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First published online March 21, 2008; 10.1104/pp.107.110841 Plant Physiology 147:143-155 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Elucidating the Germination Transcriptional Program Using Small Molecules1,[W],[OA]Department of Cell and Systems Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3B2 (G.W.B., P.F., J.A.F., N.J.P.); Centre for the Analysis of Genome Evolution and Function, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3B2 (P.F., N.J.P.); Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 1L5 (T.-f.F.C.); and Center for Plant Cell Biology, Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, University of California, Riverside, California 92521 (S.R.C.)
The transition from seed to seedling is mediated by germination, a complex process that starts with imbibition and completes with radicle emergence. To gain insight into the transcriptional program mediating germination, previous studies have compared the transcript profiles of dry, dormant, and germinating after-ripened Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seeds. While informative, these approaches did not distinguish the transcriptional responses due to imbibition, shifts in metabolism, or breaking of dormancy from those triggered by the initiation of germination. In this study, three mechanistically distinct small molecules that inhibit Arabidopsis seed germination (methotrexate, 2, 4-dinitrophenol, and cycloheximide) were identified using a small-molecule screen and used to probe the germination transcriptome. Germination-responsive transcripts were defined as those with significantly altered transcript abundance across all inhibitory treatments with respect to control germinating seeds, using data from ATH1 microarrays. This analysis identified numerous germination regulators as germination responsive, including the DELLA proteins GAI, RGA, and RGL3, the abscisic acid-insensitive proteins ABI4, ABI5, ABI8, and FRY1, and the gibberellin receptor GID1A. To help visualize these and other publicly available seed microarray data, we designed a seed mRNA expression browser using the electronic Fluorescent Pictograph platform. An overall decrease in gene expression and a 5-fold greater number of transcripts identified as statistically down-regulated in drug-inhibited seeds point to a role for mRNA degradation or turnover during seed germination. The genes identified in our study as responsive to germination define potential uncharacterized regulators of this process and provide a refined transcriptional signature for germinating Arabidopsis seeds.
Seeds are essential to the life cycle of most plants and determine when and where plants are established. Strictly speaking, the germination of seeds is defined as the events between the uptake of water by the dry seed and the initiation of elongation of the embryonic root or radicle (Bewley and Black, 1994
Experiments using whole-genome expression profiling have been performed to gain insight into the transcriptional program of seed germination and its genetic regulation. Nakabayashi et al. (2005)
A study by Carrera et al. (2007)
Other studies have produced microarray data related to seed germination under different conditions. Experiments using GA-deficient seeds (Ogawa et al., 2003
In this study, we have taken a different and complementary approach to characterizing the germination signature of Arabidopsis seeds using small-molecule inhibitors of germination. To identify these inhibitors, a chemical genetic screen of approximately 3,200 known bioactive molecules was performed. This strategy enabled the unbiased isolation of small-molecule germination inhibitors from a large set of known bioactive compounds. In general, the chemical genetic approach uses small molecules to probe biological pathways (Stockwell, 2000
Herein we describe a screen for inhibitors of Arabidopsis seed germination and the use of these inhibitors to dissect the germination transcriptional program. Global gene expression profiles in the drug-inhibited seeds were compared to those of germinating controls to identify changes in gene expression associated with germination. These data are placed within the context of previously described germination signature (Carrera et al., 2007
Identification of Seed Germination Inhibitors The commercially available LOPAC library of 1,280 biologically active compounds and the Spectrum library of 2,000 bioactive compounds were screened at 25 µM to identify molecules capable of blocking the germination of wild-type Arabidopsis Columbia (Col) seeds. The LOPAC and Spectrum libraries contain FDA-approved molecules, research inhibitors, natural products, and other bioactive molecules and can be used to identify known bioactive molecules that perturb a process of interest. Our screen for germination inhibitors was part of a larger effort aimed at the identification of both known and novel structure inhibitors of Arabidopsis cell expansion. Details of this larger screening effort will be published elsewhere.
Our screen identified eight compounds capable of inhibiting Arabidopsis germination (Table I
), including the plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA), which was present in the Spectrum library. Of the synthetic compounds identified, four stood out as having well-characterized mechanisms of action: methotrexate, aminopterin, cycloheximide, and 2,4-dinitrophenol (2,4-DNP). These compounds are general inhibitors of metabolism, protein synthesis, and energetics and not seed specific in their effects. 2,4-DNP is an uncoupler of mitochondrial membrane transport that blocks ATP synthesis by perturbing the mitochondrial proton gradient (El-Guindy et al., 1981
These well-characterized and mechanistically diverse inhibitors of germination were used to probe the seed germination transcriptional program and complement time course and comparative data of dormant and after-ripened genes in previous studies (Nakabayashi et al., 2005
To identify these germination-selective transcripts, we performed microarray analyses on stratified wild-type seeds imbibed on these drugs and isolated mRNA at 24 h after stratification. At this time point, control (untreated) seeds have shifted from a seed-developmental to a germination transcriptional program (Nakabayashi et al., 2005
To identify genes that are significantly associated with the germination transcriptional program, we used the Significance Analysis of Microarray (SAM) method (Tusher et al., 2001
This set of germination-responsive transcripts was analyzed by GO classification using the The Arabidopsis Information Resource (TAIR) GO annotations tool (complete list in Supplemental Table S2). Table II
shows the major ontological differences between the two gene sets. GermUP contains an increased number of nuclear-encoded genes whose products localize to chloroplasts, mitochondria, and plastids relative to GermDOWN. There are also a larger number of genes encoding proteins with hydrolase, transferase, and kinase activities, in addition to the components of electron transport and energy production. These latter data are consistent with the necessity for cell wall modification and increased metabolism prior to the completion of germination (Bewley and Black, 1994
These gene sets were also classified according to the seed-specific GO called TAGGIT (Carrera et al., 2007
The majority of the genes indentified by our SAM approach lacked an ascribed function so we developed an online tool to visualize gene expression patterns in seeds using our data and publicly available microarray datasets. Winter et al. (2007)
To extract information from the seed eFP browser, a user enters an Arabidopsis Genome Initiative (AGI) ID for a given gene of interest, and the transcript expression pattern and intensity across the available experiments are plotted pictographically. This visualization facilitates the interpretation of microarray data and serves as a tool for hypothesis generation as to gene function. For example, the expression pattern of the gene encoding ABI2 (At5g57050) is shown in the seed eFP output format (Fig. 1). Transcript abundance of this dormancy-mediating gene strongly correlates with seed samples representing the dormant state of Arabidopsis seeds.
The TAGGIT seed-specific GO (Carrera et al., 2007
Examination and Visualization of Germination-Regulated Transcripts
The GermDOWN dataset contained numerous genes previously identified as negative regulators of germination potential. These included the ABA-insensitive genes (fold change is in brackets after each gene) ABI4 (1.7 times) and ABI5 (2.7 times) whose corresponding mutants germinate on ABA concentrations inhibitory to the wild type (Koornneef et al., 2002
Various phosphatases that act in the ABA signaling pathway have been described, such as ABI1, ABI2, HAB1, HAB2, AHG1, and AHG3 (Leung et al., 1997 Numerous genes encoding kinases were also identified in the gene sets. Notably, a number of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase genes are germination responsive, including MPK9 (At3g18040), MPK20 (At2g42880), MKK2 (At4g29810), MAPKKK12 (At3g06030), and MAPKKK20 (At3g50310). The possibility that a MAP kinase cascade mediates the completion of seed germination remains to be investigated. The expression pattern of MAPKKK20 suggests this gene plays a role in this process. Expression of this gene is induced following imbibition, likely through the action of GA, and is expressed primarily in the endosperm (Supplemental Table S3).
A homolog of the dormancy quantitative trait locus DOG1 (Bentsink et al., 2006
The polyamine spermidine inhibits Arabidopsis seed germination when applied exogenously (Mirza and Bagni, 1991
Nitrate is capable of breaking seed dormancy in Arabidopsis (Hilhorst and Karssen, 1988
The soluble GA receptor GID1A was also present in the GermDOWN list (Ueguchi-Tanaka et al., 2005
Within the GermUP list were the negative regulators of ABA response ABI8, which encodes a protein of unknown function (Brocard-Gifford et al., 2004
A number of genes mediating light responses in seeds were included in the GermUP list, including PHOT1, NPH3, PAP1, LHY, and PIF3 (Parks and Quail, 1991
Carrera et al. (2007) Our GermUP gene set shared one-third of its genes with LerARUP genes and one-tenth with the CviARUP gene set (Fig. 3A ; Supplemental Table S4), indicating similarity between the transcripts from our analysis and those induced during germination in the analysis by Carrera et al. A total of 69 genes were shared between all three treatments, including the tubulin genes TUA4 (At1g04820), TUB1 (At1g75780), and TUB7 (At2g29550), and the homeobox gene ATHB31 (At1g14440).
The GermDOWN dataset was less similar to genes up-regulated in dormant seeds of Ler and Cvi (Fig. 3B; Supplemental Table S4). Only 33 of 205 GermDOWN genes were shared with LerDUP, and two shared with CviDUP, being a zinc finger (At5g66730) and a late embryogenesis abundant protein (At1g72100). This is consistent with the fact that the seeds used in the study were after-ripened and stratified prior to being placed under germination conditions. Their transcriptional profile consequently reflects a loss of dormancy in these seeds. Collectively, these data suggest that the chemical inhibition of seed germination is not inducing a state of dormancy in seeds, but rather is blocking the execution of germination. The effect of the germination inhibitors was also compared to the transcript profiles obtained by inhibiting germination with the hormone ABA under these same conditions. SAM was performed on microarray data generated from mRNA isolated from ABA-inhibited seeds and germinating control seeds. This analysis identified 101 genes up-regulated in ABA (ABAUP) and 38 genes down-regulated (ABADOWN). Shared between ABAUP and GermDOWN were 26 genes, including the putative endo-β-mannanase (At5g66460; Fig. 3C; Supplemental Table S4). ABADOWN shared 26 of 38 genes with GermUP (Fig. 3D). As expected, there are common changes in gene expression between ABA and drug-mediated inhibition of seed germination because both inhibit germination. The large number of ABA-specific transcriptional responses likely reflects ABA-responsive transcripts that are not normally responsive to germination. To evaluate the quality of our microarray data, quantitative reverse transcription (qRT)-PCR experiments were conducted using a small set of genes (ABI4, ABI5, β-mannanase) that showed modest, but significant, changes during germination (as determined using the SAM method). RNA samples for biological duplicate replicates for each of the chemical treatments were subjected to qRT-PCR along with triplicate germinating RNA controls using two different control primer pairs. We observed good concordance between the microarray data and the qRT-PCR data (Supplemental Fig. S1). The quality of our microarray data likely stems in part from our use of six mRNA populations (two biological replicates for each of three inhibitors) in generating the nongerminating seed mRNA populations.
The influence of each drug treatment on gene expression was examined. Given that each inhibitor treatment was done in duplicate, the SAM method could not be utilized and we focused on characterizing genes with greater than 2-fold change relative to the controls. The total number of genes down-regulated by drugs was 2.6 times greater than those up-regulated (Supplemental Table S5), a similar trend to that obtained by using the SAM method (Supplemental Table S1). TAGGIT ontological analysis of these gene sets was performed (Supplemental Table S5). Cycloheximide up-regulated a greater number of genes related to ABA than the other two treatments, and methotrexate induced a proportionally larger number of genes related to cell wall modification. The union of gene sets 2-fold or more up-regulated by each of the treatments (Fig. 4A ) included the hormone synthesis and response genes GA2-β-dioxygenase (At1g30040), NCED9 (At1g78390), GA 20-oxidase-3 (At5g07200), and ABI5. Cycloheximide treatment increases the transcript abundance of several hormone synthesis genes dramatically, up-regulating NCED6 (At3g2422) 50-fold, GA 2-oxidase-8 49-fold, and GA2-β-dioxygenase 25-fold. These data suggest a factor produced through de novo protein synthesis during seed germination may be critical for the regulation of some hormone biosynthetic enzyme gene expression.
Within the down-regulated gene sets from the individual treatments, no striking trends are apparent when taking into account the difference in the size of the gene sets (Fig. 4B). Cycloheximide does not have a strong effect on the abundance of translation-related transcripts, whereas methotrexate inhibits transcripts related to DNA repair relative to the other treatments. The DNP treatment specifically down-regulated the GA synthesis gene GA4 (At1g4120) and ABA synthesis gene ABA2 (At2g42350), in addition to the ABA response regulator HAB1 (At3g54400). Cycloheximide uniquely inhibited the expression of numerous GA and ABA synthesis genes, including NCED3 (At1g52060), NCED4 (At3g60440), GA 3-oxidase (At4g10290), GA5 (At4g08020), and the ABA-degrading enzyme CYP707A1 (At3g60630). The three-way intersection of the genes down-regulated by the individual drug treatments includes numerous genes related to photosynthesis, including LHCA6 (At1g19150), LHCA3 (At1g61520), LHCB3 (At5g54270), LHCB5 (At4g10340), and PSAH2 (At1g52230). Many genes related to photosynthesis were also identified as down-regulated in the presence of germination inhibitors (within the GermUP gene set) by SAM. These include PSI subunit D-1 (At4g02770), LHCA5 (At1g45474), PSII BY (At1g67740), chlorophyll synthetase (At3g51820), Rubisco activase (At2g39730), and the chlorophyll synthesis enzymes PORA (At5g54190) and PORB (At4g27440).
Given the germination-responsive nature of the nuclear-encoded components of photosynthesis, we examined the expression pattern of nuclear-encoded genes involved in photosynthesis and localized to this organelle. A group of 17 genes were tightly coregulated during seed germination (Supplemental Table S6) and are induced between 6 and 12 HAI in wild-type seeds (Fig. 5
). These genes are more highly expressed in the ABA-deficient genotype aba1-1, the ABA-insensitive mutant abi1-1. This is seen more strongly in the abi3-4 and fus3-8 mutants (Carrera et al., 2008
In this study, we induced a nongerminating seed phenotype using chemicals. The use of three mechanistically distinct inhibitors enabled germination to be probed without focusing on the effects of a single pathway, such as GA biosynthesis or ABA signaling, as has been done previously. By pooling the data of transcriptional responses triggered in seeds inhibited by these diverse mechanisms, we were able to isolate the transcriptional signature that defines germinating seeds. SAM identified numerous genes previously demonstrated to play potentially repressive roles in seed germination as differentially regulated between our germinating and nongerminating mRNA populations. These genes include GAI, RGA, RGL3, GID1A, ABI4, ABI5, ABI8, FRY1, and the light response-regulating genes PHOT1, NPH3, PAP1, LHY, PIF3, and DFL1. These findings illuminate the strength of the approach we took for uncovering genes related to the regulation of seed germination. A smaller ratio of genes was differentially up-regulated in germinating seeds (GermUP compared with after-ripened) relative those in dormant (GermDOWN compared with dormant; Fig. 3, A and B). These observations are consistent with the loss of dormancy in the seed samples used and suggest that chemical inhibition of germination does not reinitiate dormancy.
The GermDOWN gene set was significantly smaller than that of GermUP (207 and 1,008, respectively). In spite of its small size, this set contains many important factors that affect hormone sensitivity during germination (ABI4, ABI5, RGL3, RGA, GAI). The ABI loci are positive ABA response factors and the DELLA/RGL proteins negative GA response factors. It therefore appears that, during germination, there is a generalized reduction in the transcript levels of several factors that provide negative regulatory inputs into germination. Thus, one hypothesis to emerge from our observations is that the degradation or turnover of regulatory transcripts could be an important mechanism in the control of germination. The utilization of an mRNA degradation/turnover mechanism to promote germination is consistent with observations by Rajjou et al. (2004)
Transcription in the plastid has been implicated in the regulation of germination potential (Demarsy et al., 2006
The plastid may be regulating germination potential through the production of energy in some capacity. The up-regulation of photosynthetic machinery may also be a reflection of the seed's commitment to germinate in anticipation of autotrophic growth. The detection of nuclear-encoded plastid transcripts in the drug-inhibited seeds may reflect this inhibition of the transition to the vegetative state and the maintenance of the nonphotosynthetic embryonic state. The inhibition of nuclear-encoded photosynthetic transcripts by ABA and abi1, abi3, and fus3 suggests that this phenomenon is related to the maintenance of embryonic identity and, possibly, genome-uncoupled (GUN) signaling (Koussevitzky et al., 2007
Our approach of using mechanistically diverse chemical inhibitors combined with pooled transcriptomic data enabled us to uncouple the imbibition and germination transcriptional response. Notably, a large number of known regulators of hormone sensitivity were identified as germination responsive using this approach. Given that a multitude of genes with unknown function are also observed to be germination responsive, our data suggest that new factors in germination may potentially be uncovered by using our data to guide future genetic studies. Attempts to test this hypothesis are currently under way using T-DNA insertion lines. Collectively, our data provide a refined picture of the germination transcriptional signature and demonstrate the utility of small-molecule screens for seed biology.
Small-Molecule Screens To identify germination inhibitors, the LOPAC library (1,280 compounds) obtained from Sigma-Aldrich and the Spectrum library (Microsource Discovery Systems) were screened. Ninety-six-well microtiter plates (Greiner) were used for bioassays, prepared with 25 µM compound, 0.8% agar (w/v), and 0.34x Murashige and Skoog salts (Sigma-Aldrich). Compounds were diluted from 2.5 mM stock solutions in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) such that all wells contained 1% DMSO final concentration. Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seeds of the Col ecotype were harvested from plants grown under 24 h artificial light and after-ripened for 1 year at room temperature and ambient humidity. The seeds were then surface sterilized using 10% bleach and 0.01% Tween-20 in double deionized water, followed by four washes with double deionized water. They were then suspended in 0.1% agar (w/v) and sown into wells containing compound (approximately 15 seeds per well in 20 mL suspension), and then stratified for 4 d at 4°C. After 4 d of growth in the dark at 22°C, the plates were examined to identify germination and cell expansion inhibitors. Candidate hits were then retested to validate bioactivity. To compare relative potencies of hits, dose curves were conducted and used to infer hypocotyl growth inhibition IC50 values. The approximately 250 hits identified that affect cell expansion, but not germination, will be described elsewhere. Hypocotyl effects are our preferred comparator because most bioactive compounds do not inhibit germination, but do inhibit hypocotyl growth.
Col wild-type seeds were sown on 0.5x Murashige and Skoog medium (approximately 2,500 seeds per 150-mm plate) containing either 25 µM 2,4-DNP, 1 µM cycloheximide, 2 µM methotrexate, 1 µM ABA, or 1% DMSO (DMSO is the carrier solvent and all treatments contain 1% DMSO). Chemical concentrations were chosen from dose response curves as doses that yield robust inhibition of germination. 2,4-DNP, cycloheximide, methotrexate, and ABA (± isomers) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. Seeds were stratified on drug, hormone, or control plates for 4 d and then incubated in the dark at 22°C for 24 h. Seeds were collected, frozen in liquid nitrogen, then ground to fine powder form with frozen mortar and pestle, after which total RNA was extracted using the RNAqueous kit (Ambion) or using the phenol-chloroform extraction protocol, as described by Suzuki et al. (2004)
Pseudoproportional Venn diagrams were generated using Adobe Photoshop. The GO analysis was done on the TAIR Web site (www.arabidopsis.org), and TAGGIT analysis was done using a macro provided by Dr. Michael Holdsworth (University of Nottingham, UK).
Arabidopsis seeds were imbibed in water for 6 h on moistened filter paper in a 90-mm petri plate before their embryos were dissected from their endosperm. The isolated embryo was then placed on a 0.8% (w/v) agar-water plates containing a final concentration of 25 µM of the drug and 1% (v/v) final concentration of DMSO. Wild-type embryos germinated within 24 h, whereas the drug-treated embryos failed to germinate after 1 week.
Total RNA samples were quantified using a NanoDrop Spectrophotometer (Nanodrop Technologies). RT reactions were performed using the Fermentas first-strand cDNA synthesis kit following the manufacturer's directions with 100 ng total RNA input. qPCRs were performed using a Chromo 4 real-time PCR detector (Bio-Rad) controlled by Opticon Monitor 3 software. Standard curves were generated using five concentrations in triplicate in a dilution series, followed by the test sample run with two biological samples per treatment (each analyzed with triplicate technical replicates). qPCR results were quantified by the Pfaffl method as described in the real-time PCR applications guide (Bio-Rad). The DMSO-treated samples (i.e. germinating samples) were used as calibrators and the test samples were either cycloheximide-, 2,4-DNP-, or methotrexate-treated samples (i.e. nongerminating samples). The target genes were normalized against the reference β-tubulin gene (TUB4) or against a Zn-finger control (At5g18650), which was chosen because we noticed that many typical housekeeping genes exhibit significantly altered expression levels in the germination inhibitor datasets (see Supplemental Table S1 for examples). Primers utilized and PCR conditions are presented in Supplemental Table S7.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Dr. Eiji Nambara (RIKEN, Japan), Dr. Michael Holdsworth (Nottingham, UK), Dr. Bill Finch-Savage (Warwick, UK), Dr. Shinjiro Yamaguchi (RIKEN, Japan), and Dr. Ian Graham (York, UK) for providing seed microarray data. We also thank Hardeep Nahal for assisting with the creation of the seed eFP Browser and Thanh Nguyen for processing RNA samples for Affymetrix hybridizations. We are grateful to Peter McCourt for helpful suggestions on the manuscript prior to publication. Received October 16, 2007; accepted March 3, 2008; published March 21, 2008.
1 This work was supported by National Science and Engineering Research Council Discovery grants (to S.R.C. and N.J.P.), by a Canadian Research Chair in Plant Functional Genomics (to S.R.C.), and by the University of California, Riverside (startup funds to S.R.C.). Microarray experiments were conducted on equipment funded by Genome Canada/Ontario Genomics Institute.
2 These authors contributed equally to the research in this work.
3 These authors contributed equally to the supervision of this work. 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: Sean R. Cutler (sean.cutler{at}ucr.edu).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.107.110841 * Corresponding author; e-mail sean.cutler{at}ucr.edu.
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