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RESEARCH COMMUNICATION
1 Plant Biology Laboratory, The Salk Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA; 2 Howard Hughes Medical Institute Plant Biology Laboratory, The Salk Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA; 3 Zentrum für Molekularbiologie der Pflanzen, 72076 Tübingen, Germany
| Abstract |
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[Keywords: Brassinosteroid; endosomes; plant receptor kinase; Arabidopsis; receptor trafficking]
Received April 12, 2007; revised version accepted May 16, 2007.
-Rs, and GPCRs (DeFea et al. 2000
As the other big branch of multicellular life, plants have independently evolved a different set of receptors and show considerable divergence in endosomal structures and trafficking components (Shiu and Bleecker 2001
; Geldner and Jurgens 2006
). The >200 LRR receptor SerThr kinases (unrelated to TGF-
receptors) represent the predominant receptor family in the plant kingdom. Although the vast majority of them are orphan receptors (Morillo and Tax 2006
), the steroid receptor BRI1 has been intensively studied and provides a good model for plant receptor kinase activation (Vert et al. 2005
).
BRI1 is the receptor for brassinosteroids (BRs), which are crucial growth-promoting hormones in plants. Knock-out of BRI1 leads to extremely dwarfed and entirely BR-insensitive plants (Clouse et al. 1996
; Li and Chory 1997
; Kinoshita et al. 2005
). Binding of brassinolide (BL), the most active BR, to BRI1s extracellular domain activates the BRI1 kinase, releases the inhibitory BKI1 protein from the plasma membrane and increases it affinity for BAK1, a second LRR kinase (Wang et al. 2001
, 2005
; Nam and Li 2002
; Wang and Chory 2006
). This leads to dephosphorylation and consequent dimerization and DNA binding of the nuclear-localized BES1/BZR1 transcription factors, which control the genomic BR response (Yin et al. 2005
; Vert and Chory 2006
). This dephosphorylation is thought to be caused by a combination of inactivation of the GSK3/Shaggy kinase BIN2 (Vert and Chory 2006
) and the phosphatase activity of BSU1 (Mora-Garcia et al. 2004
). It is currently unknown how receptor activation leads to BIN2 inactivation, and the immediate relevant downstream targets of the activated receptor complex remain to be identified (Belkhadir and Chory 2006
). Nonetheless, the known components provide a straightforward and specific read-out of receptor activity.
BRI1 has been shown to localize to the plasma membrane and endosomal structures, and co-overexpression of BRI1 together with the BAK1 coreceptor in protoplasts leads to increased internal accumulation of BRI1. Based on this, it was proposed that BAK1 regulates BRI1 trafficking (Russinova et al. 2004
). However, an effect of BAK1 on BRI1 localization could not be demonstrated in intact plants, and the inherent limitations of the protoplast system precluded attempts to functionally connect endocytosis to signaling of BRI1.
| Results and Discussion |
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Activation of signaling pathways can lead to a relevant increase in protein flux between compartments, without necessarily shifting their steady-state accumulation in one or the other direction (Ando et al. 2004
). In the case of BRI1, an increase in endocytosis and degradation could be offset by increased synthesis and secretion, without causing observable changes in overall localization or levels of BRI1-GFP. Therefore, we decided to directly measure BRI1 turnover rates in planta. To do so, we placed BRI1-YFP under the control of a heat-shock promoter, generating lines that allow pulsed expression of the tagged BRI1 by a 2030-min induction at 37°C (Supplementary Movie 4). In combination with quantitative confocal microscopy, this allowed for a pulse-chase analysis exclusively in intact root meristems (Fig. 2C; Supplementary Fig. 2; Supplementary Movie 5). We determined the half-life of BRI1-YFP to be
5 h. This relative stability suggests that BRI1 either recycles during its lifetime or that only a minor fraction of BRI1 engages in endocytic transport to the vacuole with a majority remaining immobile. Again, the measured degradation rate of BRI1 was unaffected by addition of BL either to untreated or ligand-depleted roots (Fig. 2C). Based on these results, it is unlikely that BRs cause any difference in BRI1 intracellular transport, and we conclude that BRI1 trafficking is constitutive.
The activity status of BRI1 cannot be monitored directly at subcellular resolution. However, in untreated root cells a significant amount of plasma-membrane-localized BRI1 is apparently in an inactive state, as judged by the presence of the inhibitory BKI1 protein, which is released by BRI1-dependent phosphorylation after BR stimulation (Wang and Chory 2006
). We did not observe any BKI1 accumulation in endosomal structures, suggesting that the endosomal BRI1 may represent an active receptor pool (Fig. 2D). To test this idea, we attempted to specifically manipulate the subcellular localization of BRI1 and to monitor the consequences on signaling activity. A number of known chemical inhibitors of trafficking were tested (data not shown), but only Brefeldin A (BFA) turned out to be sufficiently specific for our purpose. BFA is a widely used inhibitor of endosomal trafficking in plants (Geldner 2004
). BFA had the expected effects on BRI1 localization, although we observed a fairly strong persistence of BRI1 signals at the plasma membrane. Nonetheless, we quantified plasma membrane versus intracellular signal in time-lapse images and showed that BFA induced a shift of BRI1 localization into endosomal compartments (Fig. 3A,B; Supplementary Movie 6). We also showed by pulse-chase analysis that BFA blocks translocation of BRI1 from earlier to late endosomal compartments and vacuoles, thereby interfering with BRI1-YFP degradation (Fig. 3C,D). This block in vacuolar transport is visualized, because BFA-treated cells did not accumulate residual YFP signals in vacuoles some hours after the expression pulse (Fig. 3D). Again, we did not observe any BKI1 accumulation in these BFA-induced endosomal aggregates, suggesting that the BRI1 therein could be part of active receptor complexes (Fig. 3E). For summary cartoon of BFA effects on BRI1 trafficking, see Supplementary Figure 3.
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receptor in animals, which also has been shown to traffic in a ligand-independent fashion, but nonetheless transduces signals from endosomes (Panopoulou et al. 2002Together, this now provides us with two plant receptor models that display opposite trafficking behavior. Interestingly, this difference in trafficking matches an underlying difference in the biology of these two receptors. Whereas FLS2 is a pathogen receptor evolved for rare but acute signaling, BRI1 is thought to perceive a more or less continuous signal, whose relevance lies in its modulation more than in acute presence or absence.
A number of interesting speculations have been put forward to explain why endosomal signaling might have evolved in animals. It was proposed that signaling from numerous motile endosomes might overcome problems of diffusion-based signaling cascades in large cells and that timing and specificity of signaling events can be better controlled in endosomes (Miaczynska et al. 2004
). Our data now indicate that endosomes in multicellular plants also act as signaling compartments, in spite of their independent sets of receptors and a differently organized endosomal system. We propose that a common, fundamental problem might have independently driven the development of signaling endosomes. Both multicellular plants and animals show vast increases of surface-localized receptor families. In such a situation, the available plasma membrane surface could become a limiting factor and trafficking of activated receptors to endosomes a means to increase the effective surface area available for signaling. This would restrict the dwelling time of receptors at the plasma membrane to ligand binding and activation, while compartmentalizing the longer-lasting downstream signaling events to the much less restricted inner surfaces of endosomal compartments.
| Materials and methods |
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Arabidopsis Columbia seedlings were grown vertically for 46 d with 24 h light at 22°C on 0.5x LS (Linsmayer-Skoog plant growth mixture) agar plates. Green cell suspension cultures were originally obtained from Ruishuang Geng (Ohio State University, Columbus, OH) and grown as described by Kim et al. (2003)
. Suspension-grown root meristem cultures were obtained according to an online protocol at http://www.bio.net/bionet/mm/arab-gen/1992-September/000708.html.
Constructs and generation of transgenic lines
A BRI1-GFP construct was cloned into a pGREEN II vector derivative containing nos-promoter-driven Basta resistance. It contains 1689 base pairs (bp) upstream of the BRI1 translational start codon and 629 bp downstream from the stop codon. The EGFP sequence was inserted at the C terminus as described by Friedrichsen et al. (2000)
. The contruct was transformed into wild type, and a line with close to identical expression levels was selected. This line therefore still contains twice the amount of overall BRI1 product (endogenous BRI1 plus BRI1-GFP). The promoter of the HS::BRI1-YFP construct was described by Knox et al. (2003)
. EYFP was fused to the C terminus as above.
Confocal microscopy and image quantification
Confocal microscopy was done with a Leica SP/2 inverted microscope. Live imaging of roots was done by placing root tips on an agar block that fit into silicon chambers with a coverslip bottom (Grace Biolabs). Specimens were either sealed with a slide (long-term observation) or overlaid with sufficient liquid media (short-term observations). Image analysis was done with the Leica SP/2 software package and the ImageJ bundle provided by the Wright Cell Imaging facility.
Hormone and inhibitor treatments
BL was obtained from CIDtech Research, Inc., and Brefeldin A was obtained from Sigma. For long-term treatments, hormones or drugs were dissolved into agar blocks onto which roots were placed (see above). Short-term observations were done by mixing the hormone/drug into a liquid drop overlaying the agar-embedded root tips (see above) while continuously scanning.
Heat-shock pulse-chase analysis
For quantification of the BRI1 degradation rate, seedlings of homozygous HS::BRI1-YFP lines were transferred into in 200 µL of liquid 0.5x LS in a 2-mL cap and heat-shocked in a 37°C water bath for 2030 min. Seedlings were then placed back onto an agar plate for 4.5 h, before being mounted for observation (see above). For initial experiments, entire agar plates with seedlings were sealed and left floating in the water bath for at least 45 min. Turnover rates were determined by measuring signal intensities in five regions of interest along the root meristem, as depicted in Supplementary Figure 2, of at least five roots per experiment.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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E-MAIL chory{at}salk.edu; FAX (858) 558-6379. ![]()
Supplemental material is available at http://www.genesdev.org.
Article published online ahead of print. Article and publication date are online at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.1561307
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