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First published online September 6, 2002; 10.1104/pp.008045 Plant Physiol, October 2002, Vol. 130, pp. 876-886 Photosynthetic and Other Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxylase Isoforms in the Single-Cell, Facultative C4 System of Hydrilla verticillata1Department of Botany, 220 Bartram Hall, P.O. Box 118526, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611-8526
The submersed monocot Hydrilla verticillata (L.f.) Royle is a facultative C4 plant. It typically exhibits C3 photosynthetic characteristics, but exposure to low [CO2] induces a C4 system in which the C4 and Calvin cycles co-exist in the same cell and the initial fixation in the light is catalyzed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC). Three full-length cDNAs encoding PEPC were isolated from H. verticillata, two from leaves and one from root. The sequences were 95% to 99% identical and shared a 75% to 85% similarity with other plant PEPCs. Transcript studies revealed that one isoform, Hvpepc4, was exclusively expressed in leaves during C4 induction. This and enzyme kinetic data were consistent with it being the C4 photosynthesis isoform. However, the C4 signature serine of terrestrial plant C4 isoforms was absent in this and the other H. verticillata sequences. Instead, alanine, typical of C3 sequences, was present. Western analyses of C3 and C4 leaf extracts after anion-exchange chromatography showed similar dominant PEPC-specific bands at 110 kD. In phylogenetic analyses, the sequences grouped with C3, non-graminaceous C4, and Crassulacean acid metabolism PEPCs but not with the graminaceous C4, and formed a clade with a gymnosperm, which is consistent with H. verticillata PEPC predating that of other C4 angiosperms.
Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)
carboxylase (PEPC; EC 4.1.1.31) occurs in eubacteria, cyanobacteria,
green algae, and all higher plants. In the latter, it is encoded by a
small multigene family (Lepiniec et al., 1993 Investigations on the origins of the C4 syndrome
indicate that it arose independently in a number of angiosperm taxa and
included changes in the genes controlling anatomical and chloroplastic development and in those orchestrating photosynthetic biochemistry (Hermans and Westhoff, 1992 The aquatic monocot Hydrilla verticillata (L.f.) Royle is
the best documented case of an inducible C4
photosynthetic system that concentrates CO2 in
the chloroplasts without enzymatic compartmentation in mesophyll and
bundle sheath cells, i.e. it lacks Kranz anatomy. When
[CO2] is abundant, H. verticillata
exhibits C3 characteristics, but a
C4 photosynthetic system is induced by exposure
to low [CO2], both in nature and in the
laboratory. Thus, it is best described as a facultative NADP-ME
C4 species (Bowes et al., 2002 As part of a molecular approach to understand how the
C4 system in H. verticillata is
induced and regulated, we have focused attention on the PEPC isoforms
that we have found in this plant. We present evidence that one is
induced and operates in C4 leaf photosynthesis.
Multiple isoforms are commonly reported for PEPC gene families (Ernst
and Westhoff, 1997
Isolation, Cloning, and Sequencing of Three Full-Length cDNAs Encoding H. verticillata PEPC Hvpepc3 and 4 were culled from 40 C4 leaf-derived RACE clones that screened positively for either the 3F or 4F oligoprobe. Subsequent isolations using C3 leaf material yielded only clones of Hvpepc3. A similar number of root-derived RACE clones tested positively only to the probe 3F, and from these clones, Hvpepc5 was isolated and sequenced. The salient features of these cDNAs and their encoded PEPCs are summarized in Table I. The 5' region in all of the isoforms had two ATG triplets that are candidates for translation initiation; the two different coding sequence lengths that would occur with each of the ATG triplets are also shown. These data indicate that the encoded proteins were very similar in terms of Mr and pI.
A comparison of the nucleotides (nt) from the 5'- and 3'-untranslated regions (UTR) of the three H. verticillata PEPC cDNA sequences indicates that Hvpepc3 and Hvpepc5 were very similar but not identical and that they differed from Hvpepc4. The 5'-UTR of Hvpepc5 showed 1 bp deletion and one substitution compared with Hvpepc3, whereas there were 2 bp substitutions in the 3'-UTR and 4 bp substitutions in the coding region. The Hvpepc5 sequence downstream of the stop codon (TAA) was 116 bp shorter than that of Hvpepc3. All three sequences contained a single polyadenylation signal motif. A comparative multiple alignment of the deduced amino acid sequences of
the three H. verticillata PEPCs with those of two other
monocots and one eudicot representing C3,
C4, and CAM isoform sequences is shown in Figure
1. The monocot maize contains both C3 and C4 PEPCs, whereas
the monocot Vanilla planifolia has a CAM isoform. The
C4 PEPC from the C4 eudicot
F. trinervia was also included in the comparison because
this sequence bears a phylogenetic resemblance to those of H. verticillata. The conserved regions for both eukaryotic and
prokaryotic PEPCs are indicated, as well as the specific catalytic and
regulatory binding locales and two putative C4
signature sites. Homology among the H. verticillata sequences was high (95%-99%), and they showed the closest
resemblance to the C3 PEPC from maize (85%).
Identity with the CAM PEPC was 83%, with the F. trinervia
C4 PEPC 81%, and with the maize
C4 PEPC 78%. In a comparison with
Hvpepc3, Hvpepc5 had three substitutions resulting from the 4 bp changes, whereas Hvpepc4 had 44 substitutions and two deletions. The three substitutions found in
Hvpepc5 were Ser-196 for Cys, Val-777 for Ile, and Arg-891
for Glu. The substitutions in Hvpepc4 occurred mostly in the
variable regions; the Met-150 appears to be a unique change, replacing
Leu, which is found in all other PEPCs listed in the database. The
signature C4 Ser, Ser-774 of F. trinervia (Bläsing et al., 2000
Differential Expression of H. verticillata Isoforms To compare the specific expression of Hvpepc3 and Hvpepc4, northern analyses were performed using C3 and C4 leaves of H. verticillata (Fig. 2). The samples were analyzed several times throughout the C4 induction period, starting at zero time when all the leaves had C3 photosynthetic characteristics. When isoform-specific RNA probes were used, Hvpepc4 was expressed exclusively in C4-induced leaves, after 96 and 264 h into the induction period. This isoform notably was not expressed in any other samples. In contrast, Hvpepc3 was expressed in C3 and C4 leaf samples, except at the 264-h C3 sampling time. The results of consensus probing were similar to those using the Hvpepc3 probe. The results represent a 1-µg total RNA loading scheme, which is the maximum recommended (Roche Diagnostics/Roche Applied Science, Indianapolis). The loading of greater quantities of total RNA (2 and 5 µg) did not change the detection threshold. The probe to the Hvpepc3 isoform was specifically synthesized from its 3'-UTR, however the similarity between these regions of Hvpepc3 and Hvpepc5 suggests that the probe could not discriminate between these two isoforms. Therefore, an Hvpepc5 signal in the C3 leaves cannot be excluded.
The activity of PEPC was followed in the same samples used for the northern analyses. Figure 3 shows the specific activity over time of PEPC in desalted extracts from the C3- and C4-induced leaves and shows the times when RNA was sampled for the northern analyses. The PEPC activity in the C3 leaves remained essentially constant and low. In contrast, that of the C4-induced leaves increased in a linear fashion, reaching values more than 10-fold greater than in the C3 leaves.
Partial Purification of PEPC, Kinetic Characterization, and Western Analyses Data for the purification of PEPC from extracts of C3 and C4 leaves (harvested in the light at 288 h into the induction period) and roots, using ammonium sulfate fractionation and Q-Sepharose FF anion-exchange chromatography, are summarized in Table II. The PEPC activities were assayed at the optimal pH of 8.0 with saturating substrate concentrations. The root extract did not bind to the column but eluted as a single peak in the buffer wash. However, the leaf extracts did bind and were eluted with a linear salt gradient. The elution profiles of each of these extracts were characterized by a single peak, but with elution at slightly different salt concentrations. The specific PEPC activities in both the crude and chromatographed C4 leaf extracts were substantially higher than the corresponding C3 values, and leaf values were much higher than those of the roots. The crude activities were similar to those described previously (Fig. 3). The purification factors were greater for the leaf extracts than for the root.
Kinetic data for the C3 and
C4 leaf peak PEPC fractions are presented in
Figure 4. The activities were assayed at
a cytosolic-like pH of 7.3, where PEPC kinetic effects are more
pronounced. A plot of activity versus [PEP] produced a hyperbolic
curve for the C3 leaf enzyme that followed
Michaelis-Menten kinetics (r2 = 0.957),
whereas that of the C4 was sigmoid and fitted the
Hill equation (r2 = 0.998). The Hill
coefficients for the two extracts differed considerably, 1.8 and 3.8 for the C3 and C4 leaves,
respectively. The specific activities, calculated from the
Michaelis-Menten and Hill equations, were severalfold different, with
the C4 value the higher (2.51 versus 0.37 µmol
mg
Western analyses showed two prominent immunoreactive bands in both leaf extracts, with the second being much more pronounced in the C4 leaves (Fig. 5). In addition, a third, faster running band was evident only in the C4 leaf extract. The distribution of these bands was in the Mr range of 105,000 to 111,000.
Phylogenetic Analyses Figure 6 shows the results of a phylogenetic analysis of deduced amino acid sequences with the PHYLIP program (Phylogeny Inference Package, version 3.57c, Department of Genetics, University of Washington, Seattle) using the parsimony algorithm. In addition to the three H. verticillata PEPC sequences, 28 other full-length sequences from GenBank representing 17 different taxa were included. Particular emphasis was placed on selecting species with a set of two or more isoforms, so that diversity of isoform function was represented. Using the PHYLIP or the PAUP package (Phylogenetic Analysis Using Parsimony, version 4.0, Sinaur Associates, Sunderland, MA), both the protein distance and protein parsimony methods gave consensus trees that were very similar. For these analyses, the four prokaryotic sequences were taken as the outgroup, showing similarity with the seed plant sequences in the range of 26% to 39%. In all, 943 total characters were considered, and 608 of them were parsimony informative. The consistency and retention indices were 0.71 and 0.63, respectively, indicating low homoplasy or background noise because of convergence or reversion events. The root PEPC isoforms of the graminaceous plants; maize, sorghum (Sorghum vulgare), and rice (Oryza sativa); and the C4 sequences of maize and sorghum apparently diverged independently.
From this analysis, it appeared that PEPC isoforms can be grouped into three distinct groups that likely share a common ancestor: I, C4 graminaceous; II, graminaceous roots; and III, PEPC isoforms with varying functions from a variety of taxa. Although group III was monophyletic, relationships within it were largely unresolved because the component branches lacked statistical support. Nonetheless, there was good support for several clades, namely Brassica spp., Flaveria spp., Hydrilla spp., and a Sorghum spp./Zea spp. group (C3 PEPC). Within the genus Flaveria, the C3 species Flaveria pringlei ppcA showed a clear divergence from the C4 F. trinervia ppcA, with 100% support. However, the sequences from both the C3 and C4 Flaveria spp. fell into the same group as those from H. verticillata. In the case of H. verticillata, Hvpepc3 and Hvpepc5, and Hvpepc4 diverged from a unique common C3 ancestor. It is intriguing that the gymnosperm Norway spruce (Picea abies) along with the root nodule pea (Pisum sativum) and the H. verticillata sequences appear to form a clade that is present regardless of tree construction methods.
Photosynthesis in H. verticillata is unique in
that, against a C3 background, a
C4 cycle is induced but without the development of specialized anatomy that occurs in terrestrial
C4 species. This "minimalist" system
represents something of a paradox in our concept of
C4 photosynthesis. Since the classical
C3 × C4 Atriplex
spp. hybridization experiments of Björkman et al. (1970) The inducible H. verticillata system provides an excellent opportunity to study the minimum essential biochemical elements to operate a C4 photosynthetic system, such as might be needed to transform a C3 crop plant. Its facultative nature also enables us to examine the genes involved in both the C3 and C4 states, differences in their expression, and variations in the regulatory and catalytic domains of their products. We have previously described the major physiological and biochemical
features of the system (Bowes and Salvucci, 1989 Of the three PEPC isoforms from H. verticillata Hvpepc4 was
expressed solely in C4 leaves. Several lines of
evidence point to this isoform as the photosynthetic PEPC operating in
the light. It was only isolated from C4 leaf RNA
and was only expressed in C4 leaves, and its
expression coincided with the rise in PEPC activity as the
C4 system was induced. In addition, its sequence least resembled those of Hvpepc3 or Hvpepc5 that
were isolated from C3 leaves and roots,
respectively. It also contained the F. trinervia
C4 Lys-347, though as noted earlier, this residue is not a very specific determinant of a C4 PEPC
isoform. The C4-signature Ser residue was absent
from all H. verticillata sequences, and instead, Ala, which
is typical of C3 sequences, occurred at this position. Ser appears to be ubiquitous at this position among the
C4 isoforms of terrestrial
C4 plants, and it plays a role in determining the
kinetic characteristics (Bläsing et al., 2000 We recently reported that PEPC in desalted extracts from
C3 and C4 H. verticillata leaves differed kinetically in that the C4 leaf enzyme is light activated and is over
10-fold more sensitive to malate inhibition (Bowes et al., 2002 The Km PEP values for PEPC differ among
terrestrial plant C3 and C4
enzymes (O'Leary, 1982 Hill coefficients for recombinant ppcA PEPCs from
C3 and C4 Flaveria
spp. indicate the C4 enzyme has greater positive
cooperativity (Bläsing et al., 2000 The expression pattern and kinetic data point to Hvpepc4 as
the C4 photosynthetic PEPC. What then is the role
for Hvpepc3 in the leaves? H. verticillata leaves
can fix CO2 in the dark, at 12% of the light
rate in the case of C4 leaves, and they
accumulate malate (Reiskind et al., 1997 The sequence similarity between Hvpepc3 and 5 might suggest that the same gene encodes them both. However, this is unlikely because all of the 3'-UTR sequences analyzed to date from independent clones of three organ sources, i.e. leaf, root, and subterranean and axillary turions, revealed (a) three distinct 3'-UTR categories; (b) that the Hvpepc5-like sequences were the same length and were 99% homologous; and (c) that a specific polyadenylation signal site at a common position (nt 3,198 to 3,203 in Hvpepc3 and Hvpepc5) was present. The three full-length cDNA H. verticillata sequences were
all very similar (95%-99%). A comparable situation is seen in
Kalanchoe blossfeldiana where two pairs of isogenes encode
highly similar C3- and CAM-specific PEPC
isoforms, with the slight deviations being attributed to gene
duplication or the hybrid status of the plant in which the parental
genomes are expressed (Gehrig et al., 1995 All but two plant PEPCs in GenBank contain a Cys residue at position 196, but Ser occurred in Hvpepc5. At 891, Arg is the residue most commonly found, and it was conserved in Hvpepc5, but in both Hvpepc3 and Hvpepc4, Glu was substituted. The Met-150 in Hvpepc4 was also unusual, because the conserved residue is Leu. It is not clear whether these divergences influence the kinetic and regulatory characteristics of the isoforms. As noted earlier, the absence of the C4 signature Ser is a very unusual feature of the H. verticillata photosynthetic PEPC sequence. The deduced amino acid sequences of the three full-length PEPC isoforms
indicated that they had similar pIs and
Mrs. This may be why Q-Sepharose
chromatography of C4 leaf extracts did not yield
two peaks, even though northern analyses showed the presence of two
isoforms. Of the immunoreactive bands resolved on SDS-PAGE, only the
second corresponded with the deduced Mr of
the three identified isoforms. The others may be cross-reacting proteins or other isoforms. Similar banding patterns for PEPC have been
observed in Egeria spp. and Sorghum spp. with the
conclusion that they represented different PEPC isoforms (Casati et
al., 2000 The phylogenetic analyses indicated that the H. verticillata
sequences, including Hvpepc4, were divergent from the
C4 graminaceous PEPCs. The
C4 F. trinervia PEPC similarly grouped with
C3 and CAM PEPCs from monocots and eudicots.
Thus, the functional diversity of PEPC isoforms was not fully reflected
in the branching pattern. It is possible that the
C4 form of PEPC diverged before the
monocot/ eudicot split 200 million years ago (mya) but after the
gymnosperm and angiosperm divergence 330 mya (Wolfe et al., 1989 Members of the Hydrocharitaceae, to which H. verticillata
belongs, were adapted to an aquatic environment 120 mya (Sculthorpe, 1967
Plant Material Hydrilla verticillata (L.f.) Royle sprigs 6 cm
long were incubated with a photon irradiance of 300 µmol
m PEPC Assay, Western-Blot Analyses, and Protein Purification Enzyme activities for maximal activity and western blots were
performed as previously described (Magnin et al., 1997 Cloning and cDNA Sequencing Total RNA was extracted from C4 leaves, roots,
subterranean and axillary turions (Qiagen RNeasy Kit, Qiagen USA,
Valencia, CA), and RACE-ready cDNA was prepared from it using the SMART RACE cDNA Amplification Kit (BD Biosciences Clontech, Palo Alto, CA).
PEPC-specific primers 8F (5'-GCGAAGCAATATGGAGTGAAGTTGA-3'; corresponding to nt 79-103) and 11R
(5'-TTGTACATTGTACCCTGGGTCCCTT-3'; nt 933-957) were designed from the
partial cDNA sequence Hvpepc2 obtained previously (Rao
et al., 1998 Northern Analyses For northern analyses, a total of 1 µg of RNA per lane,
extracted from leaves (RNeasy Plant Kit, Qiagen USA), was separated on
a 1.2% (w/v) agarose formaldehyde gel (Maniatis et al., 1982 Syntheses of Antisense RNA Probes Three different antisense RNA probes were synthesized following the protocol of the DIG RNA labeling kit (Roche Diagnostics/Roche Applied Sciences). PCR amplified regions from either full- or partial-length cDNA clones were inserted into the vector pCR-XL-TOPO (Invitrogen) in a manner such that the transcription template included the T7 promoter/priming site at the 3' end. The specific probes for Hvpepc3 (nt 2,948-3,368) and Hvpepc4 (nt 2,944-3,197) were derived from their respective full-length cDNA clones with the primer pairs PRB-3P (5'-TGCTGGCATGCAGAACACTGGTTAACC-3') and T7-PCR primer (5'-TAATACGACTCACTATAGGG-3'). The region (nt 47-1,799) of the consensus probe was PCR amplified from a 1.8-kb partial cDNA clone of Hvpepc3 with the aid of primer pairs 3F (5'-CGCGTCTGTTCTGATGGCGTC-3') and T7-PCR primer. Sequence Analyses and Phylogeny Inference Standard sequence compiling and analyses, including pair-wise
comparison of nt and deduced amino acids, were performed using the
Wisconsin package (v10.1, Genetics Computer Group, Madison, WI). For
phylogenetic analysis, PHYLIP v3.57 (Felsenstein, 1989 The predicted protein sequences were aligned using the CLUSTAL program
(Thompson et al., 1994 Distribution of Materials Upon request, all novel materials described in this publication will be made available in a timely manner for noncommercial research purposes, subject to the requisite permission from any third-party owners of all or parts of the material. Obtaining any permissions will be the responsibility of the requestor.
We thank Dr. Michael Salvucci of the U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service, Western Cotton Research Laboratory (Tucson, AZ) for the generous gift of the antibody to PEPC from maize. We also thank Drs. Walter Judd and Mark Whitten of the University of Florida Department of Botany (Gainesville, FL) and the Florida Museum of Natural History (Gainesville, FL), respectively, for their advice on phylogenetic tree construction.
Received May 7, 2002; returned for revision May 28, 2002; accepted June 13, 2002. 1 This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (grant no. IBN-9604518) and by the U.S. Department of Agriculture National Research Initiatives Competitive Grants Photosynthesis and Respiration Program (grant no. 93-37306-9386).
2 Present address: Université Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, Centre de Bio-Informatique, 146 Rue Léo Saignat, 33076, Bordeaux, France.
* Corresponding author; e-mail gbowes{at}botany.ufl.edu; fax 352-392-3993.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.008045.
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