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First published online May 5, 2006; 10.1104/pp.106.079202 Plant Physiology 141:887-897 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists
Differential Roles of Arabidopsis Heterotrimeric G-Protein Subunits in Modulating Cell Division in Roots1,[W]Department of Botany, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z4, Canada (J.-G.C., Y.G.); College of Resources and Environment, Northwest Agricultural and Forestry University, Yangling, Shaanxi 712100, China (Y.G.); and Departments of Biology and Pharmacology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 275993280 (J.-G.C., A.M.J.)
Signaling through heterotrimeric G proteins is conserved in diverse eukaryotes. Compared to vertebrates, the simpler repertoire of G-protein complex and accessory components in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) offers a unique advantage over all other multicellular, genetic-model systems for dissecting the mechanism of G-protein signal transduction. One of several biological processes that the G-protein complex regulates in Arabidopsis is cell division. We determined cell production rate in the primary root and the formation of lateral roots in Arabidopsis to define individually the types of modulatory roles of the respective G-protein - and -subunits, as well as the heterotrimer in cell division. The growth rate of the root is in part a consequence of cell cycle maintenance in the root apical meristem (RAM), while lateral root production requires meristem formation by founder pericycle cells. Thus, a comparison of these two parameters in various genetic backgrounds enabled dissection of the role of the G-protein subunits in modulation of cell division, both in maintenance and initiation. Cell production rates were determined for the RAM and lateral root formation in gpa1 (Arabidopsis G-protein -subunit) and agb1 (Arabidopsis G-protein -subunit) single and double mutants, and in transgenic lines overexpressing GPA1 or AGB1 in agb1 or gpa1 mutant backgrounds, respectively. We found in the RAM that the heterotrimeric complex acts as an attenuator of cell proliferation, whereas the GTP-bound form of the G -subunit's role is a positive modulator. In contrast, for the formation of lateral roots, the G![]() -dimer acts largely independently of the G -subunit to attenuate cell division. These results suggest that Arabidopsis heterotrimeric G-protein subunits have differential and opposing roles in the modulation of cell division in roots.
Heterotrimeric GTP-binding proteins (G proteins) are critical molecular switches, regulating diverse signaling pathways in eukaryotic cells (Gilman, 1987 -subunit (G ), one -subunit (G ), two -subunits (G ), one regulator of G-protein-signaling (RGS) protein, and few putative G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCR; Jones and Assmann, 2004 -, six -, and 12 -subunits of the heterotrimeric G-protein complexes, and 37 RGS proteins and as many as 800 GPCRs (Jones and Assmann, 2004 (gpa1) have a reduced number of lateral root primordia, whereas null alleles of Arabidopsis G (agb1) have enhanced cell division in roots, resulting in excessive lateral roots (Ullah et al., 2003 , confer increased cell division in the root apical meristem (RAM; Chen et al., 2003
The root is ideal to quantitate cell division in situ. The root system originates from a root primordium that forms during embryogenesis. Stem cells of the RAM generate all of the cell types through stereotypic divisions, followed by cell elongation and differentiation (Scheres et al., 2001
Many genes are involved in various aspects of root development, ranging from distal patterning, radial patterning, epidermal patterning, and cell division to cell expansion (Helariutta et al., 2000
Analysis of Arabidopsis and rice G-protein mutants and transgenic lines revealed two crucial concepts of G-protein action in plants (Perfus-Barbeoch et al., 2004
Here we use the Arabidopsis root to dissect the role of the heterotrimeric G-protein complex and the released subunits in root development. Previously, we proposed that AGB1, presumably acting as a dimer with the Arabidopsis G-protein
Here we provide genetic evidence that both G
GPA1 and AGB1 Are Expressed in Roots
The results of quantitative real-time PCR and immunoblot analyses indicated that both GPA1 and AGB1 are more strongly expressed in roots than in shoots in young seedlings (Fig. 1, A and B
). Using Arabidopsis suspension cells expressing GPA1-cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) or yellow fluorescent protein (YFP)-AGB1, we found that the fusion proteins are preferentially distributed at the cell plate in newly divided cells (Fig. 1C), suggesting a role in cytokinesis. Recently, studies in both invertebrates and vertebrates have revealed an essential function of the heterotrimeric G proteins in positioning of the mitotic spindle and attaching microtubules to the cell cortex, which is distinct from their well-studied role in signal transduction downstream of seven-transmembrane (7TM) receptors (Afshar et al., 2004
G-Protein Mutants Have Defects in Both Primary and Lateral Root Development
The morphological differences observed between wild-type and gpa1 and agb1 plants were ascribed to differences in cell proliferation rate and not histogenesis (Ullah et al., 2001
For clarity, data on only one allele of the gpa1 (gpa1-4) and agb1 (agb1-2) single mutants and one allele of the gpa1 agb1 double mutant (gpa1-4 agb1-2) are presented. These same single mutant alleles were used to generate the double and triple mutant combinations with gcr1 (Chen et al., 2004
agb1-2 Is Epistatic to gpa1-4 Combination of the two loss-of-function alleles, agb1-2 and gpa1-4, conferred longer primary roots and more lateral root phenotypes similar to the agb1-2 mutant allele acting alone (Supplemental Fig. 1). This genetic relationship was also the case for auxin-induced adventitious root formation in hypocotyls (Supplemental Fig. 2). While the focus of this study is on cell division in the root, for completeness sake we examined non-root phenotypes of G-protein mutants and found that, for all scorable traits, the agb1-2 mutant allele was epistatic to the gpa1-4 allele (Fig. 2 ).
AGB1 Modulation of Cell Proliferation in the Primary Root May Require a Functional GPA1
If G-protein-coupled signaling in Arabidopsis follows the mechanism of action established in animal systems, a comparison of the phenotypes of these single and double mutants permits prediction of which subunit, namely, the activated G
The expression levels of GPA1 protein in 35S::GPA1 transgenic lines were examined by immunoblot analysis using antibodies directed against the C terminus of GPA1. Because an exhausted attempt to make specific antibodies to the Arabidopsis G
The increased root growth in both agb1-2 single and gpa1-4 agb1-2 double mutants was due to an increased cell production in the RAM (Table I, 14). Moreover, overexpression of AGB1 confers decreased cell production in the RAM (Table I, compare 1 and 9), demonstrating that the cell production rate in wild-type RAMs is not at basal level. The capacity for a lower cell production rate than for the control is a critical point as it enabled us to assign meaning to a "no change in rate" phenotype observed in the other genotypes overexpressing individual subunits. Combining both loss- and gain-of-function results in the wild-type background indicated that AGB1 is an attenuator of cell division in the primary root.
We tested if the attenuation of root cell division by AGB1 requires a functional GPA1. We examined overexpression of AGB1 in the absence of GPA1 and determined if cell division in the RAM is altered. Overexpression of AGB1 in the agb1 mutant complemented the primary root phenotype (Table I), indicating that the transgene is functional. When AGB1 was overexpressed in gpa1 or gpa1 agb1 mutant backgrounds, no effect on primary root growth was observed (Table I, compare 9, 10, 11 and 12), indicating that AGB1 action requires a functional GPA1. This suggests that either G
To distinguish between these two possibilities, the reciprocal experiment was performed. We examined overexpression of GPA1 in the absence of AGB1 and determined if cell division in the RAM is altered. We found that ectopic expression of GPA1 in a background containing AGB1 reduced cell proliferation (Table I, compare 15). However, this decrease in cell proliferation by additional GPA1 required a functional AGB1 (Table I, compare 58). These results are consistent with the conclusion that the heterotrimeric state of the G-protein complex is required to negatively modulate cell proliferation in the RAM. A signaling role for the intact heterotrimeric complex is rare but not unprecedented (Peleg et al., 2002
We previously identified a 7TM protein, RGS1, as the sole regulator of G-signaling protein in Arabidopsis (Chen et al., 2003 We further generated double and triple mutants among gpa1-4, agb1-2, and rgs1-2 loss-of-function mutants to test the genetic interaction between RGS1 and the heterotrimeric G-protein-complex genes in the regulation of root cell division by measuring the cell production rate in the primary root and lateral root formation in these double and triple mutants. We found that the stimulatory effect in the rgs1-2 mutant was abrogated in the absence of GPA1 (Fig. 4A), suggesting that RGS1 acts through GPA1 to regulate cell division in the primary root. Both rgs1 and agb1 mutants had increased cell production in the primary root, but no additive or synergistic effects were observed in rgs1 agb1 and rgs1 gpa1 agb1 double and triple mutants (Fig. 4A), indicating that RGS1 acts in the same pathway with the heterotrimeric G-protein-complex genes. Again, while the focus here is on root cell proliferation, for completeness sake we extended our investigation to aerial phenotypes. For all other scorable traits, the gpa1-4 and agb1-2 mutants were epistatic to the rgs1-2 allele (Fig. 5 ).
AGB1 Inhibits Lateral Root Formation
Previously, we proposed a model in which AGB1 acts downstream of GPA1 and negatively regulates lateral root formation (Ullah et al., 2003 gpa1 mutants produced fewer lateral roots than the wild type. Overexpression of GPA1 in the gpa1-4 mutant restored the number of lateral roots in the mutant to the wild-type level (Table II, 6), indicating that the GPA1 transgene was functional. We observed an increased number of lateral roots when GPA1 was overexpressed in the wild-type background (Table II, compare 1 and 5). However, overexpression of GPA1 in the agb1 or gpa1 agb1 mutant backgrounds did not further increase the number of lateral roots of these mutants (Table II, 7 and 8), indicating that GPA1 acts through AGB1. The most likely explanation of this observation is that overexpression of GPA1 sequesters AGB1 into the heterotrimeric complex. Overexpression of AGB1 complemented the agb1 mutant phenotype of excessive lateral root formation (Table II, 11), indicating that the AGB1 transgene was functional. When AGB1 was overexpressed, a decrease in lateral root formation was observed compared to the no-transgene controls, regardless of the presence or absence of GPA1 (Table II, 10 and 12). Because loss of function of AGB1 promotes lateral root formation while overexpression of AGB1 inhibits it, we conclude that AGB1 is a negative modulator of lateral root formation. These results also support the notion that AGB1 acts downstream of GPA1 and that AGB1 can function independently of GPA1 in regulating lateral root formation. Moreover, an increase in the activated form of GPA1 through a loss-of-function allele of rgs1 did not affect the lateral root formation, either in the wild-type background or in the gpa1 and agb1 single or double mutant backgrounds (Fig. 4B), indicating that the interaction of RGS1 and the heterotrimeric G-protein complex may not be required for the regulation of lateral root formation. Taken together, the data of gpa1 and agb1 single and double mutants and of transgenic lines overexpressing GPA1 and AGB1 in different mutant backgrounds support a testable model in which AGB1 acts downstream of GPA1 to inhibit lateral root formation.
Based on cell proliferation and lateral root formation in roots of gpa1, agb1, and rgs1 single, double, and triple mutants and of transgenic lines overexpressing GPA1 or AGB1 in agb1 or gpa1 mutant backgrounds, we propose the following working model for the heterotrimeric G-protein complex in root cell division (Fig. 6 ). First, the heterotrimeric complex itself attenuates cell division in the primary roots. In lieu of structural data for the heterotrimeric complex, the term heterotrimer is used in a genetic sense here, but the most likely interpretation is indeed that the inactive state of G within its heterotrimeric physical state is the attenuating structural form. The question of whether or not complete dissociation of an activated G from the heterotrimeric complex occurs has recently been raised (Frank et al., 2005![]() -dimer inhibits cell division in the pericycle founder cells. However, the exact position at which each signaling element influences the cell cycle is not known at present (discussed below).
The model shown in Figure 6 is unique in that both the active and inactive states of GPA1 have opposite modulatory functions. Another aspect of this model is the potential role for RGS1 in regulating the GPA1 state. As described above, RGS1 is unusual in that it contains both a 7TM domain and a functional RGS domain. RGS1 could serve on its own as the membrane scaffold, the guanine nucleotide-exchange factor, and/or the GAP protein. This membrane signaling platform could serve to integrate signals that modulate cell proliferation. One signal known to influence cell proliferation is D-Glc. We (J.P. Taylor and A.M. Jones, unpublished data) have shown that applied D-Glc causes the wild-type cells at the root tip to stop dividing and expand dramatically, whereas cells lacking the G -subunit are less responsive to D-Glc. RGS1 may be a sugar-regulated GAP on GPA1, consistent with the proposed model. This model is consistent with our published data that overexpression of a constitutively active form of GPA1, GPA1Q222L, and loss of rgs1 function have no effect on lateral root formation (Chen et al., 2003
Mutations that alter root development can be divided into three classes: mutations that affect (1) both primary and lateral roots; (2) the primary root but not the lateral root; and (3) the lateral root but not the primary root. For example, the alf4-1 allele prevents initiation of lateral roots but does not affect the primary root (Celenza et al., 1995
Cell elongation also is required for root development. Root growth and architecture involves a balance between cell production in the apical and lateral root meristems and the subsequent elongation of those cells. This raises an interesting complexity if these two processes involve cross-regulation through G proteins. We do not rule out possible roles of GPA1 and AGB1 in cell elongation in both primary and lateral root development. For example, the length of cortex cells was reduced in roots of transgenic lines overexpressing GPA1 (Table I), implying that GPA1 may inhibit root cell elongation. It is unclear if this altered cell elongation is due to an indirect effect of altered cell division because cell division and cell elongation are often found to compensate for each other (Jones et al., 1998
The precise nuclear stage in the cell cycle for the modulatory target in the RAM and pericycle by the heterotrimeric G-protein complex and G In conclusion, this work, to our knowledge, represents the first in planta study of the role of a heterotrimeric G protein in modulation of cell proliferation. It does so within the context of root growth and architecture. The multicellular root provides the cellular heterogeneity to analyze integrative signaling, but this work should be combined with future studies using synchronizable cells in culture with altered G-protein elements so that the precise phases of the cell cycle that are modulated differentially by G-protein subunit may be determined.
gpa1 and agb1 Single and Double Mutants
All mutants Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) are in the Col background (Col-0). T-DNA insertion mutant alleles of GPA1, gpa1-3 and gpa1-4, were used as described by Jones et al. (2003)
The null allele of RGS1, rgs1-2, is described by Chen et al. (2003)
GPA1 and AGB1 transcript levels in the shoots and roots of 7-d-old, light-grown wild-type seedlings or in the whole seedlings of 35S:AGB1 transgenic lines were determined by quantitative real-time PCR. GPA1 transcripts were amplified using primers GPA1 RT-FW (5'-AGAAGTTTGAGGAGTTATATTACCAG-3') and GPA1 RT-RV (5'-AAGGCCAGCCTCCAGTAA-3'). AGB1 transcripts were amplified using primers AGB1 RT-FW (5'-CTGCTGATGTACTAAGCGTCTCA-3') and AGB1 RT-RV (5'-CTGCATGTTCCATCGTCTGA-3'). The GPA1 and AGB1 transcript levels were normalized against ACTIN2 transcripts, which were amplified using primers Actin2 RT-FW (5'-CCAGAAGGATGCATATGTTGGTGA-3') and Actin2 RT-RV (5'-GAGGAGCCTCGGTAAGAAGA-3'). The real-time PCR was performed using the MJ MiniOpticon real-time PCR system (Bio-Rad Laboratories) and IQ SYBR Green Supermix (Bio-Rad Laboratories).
The entire open-reading frames of GPA1 (At2g26300) and AGB1 (At4g34460) were amplified by PCR from a cDNA library made from seedlings grown in light for 10 d, cloned into the pENTR/D-TOPO vector (Invitrogen), and then subcloned into Gateway plant transformation destination binary vector pB2GW7 (Karimi et al., 2002 Relative expression of GPA1 was quantitated by immunoblot analysis. Briefly, approximately 20 10-d-old, light-grown seedlings were ground into powder under liquid nitrogen. Total protein was isolated by incubating the tissues with 100 µL of freshly made lysis buffer (50 mM Tris, 50 mM NaCl, 5 mM EGTA, 2 mM dithiothreitol, 1% Triton X-100, and 1x protease inhibitor cocktail [Sigma], pH 7.5) at 4°C for 30 min, followed by rocking at 4°C for another 30 min. Total proteins in the supernatant were collected by centrifuging at 14,000 rpm for 15 min at 4°C. Protein samples (30 µg per well) were separated by SDS-PAGE, electroblotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride membrane, and immunoblotted with 1:2,000 anti-GPA1 peptide antibodies (serum no. 9572, rabbit polyclonal antiserum directed against a peptide representing the last 15 amino acids of GPA1). AGB1 transcript levels in 35S:AGB1 transgenic lines were determined by quantitative real-time PCR described above.
For petri-dish-based phenotypic analyses, wild-type and mutant seeds were sterilized, sown in petri dishes containing one-half-strength Murashige and Skoog basal medium with Gamborg's vitamins (ICN Biomedicals), 1% Suc, 0.5% phytoagar (Research Products International), adjusted to pH 5.7, and treated at 4°C in the dark for 3 d, then moved to a growth chamber with 23°C and light intensity of approximately 100 µmol m2 s1. For the phenotypic analysis of 2-d-old, dark-grown seedlings, the petri dishes were wrapped in aluminum foil and placed in the darkness at 23°C. For soil-based phenotypic analysis, wild-type and mutant plants were either grown in an Arabidopsis growth chamber under short-day conditions (8 h [light]/16 h [dark]) for the observation of leaf phenotype, or grown in the greenhouse (12 h [light]/12 h [dark]) for the observation of flower and silique phenotype.
Seeds from wild type, mutants, and transgenic lines sown in petri dishes were grown vertically under constant light conditions (100 µmol m2 s1), and the positions of the root tips were recorded daily. Rates of primary root growth were calculated over 3-d periods from day 3 to day 6. Seedlings were sampled at day 6, fixed, and cleared in chloral hydrate solution (chloral hydrate:glycerol:water = 8:2:1). The lengths of about 20 cortex cells in the differentiation zone of each root were measured using a Zeiss Axiovert 200M DIC microscope (Carl Zeiss) equipped with a digital image acquisition and processing system (AxioVision Release 4.2). Cell production was calculated as the rate of root growth divided by the average cortex cell length. In separate experiments, the seedlings were grown for an additional 3 d, and the numbers of lateral root primordia and lateral roots were measured from each plant under a dissecting microscope. Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession numbers NC_003071, NC_003075, and NC_003074. Received February 13, 2006; returned for revision May 1, 2006; accepted May 1, 2006.
1 This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (grant no. GM6598901) and the National Science Foundation (grant no. MCB0209711) to A.M.J. Work in J.-G.C.'s lab is supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Canada Foundation for Innovation, the British Columbia Ministry of Advanced Education, and the University of British Columbia. Y.G. is supported by a scholarship from the China Scholarship Council. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Alan M. Jones (alan_jones{at}unc.edu).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.079202. * Corresponding author; e-mail alan_jones{at}unc.edu; fax 9199621625.
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