism | 9 | 8 | 1 |
Sulfur metabolism | 6 | 6 | 0 |
Number of input genes assigned by the KEGG database.
GO term analysis of up-regulated proteins in the adt3-1 proteome revealed enrichment for plasma membrane and vacuole factors involved in transport as well as in cell wall organization or biogenesis through the metabolism of the polysaccharides xylan and glucan (Table I). Accordingly, the most represented molecular function for the cell wall category is hydrolase activity, since in these polymers the monosaccharide residues are joined by glycosidic linkages. The involvement of the cell wall in adt3 cell morphology is also underscored by the GO term growth, which showed one of the most significant enrichments for the up-regulated proteins in the adt3-1 proteome (Table I). The proteins belonging to this category are involved in cell expansion, like expansins (EXP3, EXP9, EXP11, and EXPL1) and DIM1 (Takahashi et al., 1995). Interestingly, a protein that showed the highest increase in the adt3-1 mutant is AT14A, which was shown to function like integrin in animals to regulate cell shape and cell-to-cell adhesion (Lü et al., 2012; Supplemental Table S1).
For adt3-1 up-regulated proteins assigned to epidermal cells according to the PO database, we noticed an enrichment in proteins involved in carboxylic acid/oxoacid metabolic process (Table I), encompassing enzymes for fatty acid conjugation (LACS4, LACS8, GPAT8, and GPAT4) and the synthesis and elongation of very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs; ACC1/PAS3, CER2, CER6, CER10, ATT1 [CYP86A2], and FDH [KCS10]). We also found up-regulation of the 3-ketoacyl-CoA synthases (KCS) KCS8, KCS9, KCS16, KCS19, and CY86A4 as well as transporters of wax molecules and cuticle building blocks (ABCG11/DSO/CER5 and LTPG1). All of these functions were associated previously with cuticle formation (Kunst and Samuels, 2009; Nawrath et al., 2013, and refs. therein).
When considering down-regulated proteins, one of the most significant GO terms for cellular components is plastid, and the affected proteins are associated with the stroma, envelope, and thylakoid membrane (Table I). This is in agreement with the observation that the integrity of the plastids is compromised by the loss of ADT3 (Fig. 4A). Interestingly, we observed an overrepresentation of proteins associated with the stromule, an elusive plastidic structure that has been implicated previously in GPA1 signaling (Huang et al., 2006; Hanson and Sattarzadeh, 2011; Table I).
One of the top GO terms that describes the overrepresented molecular functions for the group of down-regulated proteins in the epidermis of the adt3-1 mutant is oxidoreductase activity (Table I), which includes proteins of both the enzymatic and nonenzymatic scavenging system that controls ROS homeostasis, like superoxide dismutases (MSD1, FSD2, CSD2, and CSD3), catalases (CAT2), enzymes of ascorbate-glutathione (AsA-GSH) cycle ascorbate peroxidase (SAPX, APX1, and APX3), monodehydroascorbate reductase (MDAR4), dehydroascorbate reductase (DHAR2), and glutathione reductase (ATGR2; Sharma et al., 2012). GDP-Man 3′,5′-epimerase, an important enzyme in the ascorbate biosynthetic pathway, also is down-regulated (Wheeler et al., 1998). In addition, of the 93 down-regulated proteins that were assigned to gene families, seven are members of the glutathione S-transferase family of proteins in adt3-1 (Supplemental Table S1).
In addition to the GO terms listed above, primary metabolic process is highly significant for both up-regulated and down-regulated proteins in the adt3-1 proteome (Table I). Hence, we investigated the metabolic pathways that were affected by the loss of ADT3 using the KEGG database. We observed the down-regulation of key enzymes of the central carbohydrate and energy metabolism (Table II), including enzymes of the glycolysis/gluconeogenesis pathway, the pentose phosphate pathway, and glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism. However, some of the enzymes involved in oxidative phosphorylation are up-regulated, suggesting an intense mitochondrial activity. Also, the expression of proteins of starch and Suc metabolism, pentose and glucuronate interconversions, as well as amino sugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism is increased in the adt3-1 mutant. The enrichment of enzymes from these pathways provides a link between cell wall metabolism and central plant metabolism (Seifert, 2004; Bar-Peled and O’Neill, 2011).
In summary, the overrepresentation of terms for specific biological functions, localization, or molecular components is consistent with the observed adt3 phenotypes, linking the physiological and morphological alterations to changes in the expression of key proteins or pathways. Moreover, in agreement with functional enrichment analysis, the pathway analysis suggests that alteration of cell morphology and subcellular structure might be linked to metabolic deficiencies as a result of the loss of ADT3 activity.
Cuticle Formation and Cell Permeability Are Altered in adt3 Cells
Many key proteins involved in the production of the cuticle were up-regulated in the adt3-1 mutant (Table I; Supplemental Table S3). Higher magnification of the outermost cell wall revealed irregular deposition of electron-opaque material within the deeper layers (Fig. 5A), indicating that cuticle biosynthesis and/or deposition is somehow defective. To further examine adt3-1 cuticular properties, we tested the permeability of adt3-1 cuticle under hyposmotic conditions using Toluidine Blue (TB) staining (Tanaka et al., 2004). Interestingly, diffuse TB staining was observed in adt3 seedlings after a 48-h incubation in water (Fig. 5B) compared with the wild type in the same conditions, a sign of incomplete or reduced cuticle in the mutant. TB staining of adt3-6 dark-grown seedlings showed similar results (data not shown). Since it was found that mutations in genes of the wax biosynthetic pathway that affect the composition of the epicuticular waxes also perturb stomatal development and increase the number of guard cells (Gray et al., 2000; Guseman et al., 2010), we inspected the epidermis of white light-grown adt3 seedlings and found adjacent stomata that were breaking the one-cell spacing rule (Fig. 5C). Our results indicate that the cuticle of adt3 epidermis does not achieve a proper organization, and this causes a reduction in the isolating properties of the epidermis and is likely to impact the cell patterning of adt3 cotyledons.
Suc Supply Restores Guard Cell Number While Asn and NH4Ac Rescue Pavement Cell Morphology in adt3 Cotyledons
Proteomic analysis revealed that a significant number of proteins from primary metabolic pathways, in particular for carbon metabolism, are down-regulated in adt3-1 seedlings (Tables I and II), so we investigated whether carbon input could alleviate the defects in adt3-1 cotyledons by transferring 4-d-old adt3-1 seedlings to medium containing 1% Suc. When we examined adt3-1 cotyledons 48 h later, we found that the pavement cell phenotype was not rescued by exogenous Suc (Fig. 6A); however, the number of guard cells was similar to that in the wild type (Fig. 6A). The rescue was not due to a change in osmotic potential, as it was not ameliorated by exogenous supply of 1% mannitol (Supplemental Fig. S8).
Since ASPARAGINE SYNTHASE1 (ASN1) is up-regulated in the adt3-1 mutant (Supplemental Table S1), we next attempted to rescue the adt3-1 phenotype by supplying exogenous Asn at sowing. After 6 d of growth on Asn in darkness, we observed that the pavement cell size and number as well as the cotyledon size were completely restored in the mutant (Fig. 6B). The same results were obtained when ammonium acetate (NH4Ac) was added to the medium (Fig. 6C). However, the guard cell lineage defect was not corrected by the application of either exogenous Asn or NH4Ac (Fig. 6, B and C). To test whether the ability of Asn and NH4Ac to rescue the adt3-1 cell morphology phenotype could be linked to restored fatty acid production (Fig. 4B), we incubated Asn- and NH4Ac-supplied adt3-1 seedlings with Nile Red (Fig. 6C); similar to the result we obtained by supplying Phe (Fig. 4B), addition of Asn and NH4Ac also resulted in an increase in Nile Red signal (Fig. 6C), indicating that these compounds could be used by adt3 to feed metabolic pathways that lead to fatty acid production. These observations suggest that a nutrient imbalance could be part of the defects in cell morphology and epidermal patterning of adt3 cotyledons (Fig. 3).
DISCUSSION
ADT3 Accumulates in the Cytosol and Is Required to Maintain ROS Homeostasis
We reported previously that an arogenate dehydratase activity could be detected in the cytosol of dark-grown young seedlings upon blue light irradiation. In this study, we used transgenic lines expressing CFP-tagged ADT3 to further investigate in vivo ADT3 localization in 4-d-old dark-grown seedlings. Here, ADT3 expression was detected in the shoot, including cotyledons and the SAM (Fig. 1; Supplemental Fig. S2). We also examined the subcellular localization of ADT3 and confirmed that the enzyme accumulates mainly in the cytosol at this stage of seedling development (Fig. 1). This observation adds to the growing body of evidence supporting the existence of extraplastidial pathways for Phe biosynthesis (Yoo et al., 2013). Phe production in the cytosol has important implications, since cytosolic Phe could be channeled directly into secondary metabolism, as the enzymes of the pathways that utilize Phe as a precursor are found outside the plastids. In particular, cytosolic synthesis of Phe would ensure the timely production of antioxidants and photoprotective molecules, which are required to contain the damage caused by high-frequency radiation when etiolated seedlings are exposed to solar light. Accordingly, we reported previously an overall reduction in UV light- and blue light-absorbing compounds in the cotyledon when Phe supply is compromised by the loss of ADT3 (Warpeha et al., 2006). In addition to providing protection from photodamage, we show here that Phe metabolism could counteract the increase in ROS concentration as part of the stress response to high-frequency radiation (Fig. 2; A-H-Mackerness et al., 2001; Kalbina and Strid, 2006; Consentino et al., 2015).
However, ROS levels were elevated significantly in unirradiated adt3 cotyledon cells compared with wild-type cells (Fig. 2; Supplemental Figs. S3–S5), indicating that ADT3 activity is required to maintain a low basal level of ROS in etiolated seedlings. Because of the high number of mitochondria in the adt3 mutant cells and the decrease in oil bodies (Fig. 4), we suggest that ROS overproduction could be due to a combination of normal reoxygenation of the germinating tissues when the embryo emerges from the seed coat (Sattler et al., 2004) and the intense metabolic activity that is likely required for the catabolism of the oil bodies.
Increased sensitivity to light and oxidative stress has been reported previously for a mutant of the ROS-scavenging enzyme ASCORBATE PEROXIDASE1 (APX1) gene, which exhibited a low cytosolic content of the antioxidant ascorbic acid (Davletova et al., 2005; Miller et al., 2007). Similar to apx1, the adt3 mutant phenotype could be a consequence of high steady-state cytosolic ROS levels. In Arabidopsis, it has been shown that cytosolic scavenging enzymes are induced upon light stress (Karpinski et al., 1997, 1999; Pnueli et al., 2003; Davletova et al., 2005), even though ROS are thought to be generated in chloroplasts and/or peroxisomes (Mittler, 2002). In addition, buffering ROS in the cytosol was shown to be essential to protect the chloroplast from oxidative damage (Davletova et al., 2005). Indeed, these chemical species can damage the membranes of organelles (Gill and Tuteja, 2010), in particular, plastids (Asada, 2000). Since we observed localization of ADT3 in the cytosol of the cells in etiolated seedlings (Fig. 1), we concluded that cytosolic Phe-derived antioxidants, and even cytosolic Phe per se, may be required to protect the integrity of the plastids from the cytosolic side, a notion that is supported by the abnormal structure of these organelles in adt3 plastids (Fig. 4), and to preserve their functionality, as indicated by the down-regulation of essential processes that take place in these organelles, such as nitrogen metabolism and the response to oxidative stress (Table I). Indeed, when we irradiated dark-grown wild-type seedlings with high-energy UV-B light (300 nm), we noticed that the structure of the plastids was visibly affected by the treatment and that inclusion of Phe to the growth medium at sowing restored the characteristic prolamellar body organization that was observed before irradiation (Supplemental Fig. S9). The effect was even more dramatic in the adt3-1 mutant, where plastids were hardly discernible upon UV-B irradiation but were resistant to the treatment in the presence of Phe (Supplemental Fig. S9). This is consistent with the ability of phenylpropanoids such as flavonols to bind to nonbilayer lipids such as monogalactosyl diacylglycerol (Erlejman et al., 2004). Part of the acute sensitivity of adt3 seedlings to UV-C irradiation doses that are tolerated by the wild type (Warpeha et al., 2008) also could be explained by the observation that other enzymes involved in ROS removal are down-regulated in adt3 (Table I; Supplemental Table S1). This could lead to a chronic imbalance between the production of ROS upon high-energy UV light treatment and the ROS-buffering capacity of adt3 seedlings. Failure to activate additional ROS-scavenging pathways as part of the physiological response to increases in ROS concentration (Sharma et al., 2012) suggests that, without the contribution of ADT3 function, ROS would accumulate above the threshold toxic levels in young etiolated seedlings, resulting in irreversible cellular damage (Sharma et al., 2012).
Thus, Phe biosynthesis through ADT3 activity is required to protect the cotyledons of etiolated seedlings from the deleterious effects of ROS by maintaining a low concentration of these toxic compounds at steady state and by buffering ROS increase as a consequence of photostress. Control of ROS homeostasis is still poorly understood, and advancing the knowledge of Phe and related metabolism will help elucidate the cellular signaling and metabolic processes involved in this important mechanism (Geigenberger and Fernie, 2014).
A Role for ADT3-Supplied Phe in Morphogenesis and Cell Proliferation through Cuticle Assembly
ADT3 was shown previously to participate in the production of epicuticular waxes (Warpeha et al., 2008). In this study, we have shown that the adt3 epidermis bears signs of alterations in the deposition process (Fig. 5A). This is likely to cause a severe alteration in the rheological properties of adt3 epidermal cells, particularly when the permeability of adt3 seedlings is challenged (Fig. 5B). Increased levels of known factors involved in cuticle production and transport indicate that the molecular machineries that act in this process are in place in the adt3 epidermis (Table I), so the defect might be due to a shortage of substrates (like VLCFAs) or impairment in cuticle assembly. Both hypotheses are plausible, as the VLCFAs are produced by plastids (Yeats and Rose, 2013), whose structure and function appear to be altered in adt3 (Fig. 4; Table I), or could derive from the degradation of triacylglycerols stored in oil bodies, which are nearly absent in adt3 mutants (Fig. 4; Supplemental Fig. S6). The presence of osmiophilic compounds in the cytoplasm of adt3 epidermis suggests that a high amount of lipid substrates is available for the formation of cuticle monomers (Fig. 4B), but the observation that the deposition of electron-opaque material occurs within the deeper layers of the cell wall is a sign that the process is disrupted (Fig. 5A). A similar phenotype was seen previously in the bodyguard (bdg) mutant, a putative α/β-hydrolase, which is thought to function in cutin biosynthesis or as a cross-linking enzyme (Kurdyukov et al., 2006). Similarly, Phe-derived phenolic components of cutin and cuticular waxes (Nawrath et al., 2013) could participate in cuticle assembly as a cross-linker by reacting with cutin monomers (Pollard et al., 2008). The involvement of phenylpropanoids in cuticle formation has been reported previously for transparent testa mutants like ttg1, which are regulators of the phenylpropanoid biosynthetic pathway (Koornneef, 1990; Xia et al., 2010), strengthening the hypothesis that decreased Phe availability is linked to the adt3 defect in cuticle formation. TTG1 also is involved in epidermal development, as it participates in trichome and stomata patterning (Bean et al., 2002). Interestingly, mutations in other genes involved in cuticle formation and up-regulated in the adt3 mutant, like FIDDLEHEAD, also affect the number of trichomes (Yephremov et al., 1999; Wellesen et al., 2001), while different genes involved in the same process, like CER1 and CER6, affect stomatal number (Bird and Gray, 2003).
Thus, Phe-derived compounds (and, hence, ADT3 function) could play a role in cell differentiation by modulating cuticle assembly. Indeed, phenylpropanoids appear to be more abundant in the cuticle of the guard cells, where the natural blue fluorescence that they emit under UV light is higher than in the pavement cells because of either the thickness or the richness of wax-bound phenolics in the epicuticular waxes of the guard cells (Karabourniotis et al., 2001). Cuticle composition influences diffusion rates (Kerstiens, 1996; Schreiber and Riederer, 1996), so tightening of the cuticular structure could confine the effect of developmental cues within the stomatal cell lineage (Guseman et al., 2010; Engineer et al., 2014), while a loose cuticle could facilitate exchanges of signaling molecules to prevent pavement cells from acquiring stomatal identity at later stages of stomatal development. Change of permeability due to a decrease in cell wall resistance could then cause the arrest of stomatal development at the meristemoid stages in adt3, with a consequent reduction in the number of stomata, or even at an earlier stage, when the initial precursor stomatal lineage, the mother cells, first differentiate from the protoderm. This would explain not only the reduced number of stomata in adt3 cotyledons but also the decreased number of pavement cells, as the mother cell divides asymmetrically to generate one pavement cell and one meristemoid (Pillitteri and Torii, 2012). The defective cuticle also could contribute to the enlargement observed for adt3 pavement cells, as they are incapable of maintaining a correct water balance (Fig. 4B). Interestingly, enlarged pavement cells also are observed in the stomata development mutants speechless and mute (Tanaka et al., 2013), suggesting that communication signals from the stomata cell lineage can influence the morphology of proximal pavement cells. Hence, our work provides evidence that ADT3 function is required during early stages of seedling establishment to regulate the development of the epidermal layer by controlling the size of pavement cells and stomatal cell fate acquisition though the modulation of cuticle formation. Further analysis is required to establish the chemical composition of the cuticle at this stage of cotyledon development.
Phe Role in Nutrient Availability
Our finding that loss of ADT3 compromises ROS homeostasis and alters cuticle formation indicates that ADT3 function is required to coordinate defense and development in the seed-to-seedling transition. Moreover, we speculate that Phe synthesis by ADT3 could be implicated in energy production during early stages of plant growth. We have shown that supply of Phe restores lipid synthesis in oil body-depleted adt3 cotyledons (Fig. 3B; Supplemental Fig. S6). As fatty acid biosynthesis takes place in chloroplasts (Yeats and Rose, 2013), which are severely affected by the loss of ADT3, Phe treatment of adt3 seedlings could support this process by shielding the developing plastid membranes from the damage caused by increased ROS levels at steady state, therefore preserving their functionality. Alternatively, de novo synthesis of fatty acids could be carried out using Phe as a substrate of the tricarboxylic acid cycle through Tyr conversion; however, resupplying the adt3 mutant with Tyr did not rescue adt3 phenotypes (Supplemental Fig. S7). Although we cannot exclude that this may be due to the inability of adt3 to take up or metabolize Tyr in the form we supplied, it is tempting to speculate that Phe could be metabolized by a pathway that does not encompass the Tyr conversion step (Wang et al., 2013).
We also could rescue fatty acid biosynthesis by supplying the adt3-1 mutant with Asn and NH4Ac (Fig. 5), which also led to the restoration of the pavement cell phenotype (Fig. 5). Curiously, the pavement cell defect could not be ameliorated by the addition of Suc, which was instead successful in rescuing the guard cell phenotype in adt3 cotyledons. Asn is known to be an important nitrogen carrier for transport and storage, and an increase in Asn through up-regulation of ASN1 in dark-grown seedling was shown to be part of a metabolic strategy for the remobilization of metabolites in low-energy states (Lam et al., 1998, 2003). This seems to be the case for XANTHINE DEHYDROGENASE1, whose activity provides a source of nitrogen through purine catabolism (Brychkova et al., 2008). As both proteins are significantly up-regulated in the adt3 proteome (Supplemental Table S1), we put forward that Phe metabolism may provide an alternative source of nitrogen in etiolated seedlings. Indeed, deamination by Phe ammonia lyase is the first step of Phe metabolism, and the ammonia is thought to be recycled back into Phe biosynthesis (Singh et al., 1998; Corea et al., 2012); however, under nitrogen shortage, Glu from Phe metabolism could be used as an alternative nitrogen source (Lee et al., 2007) or as a nitrogen donor for other pathways, as observed for other organisms (Marusich et al., 1981; Sikora and Marzluf, 1982; Vuralhan et al., 2003). The nitrogen requirement in adt3 seedlings could be needed to restore an imbalance in carbon-nitrogen ratio that is caused by an increase in carbon availability as a result of cell wall metabolism, as suggested by the up-regulation of SUGAR TRANSPORTER PROTEIN1 and the enrichment in enzymes involved in cell wall remodeling (Table I; Supplemental Table S1; Stadler et al., 2003; Baena-González et al., 2007; Schofield et al., 2009).
ADT3 in Signaling and Development
In Arabidopsis, α, β-, and γ-subunits of G-proteins and their effectors are part of complex signal transduction pathways that regulate defense mechanisms and developmental processes (Huang et al., 2006; Pandey et al., 2006; Lee et al., 2013; Urano et al., 2013; Urano and Jones, 2014). G-protein signaling is thought to participate in the developmental program underlying the seed-to-seedling transition by influencing the structure of the cotyledons. Mutations in GPA1, the sole Gα-subunit found to date in Arabidopsis, result in low stomatal density and in an increase in the size of epidermal cells in young seedlings (Ullah et al., 2001; Zhang et al., 2008; Nilson and Assmann, 2010). These observations indicate a defect in cell division and elongation as the possible cause of gpa1 morphological phenotypes, which also could explain the short hypocotyl and open apical hook of gpa1 etiolated seedlings (Lease et al., 2001; Ullah et al., 2002, 2003). Interestingly, the assembly of a G-protein interactome has revealed that GPA1 interacts with proteins that are involved in the modulation of cell wall composition or structure (Klopffleisch et al., 2011), like those we reported misregulated in the adt3 proteome (Table I), providing a possible link between G-proteins and morphogenesis. ADT3 is part of a signaling module that includes GPA1 and GCR1, whose activation by blue light leads to Phe synthesis (Warpeha et al., 2006, 2008). gpa1 and gcr1 mutants are deficient in the production of Phe-derived compounds and share a high degree of phenotypic similarity with adt3, including reduced number of stomata, broader cotyledons, and poorly developed chloroplasts (Ullah et al., 2001; Zhang et al., 2008; Nilson and Assmann, 2010), which can be rescued by supplying exogenous Phe (Fig. 3; Supplemental Fig. S10). Therefore, we conclude that ADT3-derived Phe could function as a liaison between signaling and development at the early stages of seed establishment.
CONCLUSION
In this study, we propose a simple model for ADT3 action and the subsequent Phe produced (Fig. 7, inset epidermis). We show that ADT3 localizes mainly in the cytosol of cotyledon cells at the transition from seed to seedling, therefore placing Phe biosynthesis outside the plastid. The existence of an extraplastidic pathway for Phe biosynthesis was speculated previously in Arabidopsis (d’Amato et al., 1984; Benesova and Bode, 1992; Eberhard et al., 1996), and evidence of a cytosolic route for Phe production was reported recently in petunia (Petunia hybrida; Yoo et al., 2013). Later in development, ADT3 appears to be localized in the chloroplast of green tissues, suggesting that ADT3 localization appears to be age and light dependent; further investigation will be required to unravel the molecular dynamics of ADT3 function.
Our work opens a window into an elusive phase of plant life, when the seedling has emerged from the seed coat but is not yet capable of carrying on photosynthesis. We demonstrated that cytosolic Phe plays a critical role during the transition from heterotrophy to autotrophy by protecting the cells from oxidative damage, providing substrates for defense, and, possibly, fueling energy pathways. In laboratory conditions, this transition is quite fast, since germination is routinely achieved by planting seeds on synthetic medium in light conditions; however, in natural environments, variables such as light limitation due to dense vegetation could extend the transition, as could the agricultural practice of burying seeds deeper than natural dispersal, making the accumulation of cytosolic Phe critical for survival. Recently, a molecular switch that regulates the allocation of resources to growth and defense was described in which the increase in uncharged tRNAPhe accumulation, as a consequence of the imbalance in Phe metabolism that accompanies pathogen challenge, switches off primary growth and development by repressing the expression of chloroplast proteins and switches on the cellular program that leads to systemic acquired resistance (Pajerowska-Mukhtar et al., 2012). Through a similar mechanism, Phe availability could play a critical role in etiolated seedlings by providing a physical, metabolic, and defense support to the emerging embryo.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Chemicals
All chemicals, unless noted otherwise, were obtained from Sigma.
Plant Materials, Seed Stocks, and Accessions
Seeds of wild-type Columbia Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and T-DNA insertion lines for ADT3 (At2g27820) adt3-1 (SALK_029949), and adt3-6 (SALK_071907) were obtained from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center (Alonso et al., 2003). The double mutant (accession no. CS8602) of FAH1-7 (At4g36220; Landry et al., 1995) and TT4-1 (At5g13930; Li et al., 1993) was a gift from Wendy Peer (University of Maryland). The mutant lines are homozygous null for the reported insertions. The mutant speechless (At5g53210) was a gift from Keiko Torii (University of Washington); mute (At3g06120) was a gift from Dominique Bergmann (Stanford University).
Plant Growth Conditions for Experiments
Seeds of Arabidopsis wild type or T-DNA insertion mutants were sown on 0.5× Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium with no added sugars, hormones, vitamins, or other nutrients in complete darkness using a dim green safelight to prevent photomorphogenesis (Mandoli and Briggs, 1982; Orozco-Nunnelly et al., 2014). For some experiments, seeds were sown on top agarose supplemented with chemicals (500 μm NH4Ac, 500 μm l-Phe, 500 μm l-Tyr, and 500 μm l-Trp or l-Asn) and then grown for 6 d. For other experiments, 4-d postsowing on 0.5× MS top agarose, disks bearing about 30 seedlings were moved to filter paper soaked with 0.5× MS medium (control), 1% Suc, or 1% mannitol (final concentration in 0.5× MS medium) and then analyzed after 48 h. For most replicates, n = 30 unless specified otherwise.
Contrast Microscopy: Deconvoluting
Living seedlings were mounted in sterile water to be viewed on a Zeiss Observer.Z1 deconvoluting microscope utilizing the 20× or 63× (oil-immersion) objective with DAPI excitation to view traditional fluorescence or on an optical apotome utilizing XCite 120 LED/Lumen Dynamics DAPI, FITC, and Cy5 LEDs, as managed by Zen pro software. Images were captured on a high-resolution Axio503 mono camera. At least 30 seedlings were viewed per experimental condition for experiments unless described otherwise (20–40 seedlings per experimental condition for analysis). A 150-μm square superimposed on images was analyzed to quantitate cell type numbers, and cell area was quantified using Image J (http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/).
Cellular Stress Assays
Four days after moving to 20°C, dark-grown seedlings were placed on sterile filter paper for 3 h with 0.5× MS medium (control), potassium iodide, Phe, or the analog para-dl-fluoro-Phe (Conway et al., 1963). Seedlings received an empircally determined sublethal (3-min) dose of 254 nm (UV light methods are described in Warpeha et al., 2008). Young cotyledons emit natural fluorescence after absorption of UV (DAPI; Warpeha et al., 2008) or blue/blue-green (FITC; Tattini et al., 2004; Warpeha et al., 2008) irradiation, so these LEDs were used to collect fluorescence information. The specific cell-permeable dye CellRox Deep Red (Life Technologies) emitting in the red/far-red region was used as recommended by the manufacturer to detect ROS dark-grown seedlings (Cy5 channel, false-colored pink; Ghura et al., 2016). In brief, dark-grown seedlings of the wild type or adt3 (each replicate had 30 seedlings) on day 6 were exposed to a sublethal treatment of UV-C light (254 nm), then cut mid hypocotyl to be immediately immersed in 400 μL of 5 μm CellRox in sterile dimethyl sulfoxide in a glass well dish in darkness. Samples were orbitally rotated (50 rpm) for 30 min. At that time, CellRox reagent was removed by a p200 pipet tip to avoid removing cut seedlings, then solution was replaced immediately by sterile 1× phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; pH 7.2) for three 3-min washes under the same rotation. After washing, the PBS was removed and seedlings were rinsed one time in sterile water for 3 min and then mounted in sterile water on glass slides for immediate microscopy. Cotyledons were imaged with 63× (oil-immersion) and, for some experiments, 20× objectives with DAPI, FITC, and Cy5 LEDs in 1-μm optical sections by apotome (microscope described above). At least 20 seedlings were viewed per replicate, and all exposure settings were based on the wild-type untreated cotyledons (that setting was used for all seedling conditions and genotypes). For seedlings exposed to Phe, seedlings were moved on day 6 to 500 μm l-Phe for 3 h and then subjected to the same conditions for CellRox reagent experiments. All growth conditions and seedling manipulations were identical for SOSG (Thermo Fisher); however, the preparations of the reagent were as follows. SOSG is provided as a solid and was dissolved as directed in methanol to 5 mm. The working solution was utilized at 10 μm in 1× PBS (pH 7.2). Identically to CellRox experiments, seedlings were immersed in the reagent immediately postirradiation, then washed in the same way, and mounted in sterile water for microscopy. Microscopy was handled in the same way as for CellRox reagent, except that SOSG responds to singlet oxygen by causing a large fluorescence that can be captured by FITC. The LEDs utilized for these experiments were DAPI, FITC, and Texas Red. As for CellRox, the wild-type unirradiated sample was the replicate used to determine the best exposure, and all other samples used the identical exposure settings. For all fluorescence experiments, epidermal pavement cells were traced in ImageJ, and the fluorescence level (artificial units) was determined and then compared (Ghura et al., 2016). A minimum of six cells per cotyledon of four to six seedlings per replicate were assessed utilizing Prism (see “Statistics”).
Nile Red Staining
Six-day-old dark-grown seedlings were cut into 1 mm Nile Red stain (saturated solution in acetone as directed by the manufacturer [Sigma]; working solution in 1× PBS, pH 7.2, was made immediately before use and maintained in darkness throughout) and incubated for 30 min under rotation, with the same experimental handling and timing as SOSG. Seedlings then were mounted in sterile water as described for SOSG and visualized by optical sectioning (described above) at 20× magnification using FITC (false-colored gold). n = 30 for each replicate.
Cloning
Standard molecular biology techniques and the Gateway system (Invitrogen) were used for all cloning procedures as described (Orozco-Nunnelly et al., 2014). The 819-bp ADT3 promoter fragment was cloned into pDONR P4-P1R (Invitrogen), and the ADT3 open reading frame fragment was cloned into pENTR/D-TOPO (Invitrogen). pGreen (Hellens et al., 2000) was used as the destination vector for the construct ADT3::ADT3-GFP or ADT3::ADT3-CFP. T3 homozygous transformed seedlings were used in experiments.
Visualization of Transgene Expression by Spinning Disk Confocal Microscopy
Transgenic and untransformed 4-d-old dark-grown seedlings were mounted live and immediately viewed on an Andor WD Spinning Disk confocal system using iQ3 software as described (Orozco-Nunnelly et al., 2014). LEDs at 1 nm width included 405 nm (DAPI; blue), 488 nm (GFP; green), 445 nm (CFP; magenta), and 561 nm (red). Images were captured at 30× or 60× as described, with 1-μm optical section thickness. Images were prepared with ImageJ software. n = 20 for each replicate.
TEM
Seedlings were harvested into 0.5× Karnovsky’s fixative for overnight storage at 4°C, and buffer was washed and then fixed in 1% OSO4 for 2 h. After washes in 0.1 m cacodylate buffer, the samples were embedded in 3% SeaPrep agar, dehydrated in a 10% to 100% ethanol series, and infiltrated with Spurr’s resin, which was allowed to polymerize at 70°C for 2 d. Thin sections (between 70 and 80 nm) of at least five seedlings for each sample were cut on a Leica UC7 ultramicrotome, collected on a 200-mesh formvar/carbon-coated copper grid (Ted Pella), and stained with aqueous UA for 2 h and lead citrate for 5 min. The grids were viewed with a JEOL JEM 1400 TEM device, and images were taken at 120 kV.
TB Staining
On day 4, dark-grown seedling islands of top agarose were transplanted to 0.5× MS medium in phytatrays with disk annealed by a 200-μL top agarose drop to the tray. The bottom of the phytatray was covered with sterile water only or 0.5× MS medium, and on day 6, the phytatray was filled with TB solution to cover the seedlings (Tanaka et al., 2004). After 3 min, seedlings were washed and immediately imaged with a bright-field Zeiss V.2 stereo dissecting microscope.
Statistics
Data shown in the figures were entered into Prism version 5.0 (GraphPad Software; graphpad.com), where means and se were calculated for relevant experiments. Unpaired Student’s t test with Welch’s correction was used to assess significance.
Protein Extraction, Digestion, Labeling, and Subfractionation
Protein was extracted from each biological replicate of 6-d-old dark-grown wild-type and adt3 liquid nitrogen-ground samples as described previously (Alvarez et al., 2011). The pellets were then dissolved in 150 µL of 3 m urea and 0.5 m triethylammonium bicarbonate, pH 8.5, and assayed using the CB-X protein assay kit (G-Biosciences). Each sample was reduced in a final concentration of 5 mm Tris-(2-carboxyethyl)-phosphine hydrochloride for 1 h at 37°C and alkylated using 10 mm iodoacetamide for 30 min at 22°C in the dark. Aliquots containing 40 µg of protein were diluted to 1 m urea and digested with trypsin at a 1:20 enzyme:protein ratio for 16 h at 37°C. Samples were desalted using 1-mL Sep-Pak Vac C18 solid-phase extraction columns (Waters) and vacuum centrifuged (Centrivap; Labconco) to dryness. Stable isotope labeling was carried out with TMT-6plex reagents (Thermo Fisher Scientific) according to the manufacturer’s instructions, and the six samples were combined, vacuum centrifuged, and desalted using solid-phase extraction. Subfractionation was carried out on a 3100 OFFGEL fractionator (Agilent Technologies) using pH 3 to 10 gradient strips and ampholytes according to the manufacturer’s guidelines, but without the incorporation of glycerol. Focusing was carried out for 50 kilowatt hours with a current limit of 50 µA and a voltage limit of 8,000 V. Fractions were fully dried.
Protein Identification and Quantification by Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry
Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry was carried out on a LTQ-Orbitrap Velos Pro (Thermo Fisher Scientific) as described previously (Alvarez et al., 2013, 2014) coupled with a U3000 RSLCnano HPLC device (Thermo Fisher Scientific). The dried OFFGEL fractions were dissolved in 5% acetonitrile and 0.1% formic acid, and a portion was loaded onto a C18 trap column (PepMap100; 300-µm i.d. × 5 mm, 5-µm particle size, 100 Å; Thermo Fisher Scientific) at a flow rate of 15 µL min−1 for 4 min equilibrated with 2% acetonitrile and 0.1% formic acid. Peptide separation was carried out on a C18 column (Acclaim PepMap RSLC; 15 cm × 75 μm nanoViper, C18, 2 μm, 100 Å; Thermo Fisher Scientific) at a flow rate of 0.3 μL min−1 and the following gradient: 0 to 3 min, 2% B isocratic; 3 to 12 min, 2% to 15% B; 12 to 84 min, 15% to 38% B; 84 to 93 min, 38% to 50% B; and 93 to 97 min, 50% to 90% B. Mobile phase A was 0.1% formic acid, and mobile phase B was 0.1% formic acid in 80:20 acetonitrile:water. The Orbitrap mass analyzer was operated as described previously (Alvarez et al., 2014), except for the exclusion duration, which was set at 90 s, and the minimum mass spectrometry ion count for triggering tandem mass spectrometry, which was set to 50,000 counts.
Database Search and Data Mining for the Proteome
Data processing was automated using Mascot Daemon (Matrix Science). Mascot Distiller, version 2.4.3.3 64 bit (Matrix Science), was used to create mgf files, which Mascot Server, version 2.4 (Matrix Science), searched against The Arabidopsis Information Resource 10 (35,386 entries) to identify and quantify the proteins with a false discovery rate of 1%. The search parameters used have been described previously (Alvarez et al., 2014) except for the fixed modifications, which were set as TMT (N-terminal) and TMT (K). Only proteins with at least two peptides were used for the analysis. Peptide and protein ratios were calculated using the weighted method in Mascot, where the intensity values of the set of peptides are summed and the protein ratios are calculated from the summed values. Normalization of the ratios was performed using the total labeling intensity of each species (summed intensities). The ratios and sd values for all combinations of the replicates adt3/wild type were reported. An overall ratio for a protein hit was reported only if the minimum number of two peptide matches was achieved. If the ratios for the peptide matches were not consistent with a sample from a normal distribution, the ratios were not used further in the analysis. Only protein ratios statistically different from 1 (P < 0.05), detected from the replicates, were averaged. Only proteins for which there were at least three protein ratios, of which at least one was associated with each control for each of the three mutant replicates, were used for further analyses. For these proteins, the sd and coefficient of variation were calculated.
The proteome was analyzed using the bioinformatics platform Virtual Plant (http://virtualplant.bio.nyu.edu/cgi-bin/vpweb/; Katari et al., 2010) and the KEGG database (http://www.genome.jp/kegg/).
Supplemental Data
The following supplemental materials are available.
Supplemental Figure S1. ADT3::ADT3-GFP restores adt3-1 cotyledon epidermis to wild-type appearance and confers survival to UV light stress.
Supplemental Figure S2. Expression of ADT3-GFP fusions in adt3-1 and wild-type backgrounds and ADT3::ADT3-GFP in the SAM.
Supplemental Figure S3. ROS detection in the adt3-6 mutant by CellRox.
Supplemental Figure S4. Singlet oxygen species detection in adt3 mutant seedlings incubated with SOSG.
Supplemental Figure S5. ROS levels detected by CellRox from unirradiated and UV-C irradiated wild-type and adt3-1 seedling cotyledons before and after pretreatment with Phe, the ROS scavenger potassium iodide, and a Phe analog.
Supplemental Figure S6. Epidermal defects in adt3-6 seedlings are rescued by Phe.
Supplemental Figure S7. Phenotypic defects of adt3-1 seedlings not complemented by Tyr or Trp; stomatal lineage mutants do not respond to Phe like adt3-1 mutants.
Supplemental Figure S8. Experiments indicate that mannitol does not rescue guard cell lineage progression.
Supplemental Figure S9. Developing chloroplast ultrastructural phenotype rescue in adt3 mesophyll cells by inclusion of Phe in planting medium,
Supplemental Figure S10. gpa1 and gcr1 mutants have cotyledon phenotypes that can be rescued by Phe.
Supplemental Table S1. Proteome data of 6-d dark-grown adt3-1 mutant compared with the wild type.
Supplemental Table S2. PO analysis for up-regulated proteins in the adt3 proteome.
Supplemental Table S3. GO term analysis for biological process for adt3 up-regulated proteins in the epidermal cell PO category.
Supplemental Table S4. GO term analysis for cell components for up-regulated proteins in the adt3 proteome.
Supplemental Table S5. GO term analysis for biological process for adt3 up-regulated proteins in the plasma membrane category.
Supplemental Table S6. GO term analysis for biological process for adt3 up-regulated proteins in the vacuole category.
Supplemental Table S7. GO term analysis for biological process for adt3 up-regulated proteins in the cell wall category.
Supplemental Table S8. PO analysis for down-regulated proteins in the adt3 proteome.
Supplemental Table S9. GO term analysis for molecular function for adt3 down-regulated proteins in the epidermal cell PO category.
Supplemental Table S10. GO term analysis for cell components for down-regulated proteins in the adt3 proteome.
Supplemental Table S11. GO term analysis for biological process for down-regulated proteins in the adt3 proteome.
Supplementary Material
Acknowledgments
We thank Jennifer Baek, Ashley Williams, Yang Chen, Huini Wu, and Nadia Kukuruza for assistance with experiments; Dr. Jeremy Lynch and Dr. Teresa Orenic for assistance with confocal and deconvoluting microscopy, respectively; Jack Gibbons for electron microscopy services featured in the Supplemental Data; Stephen MacFarlane, Sharmon Knecht, and especially Bobbie Schneider for TEM (Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center); John Cason for artwork, except Figure 7; and Dr. Lon Kaufman (now at City University of New York-Hunter College) and Dr. Gary Gardner (University of Minnesota) for helpful discussion.
Glossary
- ROS
reactive oxygen species
- SAM
shoot apical meristem
- LED
light-emitting diode
- SOSG
Singlet Oxygen Sensor Green
- DAPI
4′,6-diamino-phenylindole
- TEM
transmission electron microscopy
- GO
Gene Ontology
- KEGG
Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes
- PO
Plant Ontology
- VLCFAs
very-long-chain fatty acids
- TB
Toluidine Blue
- MS
Murashige and Skoog
- FITC
fluorescein isothiocyanate
- PBS
phosphate-buffered saline
Footnotes
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (grant no. MCB–0848113 to K.M.W. and Lon S. Kaufman).
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