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Evidence for a Role for AtMYB2 in the Induction of the Arabidopsis Alcohol Dehydrogenase Gene (ADH1) Low Oxygen
Frank U. Hoerena, Rudy Dolferusa,b, Yingru Wua, W. James Peacocka,b, and Elizabeth S. Dennisa,ba C.S.I.R.O. Plant Industry, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia
b Cooperative Research Centre for Plant Science, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia
Corresponding author: Rudy Dolferus, C.S.I.R.O. Plant Industry, G.P.O. Box 1600, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia, rudy{at}pican.pi.csiro.au (E-mail).
Communicating editor: E. MEYEROWITZ
| ABSTRACT |
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The transcription factor AtMYB2 binds to two sequence motifs in the promoter of the Arabidopsis ADH1 gene. The binding to the GT-motif (5'-TGGTTT-3') is essential for induction of ADH1 by low oxygen, while binding to the second motif, MBS-2, is not essential for induction. We show that AtMYB2 is induced by hypoxia with kinetics compatible with a role in the regulation of ADH1. Like ADH1, AtMYB2 has root-limited expression. When driven by a constitutive promoter, AtMYB2 is able to transactivate ADH1 expression in transient assays in both Arabidopsis and Nicotiana plumbaginifolia protoplasts, and in particle bombardment of Pisum sativum leaves. Mutation of the GT-motif abolished binding of AtMYB2 and caused loss of activity of the ADH1 promoter in both transient assays and transgenic Arabidopsis plants. These results are consistent with AtMYB2 being a key regulatory factor in the induction of the ADH1 promoter by low oxygen.
PLANTS respond to conditions of low oxygen by switching carbohydrate metabolism in root cells from an oxidative to a fermentative pathway. In maize, where the molecular events initiated during low oxygen stress have been studied in most detail, transfer to conditions of low oxygen represses aerobic protein synthesis and, at the same time, initiates the synthesis of two transition polypeptides, with molecular weights of approximately 33 kD. After approximately 90 min, a group of about 20 polypeptides, the anaerobic polypeptides (ANPs) are synthesized (![]()
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Sequence elements in the promoter of the maize ADH1 gene, which are critical for anaerobic induction, have been identified (![]()
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Arabidopsis has a similar anaerobic response to maize (![]()
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The Arabidopsis ADH1 GT-motif contains a potential Myb binding site. Myb transcription factors bind to a consensus sequence with an AAC central motif (5'-T/CAAC[T/G]G-3'; or 5'-CC[T/A]ACC-3'; ![]()
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In this paper we present evidence that AtMYB2 is rapidly induced by low oxygen conditions, and that it binds to the GT-motif in the ADH1 promoter. In transient assays AtMYB2 activates expression of an ADH1-GUS construct, and this transactivation does not occur when the GT-motif is mutated.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plant material, growth conditions, and stress treatments:
Arabidopsis thaliana seeds, ecotypes C24 or Columbia (Co-0), used in this study were grown on Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium at 22° (16/8 hr light/dark cycle, 200 µE/sec/cm2). Stress and ABA treatments were carried out hydroponically, in dishes containing 15 ml liquid MS medium as previously described (![]()
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Recombinant DNA techniques:
All cloning methods were according to standard procedures (![]()
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A full-length AtMYB2 cDNA, flanked by BamHI sites was obtained using RT-PCR of anaerobically induced root RNA. The resulting cDNA was cloned between the 35S promoter and the 3' NOS terminator sequence of plasmid pART7 (![]()
GBox-1]ADH-GUS, p[
GBox-2]ADH-GUS, p[
GT]ADH-GUS, and p[
GC]ADH-GUS were described earlier (![]()
MBS-2]ADH-GUS, containing substitution mutations in the MBS-2 site, was constructed by amplifying fragments overlapping the MBS2 site (5'-TAGCAACGCC-3') and transforming this site into a NotI restriction site (5'-GCGGCCGCAT-3'). The full-length ADH1 promoter was reconstructed, and the mutated promoter was cloned into plasmid pADH1-GUS to replace the wild-type promoter. The construct was subcloned in binary vector pBIN19 (![]()
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RNA extractions, Northern and Southern blot analysis:
RNA extraction, gel electrophoresis, Northern blot hybridizations using antisense RNA probes, and filter washing procedures were as described previously (![]()
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Tissue culture, protoplast transient assays, particle bombardment, and Agrobacterium transformation:
Arabidopsis root cultures were established by placing 1-month-old leaf cuttings (ecotype C24) on callus-induction medium (![]()
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Particle bombardment of pea leaves was carried out using a homemade helium gun. A total of 25 µl of particles (100 mg/ml in 50% glycerol; 50:50 mixture of tungsten and gold particles) was mixed with 26 µg plasmid DNA (1 µg/µl), 25 µl 2.5 M CaCl2, and 10 µl spermidine (0.1 M). The total volume was then adjusted to 40 µl, and 4 µl was used for the bombardment of one leaf. Reporter and effector plasmids were used in a 1:1 ratio. Leaves were incubated on MS plates for 16 hr before GUS staining.
GUS histochemical staining and fluorometric assays:
GUS fluorometric assays and in vivo histochemical stainings were carried out as previously described (![]()
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| RESULTS |
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The Arabidopsis ADH1 promoter has binding sites for AtMYB2:
The Arabidopsis ADH1 promoter contains two potential Myb Binding Sites (MBS) in the 200 bp immediately upstream of the start of transcription (Figure 1A). The more distal MBS-2 at -189 to -187 lies in the footprinted region containing G-box-2 (![]()
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AtMYB2 was expressed in Escherichia coli as a glutathione-S-transferase fusion protein (AtMYB2-GST) and affinity purified. The fusion protein was used in EMSAs with oligonucleotides corresponding to the MBS-1 and MBS-2 motifs (Figure 1B). The recombinant AtMYB2 protein retarded both classes of oligonucleotides (Figure 2A). Binding was competed by unlabeled homologues, but not by a nonspecific competitor (salmon sperm DNA; Figure 2A). Binding to the monomers was competed out by 100200-fold molar excess of either of the MBS-1 or MBS-2 oligos. Multimerization of the MBS-1 oligo gave significantly stronger binding than the monomer (Figure 2A), a 500-fold molar excess excluding all binding to the tetramer; at this level, some degree of competition was also observed with the nonspecific competitor (salmon sperm DNA; Figure 2A). AtMYB2-GST did not bind to other motifs of the ADH1 promoter (G-box-1 or GC-motif sequences; data not shown). Another plant Myb transcription factor, GAMYB (![]()
-amylase promoter, did not interact with either MBS-1 or MBS-2 when expressed as a GAMyb-GST fusion protein (Figure 2A).
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AtMYB2 binding to MBS-1 and MBS-2 requires the AAC-core:
The AAC-core sequence of MBS-1 and MBS-2 was mutated to CCC (
MBS-1/1 and
MBS-2) or GAC (
MBS-1/2; Figure 1B). Similar mutations in vertebrate and plant Myb factors abolished binding (![]()
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MBS-1/1 and
MBS-2) did not compete for binding to wild-type MBS-1 and MBS-2 probe sequence (Figure 2B); the GAC core (
MBS-1/2) had much reduced ability to compete for binding to wild-type MBS-1 (Figure 2B). The EMSA results indicate that AtMYB2 binding requires the AAC-core sequence of both MBS-1 and MBS-2. The fact that GAMYB did not interact with MBS-1 and MBS-2 further suggests that both motifs are specific interaction sites for AtMYB2.
AtMYB2 expression is induced by low oxygen stress in roots:
We found that AtMYB2 mRNA levels were increased significantly by low oxygen treatment, with higher induction in roots than leaves (Figure 3A). There was an average of 5.6-fold induction, with root expression levels about seven times higher than in shoots (Figure 3B). Expression peaks within 4 hr, declines by 68 hr, and increases again (Figure 3A). The timing of AtMYB2 induction by hypoxia was compared to that of ADH1, using RNA extracted from Arabidopsis root cultures (Figure 3C). Induction of ADH1 mRNA is tightly coupled to the first rise (24 hr) in AtMYB2 mRNA (Figure 3C). Peak ADH1 levels were obtained between 4 and 6 hr, followed by a decline and a second increase reaching maximal expression after 24 hr, mirroring a second rise in AtMYB2 mRNA levels.
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The induction of AtMYB2 is also coordinated with the induction of other anaerobically induced Arabidopsis genes, such as the pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC1; DOLFERUS, PEACOCK and DENNIS, unpublished results) and sucrose synthase genes (ASUS1; ![]()
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Induction of AtMYB2 by other stresses correlates with ADH1 induction:
Maximal induction of ADH1 occurs after 810 hr of dehydration stress, 2024 hr of low temperature, and 4 hr of ABA treatment (![]()
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AtMYB2 mRNA accumulates following dehydration with kinetics similar to those of ADH1 mRNA, with two peaks (4 and 10 hr) in both (Figure 3C). We also found two peaks of ABA induction of AtMYB2 (2 and 10 hr; 24- and 15-fold induction respectively), and of ADH1 (peaks at 4 and 24 hr; Figure 3C). Low temperature treatment resulted in transient AtMYB2 mRNA accumulation between 2 and 6 hr (5-fold induction), with induction of ADH1 mRNA reaching a peak level between 12 and 24 hr. These data suggest that AtMYB2 expression is correlated both temporally and spatially with ADH1 expression. The Arabidopsis rab18 gene is strongly induced by dehydration and ABA in both leaves and roots (![]()
AtMYB2 does transactivate ADH1:
To investigate whether AtMYB2 could transactivate ADH1 in the absence of hypoxia, an ADH1-promoter-GUS reporter construct (ADH1-GUS; ![]()
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For quantitative data, we carried out transient assays in Arabidopsis mesophyll protoplasts. AtMYB2 transactivated ADH1 promoter activity, increasing expression by a factor of 22.5-fold (Figure 6A). A greater stimulation (2.54.5-fold) was observed in N. plumbaginifolia suspension cell protoplasts (Figure 6A). Transactivation was low when lower amounts of effector plasmid compared to the reporter plasmid were used (data not shown).
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AtMYB2 transactivates the ADH1 promoter via the GT-motif (MBS-1):
The presence of a second potential AtMYB2 binding site, MBS-2, in the ADH1 promoter suggested the promoter may resemble the maize Adh1 promoter in having two functionally important GT-motifs (Figure 1). MBS-2 is in an in vivo footprinted segment. The area previously mutagenized (G-box-2) did not affect ADH1 expression (![]()
MBS-2)ADH1-GUS). Mutation of all the bases of the AAC core eliminates binding to AtMYB2 in EMSA assays (Figure 2B). Mutations of MBS-1 did abolish transactivation in Arabidopsis mesophyll protoplasts (Figure 6B). In contrast, we found that MBS-2 mutations increased transactivation by about 1.5-fold over wild-type levels in N. plumbaginifolia protoplasts. This could indicate that different factors interact with the ADH1 promoter in suspension cells compared to the mesophyll protoplast system, or that different factors interact with the ADH1 promoter in N. plumbaginifolia. Alternatively, mutation of MBS-2 could make more AtMYB2 factor available for binding to MBS-1.
Mutation of the GC-motif (Figure 1B; ![]()
In transgenic plants, ADH1-GUS expression was decreased dramatically when mutations were introduced into the GT+GC motifs (![]()
Cycloheximide inhibits ADH1 induction but increases AtMYB2 expression:
If AtMYB2 accumulation is necessary for ADH1 expression then induction of ADH1 mRNA would require protein synthesis. Figure 7A shows cycloheximide prevents accumulation of ADH1 mRNA following inductive conditions, indicating that protein synthesis is required. In contrast, cycloheximide caused a 29-fold increase in AtMYB2 mRNA levels for all treatments (Figure 7B). It is not clear whether this effect is at the transcriptional or post-transcriptional level, but the results do show that AtMYB2 mRNA can be induced without prior de novo protein synthesis.
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| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Our results suggest that AtMYB2 is a key transcription factor in stress-induced ADH1 gene expression. AtMYB2 binds to two sites in the Arabidopsis ADH1 promoter, the MBS-1 and MBS-2 motifs. The binding is specific to AtMYB2; neither of two other plant Myb factors, GAMYB (![]()
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AtMYB2 has tissue and temporal expression patterns compatible with the proposed role as key regulator of ADH1 transcription. The tissue-specificity of AtMYB2-GUS expression (![]()
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The low temperature, dehydration and ABA responses also require the G-box-1 sequence (![]()
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Our finding that the induction of transcription and subsequent translation of ADH1 by low oxygen is sensitive to cycloheximide implies that protein synthesis is required for the operation of this response. On the other hand, cycloheximide does not inhibit AtMYB2 induction, but actually increases it. We conclude that induction of AtMYB2 may be the initial response, and that its synthesis is required for the induction of ADH1, and probably for the other anaerobic polypeptides. Transition proteins are synthesized before the induction of the anaerobic proteins (![]()
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The transient expression experiment with cotransfection of 35S-AtMYB2 and ADH1-GUS also showed that AtMYB2 is a key transcription factor for the ADH1 promoter. While transactivation levels in protoplasts (23-fold) were lower than induction levels observed in roots following low oxygen treatment (510-fold at protein level; 2050-fold at mRNA level), they were of the same magnitude as those observed in N. plumbaginifolia suspension protoplasts following low oxygen treatment (![]()
In plants, AtMYB2 expression under low oxygen conditions is confined to the roots. Following dehydration stress or ABA treatment AtMYB2 mRNA is induced both in leaves and roots, as is ADH1 (Figure 3B), paralleling the increase in ABA levels in these two tissues (![]()
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Our mutation analysis has shown that AtMYB2 probably also requires association with the protein binding to the GC-motif (Figure 6; possibly the Arabidopsis homologue of GCBP-1; ![]()
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The GT-motif is present in all anaerobically induced genes (Table 1), and is usually located between positions -300 and -100 relative to the start of transcription. The consensus sequence is 5'-AAACCA-3'. Depending on whether or not a GC-motif is next to the GT-motif, the consensus sequence can be extended to 5'-AAACCAAA-3' or 5'-AAACCG[G/C][G/C]-3' respectively (Table 1). The core AtMYB2 recognition sequence in the rd22 promoter (5'-TAACCA-3') is similar to the GT-motif (![]()
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
The authors wish to thank S. STOPS for excellent technical assistance, K. SHINOZAKI for providing us with the AtMYB2-GST clone, L. WILLMITZER for providing us with the Arabidopsis ASUS1 probe, P. LARKIN for providing us with the N. plumbaginifolia suspension cell protoplasts, and F. GUBLER for many helpful discussions throughout the work. F. HOEREN was supported by grants from the Australian Research Council (ARC), Alexander von Humboldt, and the Deutsche Forschungs Gemeinschaft (DFG grant HO 1824).
Manuscript received January 6, 1998; Accepted for publication March 23, 1998.
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) than in shoots (
). Error bars represent standard errors for three repeats. (C) Induction kinetics of AtMYB2 mRNA (
), in Arabidopsis root cultures. Results are expressed as a percentage of maximum mRNA induction obtained for each treatment (24 hr).


, -35S-ATMYB2; 

