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GL3 Encodes a bHLH Protein That Regulates Trichome Development in Arabidopsis Through Interaction With GL1 and TTG1
C. Thomas Payne1,a, Fan Zhanga, and Alan M. Lloydaa Molecular Cell and Developmental Biology and the Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Texas, Austin, Texas 78712-1095
Corresponding author: Alan M. Lloyd, MCDB and ICMB, 2500 Speedway, University of Texas, Austin, TX 78712-1095., lloyd{at}uts.cc.utexas.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: C. S. GASSER
| ABSTRACT |
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Arabidopsis trichome development and differentiation is a well-studied model for plant cell-fate determination and morphogenesis. Mutations in TRANSPARENT TESTA GLABRA1 (TTG1) result in several pleiotropic defects including an almost complete lack of trichomes. The complex phenotype caused by ttg1 mutations is suppressed by ectopic expression of the maize anthocyanin regulator R. Here it is demonstrated that the Arabidopsis trichome development locus GLABRA3 (GL3) encodes an R homolog. GL3 and GLABRA1 (GL1) interact when overexpressed together in plants. Yeast two-hybrid assays indicate that GL3 participates in physical interactions with GL1, TTG1, and itself, but that GL1 and TTG1 do not interact. These data suggest a reiterated combinatorial model for the differential regulation of such diverse developmental pathways as trichome cell-fate determination, root hair spacing, and anthocyanin secondary metabolism.
ARABIDOPSIS trichome cell-fate determination is positively regulated by at least three regulatory genes, TTG1 (![]()
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TTG1 was reported to be a WD repeat-containing protein [conserved repeating units usually ending in Trp-Asp (![]()
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Two Arabidopsis R-homologous genes have been described, ATMYC1 (![]()
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An Arabidopsis expressed sequence tag (EST), 146D23T7, which was highly similar to R and DELILA, was identified by the Arabidopsis genome effort. This EST was used to screen a phage library of Arabidopsis genomic DNA, which resulted in the cloning of a fragment of a second bHLH gene also highly similar to R and DELILA (F. ZHANG and A. M. LLOYD, unpublished results) and present in the database as MYC6. Although other Arabidopsis bHLH sequences are also present in the database, the extensive homology between these two genes and the known anthocyanin regulatory loci from maize and Antirrhinum caused us to focus efforts on 146D23T7 and MYC6, the latter identified here as GL3.
In contrast to the ttg1-1 and gl1-1 mutants, the gl3-1 mutant is not devoid of trichomes (![]()
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Here we describe experiments that identify the trichome development regulatory factor encoded by the GL3 gene as a bHLH protein with significant homology to R. It is furthermore demonstrated that the GL3 protein can interact synergistically with GL1 to promote trichome development in plants. Finally, complementary two-hybrid data showing interactions in yeast between GL3 and other known regulators of trichome development are presented and a regulatory model supported by these data is described. In this model, TTG1 regulates the several distinct developmental pathways defined by ttg1 mutations by influencing the activity of one or more bHLH factors including GL3.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plant growth conditions:
Arabidopsis thaliana was grown in Premier ProMix BX (Hummerts, St. Louis) at 22° under continuous fluorescent illumination. Plants were fertilized weekly with a dilute solution of Peters 20-20-20 all-purpose plant food.
Arabidopsis strains:
The gl3-1, gl3-2, and ttg1-1 mutations are in the Landsberg erecta (Ler) ecotype. With the exception of gl3-2, all strains are from the Ohio State Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center. The gl3-2 mutant was a gift of Martin Hülskamp and is an EMS-induced mutation in the Ler background.
Sequencing of GL3 mutant alleles:
PCR products spanning the entire gl3-1 allele were sequenced in both directions and the mutation in codon 378 was identified. To verify the sequence, sequences of PCR products spanning the mutation were generated from three independent amplifications, each from a separate DNA preparation derived from different plants. Wild-type Ler sequences, spanning the region containing the gl3-1 mutation, from two independently generated PCR products, each from different template DNA preparations, agreed in both cases with the GenBank sequence for the MYC6 R homolog. PCR products from the gl3-2 mutation were sequenced until the mutation at codon 46 was identified. This region was sequenced in both directions from PCR products from two independent DNA preps from different plants to verify the sequence. It is possible that gl3-2 contains additional mutations later in the coding region.
Two-hybrid ß-galactosidase lift assays:
All two-hybrid analysis was done in the yeast strain Y190 (![]()
Plasmid constructs:
pD2LX, GL3 genomic complementation plasmid:
The genomic GL3 coding sequence plus
1 kb of sequence 5' and 3' of the gene was amplified by PCR from the P1 clone MYC6 (AB006707), using the primers 5D25 (5'-GGGGGATCCGATCACTCAAATAGTAATAAGACTG-3') and 3D23 (5'-GGGGGATCCCTGATCGCACACTTTGTGTG-3') and the product cloned into pBluescript II KS+ (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) as a BamHI fragment to create pD2L-2. The pD2L-2 insert was subcloned as a BamHI fragment into the BglII site of the T-DNA vector pAL47 (![]()
pEZF1, GL3 antisense plasmid:
A partial clone of GL3 was isolated by homology to 146D23T7 from an Arabidopsis genomic library. A SalI fragment of this was subcloned into pBluescript II KS+ to create pZF1. The primers M13R (5'-AGCGGATAACAATTTCACACAGGA-3') and Fun102/SalI (5'-CGCGCGTCGACCAACTAAGTAGTCTTCAACAGATCCA-3') were used to amplify a 1.8-kb PCR product from this template and it was cloned as an EcoRI-SalI fragment into pLBJ22 digested with EcoRI and XhoI in the antisense orientation. pLBJ22 is a derivative of pKYLX71 created as follows: The preexisting EcoRI site of pKYLX71 (![]()
pD22, GL3 plant overexpression plasmid: The P1 clone MYC6 was used as a template for PCR amplification of the GL3 gene. The oligonucleotides Ros102/EcoRI (5'-GGGGGAATTCGCCATGGCTACCGGACAAAACAGAACAAC-3') and Fun102/SalI (5'-CGCGCGTCGACCAACTAAGTAGTCTTCAACAGATCCA-3') were used as primers, introducing EcoRI and SalI sites, respectively. This product was cloned into the corresponding sites of pBSKS+ to create pDRAT2. The insert in pDRAT2 was sequenced and subcloned into pLBJ21 digested with EcoRI and XhoI as an EcoRI-SalI fragment. Note that GL3 contains an internal SalI site. pLBJ21 is a derivative of pKYLX71 created as follows: The self-complementary oligo, 5'-CGGAATTCCG-3', was ligated into the filled, unique HindIII site of pLBJ17. This replaces the unique HindIII with a unique EcoRI site in the CaMV 35S expression cassette of pKYLX71.
pGL3A and -B, GL3 full-length two-hybrid constructs: The GL3 cDNA was amplified by reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR from total RNA prepared from an Arabidopsis line overexpressing GL3 from the pD22 construct, using the primers DRA25 (5'-GGGAGCTCGAATTCGCCATGGCTACCGGACAAAACAGA-3')and DRA23 (5'-G GTCTAGAGGATCCTCAACAGATCCATGCAACCC-3'). This product was cloned into pBluescript II KS+ as a SacI-XbaI fragment to create pD2CD-7. After sequencing, the pD2CD-7 insert was subcloned as an EcoRI-BamHI fragment into the corresponding sites of pGAD424 and pAS2-1 (both from CLONTECH) to create pGL3A and -B, respectively.
pGL3NTA and -B, GL3 400 amino acid, amino end, two-hybrid plasmids: A 5' fragment of the GL3 cDNA encoding the first 400 amino acids of the protein was amplified from the pD2CD-7 template using the DRA25 (see pGL3A and -B) and D2NT (5'-GGGGYCGACTCATCCTGATGATGATGACGATGAT-3') primers and cloned into pBluescript II KS+ as a SacI-SalI fragment to create pD2NT. After sequencing, this insert was subcloned into pGAD424 or pAS2-1 as an EcoRI-SalI fragment to create pGL3NTA and -B, respectively.
pGL396A and -B, GL3 96 amino acid, amino truncation, two-hybrid plasmids: The fragment encoding the carboxy-terminal 541 amino acids of GL3 was amplified from pD2CD-7 using the primers D2096 (5'-GGGTCGACCCATGGAATTCGCCG GATCTCAAGTCACC-3') and DRA23 and cloned as a SalI-XbaI fragment into pBluescript II KS- to create pD296. After sequencing, this insert was subcloned into pGAD424 and pAS2-1 as an EcoRI-BamHI fragment to create pGL396A and -B, respectively.
pGL3211A and -B, GL3 211 amino acid, amino truncation, two-hybrid plasmids: The fragment encoding the carboxy-terminal 426 amino acids of GL3 was amplified from pD2CD-7 using the primers D2211 (5'-GGGTCGACCCATGGAATTCCCGTA CGCTACAATATTACC-3') and DRA23 and cloned as a SalI-XbaI fragment into pBluescript II KS- to create pD2211. After sequencing, this insert was subcloned into pGAD424 and pAS2-1 as an EcoRI-BamHI fragment to create pGL3211A and -B, respectively.
pGL3CTA and -B, GL3 400 amino acid, amino terminal truncation, two-hybrid plasmids: A 3' fragment of GL3 encoding the carboxy-terminal 237 amino acids of the protein was amplified by PCR from pD2CD-7 using the primers D2CT (5'-GGGTCGACCCATGGAATTCACCGCCACGGTCACGGC-3') and DRA23 and cloned into pBluescript II KS+ as a SalI-XbaI fragment to create pD2CT. After sequencing, the insert was subcloned into pGAD424 or pAS2-1 as an EcoRI-SalI fragment.
pGL1A and -B, GL1 full-length two-hybrid plasmids: RT-PCR was employed to amplify a fragment encoding the entire 216 amino acid protein of GL1 from ecotype Col-O using the primers GL1A (5'-GGGGGGGGGAATTCATGAGAATAAGGAGAAGAGATG-3') and GL1C (5'-GGGGGGGGCTGCAGATTAAACTAAAGGCAGTATC-3'). The product was cloned into pBluescript II SK- as an EcoRI-PstI fragment to create pSRV2 and sequenced. This insert was subsequently cloned into pGAD424 and pGBT9 (CLONTECH) as an EcoRI-PstI fragment to create pGL1A and -B, respectively.
pGL1NTA and -B, GL1 myb domain two-hybrid plasmids: RT-PCR was employed to amplify the 5' fragment encoding the 121 amino-terminal residues of GL1 from ecotype Col-O using the primers GL1A (5'-GGGGGGGGGAATTCATGAGAATAAGGAGAAGAGATG-3') and GL1B (5'-GGGGGGGGCTGCAGTTAATCTCCGACGAGTTTTTTGCTG-3'). The product was first cloned into pBluescript II SK- as an EcoRI-PstI fragment to create pSRV1 and sequenced. This insert was subsequently cloned into pGAD424 and pGBT9 (CLONTECH) as an EcoRI-PstI fragment to create pGL1NTA and -B, respectively.
pTTG1A and -B, TTG1 full-length two-hybrid plasmids: Full-length TTG1 was amplified from genomic Wassilewskija (WS) wild-type DNA (the coding region contains no introns) using the primers WD40X5 (5'-GGGAATTTCGCCATGGATAATTCAGCTCCAGATTC-3') and WD40X3 (5'-GGTCTAGACTCGACTCATTAGAATCTAGGCCTAGCAA-3') and cloned as an EcoRI-SalI fragment into pBluescript II KS+ to create pWS10. After sequencing, the pWS10 insert was subcloned into pGAD424 and pAS2-1 as an EcoRI-SalI fragment to create pTTG1A and -B, respectively.
pTTG1MA and -B, TTG1 25 amino acid, carboxy-terminal truncation, two-hybrid plasmids: A truncated version of TTG1 was amplified from pWS10 using the primers WD40X5 and TTG1M1 (5'-GGTCTAGAGTCGACCAACTAATTAATCTCCGAACCAGC-3') and cloned into pBluescript II KS- as an EcoRI-XbaI fragment to create pMTTG. After sequencing, the insert was subcloned into pGAD424 and pAS2-1 as an EcoRI-SalI fragment to create pTTG1MA and -B, respectively.
Plant transformation:
Binary constructs were introduced into Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain GV3101 containing pMP90 (![]()
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Trichome counts: Trichome numbers were counted for each of the first four fully expanded leaves on soil-grown seedlings using an Olympus dissecting scope. Leaves were numbered in order of appearance except the first two leaves, which emerge at the same time and are considered equivalent. The trichome branching phenotype in Table 1 refers to the number of processes rather than branching events; thus 1 is an unbranched spike, 2 is two-branched, etc.
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Scanning electron microscopy: Plant materials were fixed overnight in 2% glutaraldehyde and 0.1 M cacodylate and then taken through an alcohol dehydration series, once in 35, 50, 65, 75, 85, and 95% ethanol, and twice in 100% ethanol, for at least 2 hr per step. Specimens were critical-point dried in a Tousimis Samdri-790 and sputter coated with a gold-palladium alloy using a Ladd instrument. Specimens were visualized with a Phillips 515 scanning electron microscope and photographed with Polaroid film.
RT-PCR experiments:
Two-week-old Arabidopsis seedlings grown on germination medium, 1 x Murashige and Skoog salts (Sigma), 10 g/liter sucrose, 1 x Gamborg's B5 vitamins, and 8 g/liter tissue culture agar (Carolina Biological), under continuous fluorescent light at 22°, were frozen in liquid nitrogen. Total RNA was prepared using Trizol reagent (GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD) and the procedural modifications recommended by the manufacturer for plant tissue. RNA was quantified spectrophotometrically. A total of 2 µg of each sample was treated with amplification grade DNase (GIBCO BRL) as per the manufacturer's instructions. Oligo(dT) was used to prime reverse transcription by Superscript II (GIBCO BRL) from 1 µg DNase-treated RNA template. Parallel PCR reactions using each reverse transcription reaction (5 of 20 µl) as template were set up as follows in a total volume of 100 µl: 10 µl 10 x PCR buffer, 3 µl 50 mM MgCl2, 5 µl 10 µM 5' primer, 5 µl 10 µM 3' primer, and 1 µl (= 5 units) Taq polymerase (GIBCO BRL). Control primers, APTC5 (5'-GAAATGGCGACTGAAGATGTG-3') and APTC3 (5'-CTCCTTTCCCTTAAGCTCTG-3'), amplify a fragment of the Arabidopsis adenine phosphoribosyl transferase (APRT) message. APRT has been shown to be constitutively expressed at low levels in all cells (![]()
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| RESULTS |
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The bHLH gene contained on MYC6 is GLABRA 3:
The MYC6 P1 clone (genomic sequence AB006707) contains an R-homologous gene and is part of a contig that maps 1618 Mb from the top of chromosome 5 near restriction fragment length polymorphism marker m423. The putative protein encoded by this clone contains 637 amino acids and is 52% homologous throughout its length to R from maize, a monocot. It is 55% homologous to DELILA (![]()
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93% of the encoded protein.
To verify that the mutation in the MYC6 homolog was responsible for the gl3-1 mutant phenotype, the mutant was complemented by transformation with a MYC6 genomic fragment containing the R-homologous gene under the control of its native regulatory elements. A PCR fragment was generated that contained the entire coding region and
1 kb of flanking genomic DNA both upstream and downstream of the putative start and stop codons. This fragment was subcloned into an A. tumefaciens binary vector to create pD2LX. The gl3-1 allele is in the Landsberg erecta (Ler) ecotype, which has fewer trichomes than most "wild-type" strains (![]()
Antisense GL3 expression:
Further evidence in support of a role for the MYC6/GL3 locus in trichome development is provided by antisense expression experiments. An
1800-bp PCR fragment of the genomic region starting just after the stop codon was placed in reverse orientation under the control of the constitutive CaMV 35S promoter, and the resulting construct, pEZF1, was transformed into wild-type ecotype WS. GL3 antisense expression caused the plants to produce altered proportions of two- and three-branched trichomes, approximating the gl3-1 mutant branching phenotype (Fig 1D and Fig E; Table 1) but it had only a moderate effect at best on reducing trichome numbers. This phenotype is dominant and segregates with the T-DNA when the transformants are either selfed or outcrossed. Three out of 20 GL3 antisense transformants examined show this altered trichome branching phenotype. It is interesting that the gl3-2 mutation has the same effect of increasing the proportion of two-branched trichomes but has only a modest affect on total trichome number (Table 1).
GL3 overexpression increases trichome differentiation:
A GL3 genomic PCR fragment without the flanking regulatory regions was cloned in the sense orientation under the control of the CaMV 35S promoter to create pD22. Fig 1F shows a WS wild-type plant overexpressing GL3 from this construct (compare to Fig 1D). The increased trichome phenotype seen in these plants is very similar to that seen in plants overexpressing R (![]()
GL3 overexpression suppresses ttg1-1:
Fig 1K shows that ttg1-1 plants overexpressing GL3 from this construct produce trichomes. GL3 overexpression also restores anthocyanin and seed coat mucilage production in ttg1-1 (data not shown). In contrast to R, when overexpressed, GL3 is not a strong suppressor of the trichome defect, and in some cases transformed plants are as hairless as the ttg1-1 mutant but low levels of anthocyanins are restored (data not shown).
The fact that overexpression of GL3 produces an abundance of trichomes in the presence of a full-length TTG1 protein, but not in plants without, indicates that TTG1 is necessary for full GL3 function. That R does not require functional TTG1 further suggests that there is a fundamental difference between the regulatory roles performed and the functional interactions participated in by the R and GL3 proteins.
Overexpressed GL3 and GL1 interact in plants:
Arabidopsis overexpressing GL1 were crossed to GL3 overexpressers to assess the interaction between these proteins in plants. GL1 overexpression leads to a reduction in the number of trichomes in a wild-type background (Fig 1G; ![]()
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GL3 interacts with other trichome regulators in yeast:
Prior to complementation of the gl3-1 mutant, two-hybrid analysis in yeast (![]()
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Fragments of the GL3 cDNA were subcloned as fusions to the GAL4 AD and tested for interaction with the GL1 and TTG1 constructs. The amino-terminal two-thirds of the protein (pGL3NTA) was sufficient for both interactions to occur, but amino-terminal truncations of 96 (pGL396A) and 211 (pGL3211) amino acids from GL3 abolished the interaction with the MYB domain-containing GL1 construct. The interaction with TTG1 was not affected by these truncations, indicating that the two trichome regulators bind at different sites on the GL3 protein or that GL1 binding is relatively more sensitive to conformational changes resulting from the truncations. A DBD fusion to TTG1 lacking 25 amino acid residues from its carboxy terminus, pTTG1MB, which recapitulates the ttg1-1 mutation, failed to interact with any of the GL3 fusions. This result agrees well with our interpretation of the plant overexpression data: GL3 exerts its regulatory effects on the trichome development pathway through interaction with TTG1, and TTG1 requires GL3, and possibly other bHLH class regulators, to activate the trichome pathway.
The GL3 amino-terminal truncations differed in their ability to independently activate reporter gene transcription when fused to the GAL4 DBD. Curiously, the pGL396B construct, from which relatively less of the amino terminus was removed, failed to activate, whereas pGL3211B activated strongly. ![]()
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A GAL4 DBD fusion construct containing approximately the carboxy-terminal third of GL3 (pGL3CTB) did not activate reporter gene transcription alone or when cotransformed with GL1 or TTG1 AD fusion constructs. This fragment contains a bHLH dimerization and DNA binding motif and was sufficient to mediate self-interaction in yeast when cotransformation of AD and DBD fusions were performed. We also could find no indication that either TTG1 or GL1 form homodimers or that TTG1 and GL1 interact with each other.
RT-PCR of GL3:
To observe the effects of mutant background on the expression of the GL3 transcript, semiquantitative RT-PCR was performed. APRT (![]()
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| DISCUSSION |
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Sequence analysis indicates that the gl3-1 mutant may produce a truncated protein lacking a bHLH domain but maintain those domains that two-hybrid data suggest mediate interactions with GL1 and TTG1. Thus the gl3-1 allele might encode a partially functional GL3 protein able to participate in the R-suppressible developmental pathways defined by the ttg1-1 mutation. The mutant protein would lack both of the R-homologous nuclear localization signals (NLSs) inferred for wild-type GL3 (based on ![]()
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We have recently identified the lesion in the gl3-2 allele as a G to A transition, which replaces the tryptophan codon TGG with a stop, TGA, at codon 46. If translated, the mutant transcript would yield a polypeptide of only 45 amino acids. Such a severely truncated protein is unlikely to have any significant regulatory function. The trichome phenotypes of the gl3-1 and gl3-2 mutants are very distinct. Both mutations result in a shift from three and four branched trichomes to mostly two branched (Table 1). However, the gl3-1 mutation results in a more severe reduction in trichome number than gl3-2. This is despite the fact that the respective lesions would imply that the gl3-2 mutation is more likely to be a null. The finding that the gl3-1 truncation gives a more severe reduction in trichome number may imply that this partial protein can interfere with the trichome initiation machinery. A model for interference by gl3-1 may be consistent with the findings for certain R alleles noted above (![]()
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Is GL3 redundant?
The phenotypes of the gl3 mutations are trichome specific and the mutants produce significant numbers of trichomes. No obvious seed coat or anthocyanin defects have been observed as might have been predicted from the overexpression and ttg1 suppression experiments. This result could be readily explained by the existence of a second R-homologous bHLH factor with a partially redundant and complementary function. Perhaps the truncated GL3 produced by gl3-1 is interfering with the interactions required by a partially functionally redundant bHLH factor, specifically, those interactions with TTG1 and GL1. Further work will be directed toward testing this hypothesis.
As shown in the alignment of bHLH proteins (Fig 5), 146D23T7 and GL3 are highly homologous. A difference in length of 40 amino acids exists, but the additional residues in the GL3 protein are evenly distributed rather than present in a block that might figure as an additional domain or function acquired by GL3 relative to 146D23T7. If GL3 and 146D23T7 are functionally redundant, this distribution suggests a gradual drift in portions of the sequence not constrained by function after the seminal gene was duplicated. Overexpression of 146D23T7 will also suppress the ttg1-1 mutation whereas overexpression of the more divergent bHLH protein ATMYC1 (![]()
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Until the Arabidopsis genome is completely sequenced, we cannot know with certainty the extent of the R-homologous bHLH protein family represented by GL3 and 146D23T7. Separate bHLH factors may regulate the various TTG1-dependent pathways or have partially or wholly redundant functions. Analyses of expression patterns currently underway should enable the determination of whether and to what extent the transcription of GL3 and 146D23T7 overlap. It is also likely that the specificity of bHLH-controlled regulation will be determined in each pathway by the availability of a MYB-class partner. Two-hybrid analyses indicate the 146D23T7 is also capable of interacting with GL1 and TTG1 in yeast and that 146D23T7 and GL1 interact synergistically when both are overexpressed in Arabidopsis (F. ZHANG and A. M. LLOYD, data not shown).
Near-neighbor inhibition:
Analyses of wild-type trichome patterns reveal that trichomes are almost never produced by adjacent cells (![]()
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How does TTG1 regulate GL3?
The data presented here support a combinatorial model for the regulation of epidermal pathways dependent on TTG1. In this model the WD repeat protein TTG1 interacts with an R homolog; the latter also interacts with a MYB-class transcription factor specific to the pathway regulated (Fig 6). For example, GL3 might interact with GL1 in the case of trichome development and with PAP1 in the case of anthocyanin synthesis. Whether these interactions are simultaneous or sequential remains to be determined, but the assumption is made that GL1 and GL3 (and other MYB:MYC-like transcription factor pairs) bind to promoters of downstream genes. The functional significance of the TTG1:GL3 interaction has not been established.
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The most striking characteristic of the TTG1 protein is that a considerable portion is composed of WD repeats. Proteins containing four or more adjacent WD repeats are thought to assume a ß-propeller fold in which each blade corresponds to parts of two WD repeats (![]()
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Our two-hybrid data indicate that TTG1 interacts physically with the GL3 protein in yeast, and taken together with genetic data this implies that TTG1 activates, modifies, stabilizes, or in some other fashion has a positive effect on the capacity of the GL3 protein to activate trichome structural gene transcription. One attractive hypothesis discussed by ![]()
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-importin, ATHKAP2, which did not bind to conventional plant NLSs. We tested the ATHKAP2 construct against TTG1 in the two-hybrid assay but detected no interaction (not shown), suggesting that there is no generalizable relationship between WD repeat-containing regulatory factors and this novel class of
-importins.
Database searches using the 341-amino-acid TTG1 sequence as a query have not detected functionally defined motifs other than the WD repeats themselves. In the absence of catalytic domains it may be hypothesized that TTG1's function relative to GL3 is merely binding. The consequence of binding might be modification of GL3 by another protein bound to TTG1. A two-hybrid screen conducted in our lab has identified several proteins that potentially interact with TTG1 in planta. Indeed, it would be remarkable if a WD repeat protein with multiple binding surfaces like TTG1 participated in only one physical interaction, especially when precedents for multiple interaction partners for this class of proteins are to be found in the literature (![]()
Overexpression experiments have frequently been used to address gene function in plants (for example, ![]()
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Present address: CSIRO Plant Industry, GPO Box 1600, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank John Larkin, John Schiefelbein, David Marks, Dan Szymanski, Justin Borevitz, Vaughan Symonds, Brian Windsor, Stephen Goff, Karen Koch, and Virginia Walbot for helpful discussions. We thank John Mendenhall, Barbara Goetgens, Kristina Schlegel, Gwen Gage, and Mingzhe Zhao for technical help and help with the figures. This work was supported by grants from the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board (ATP-276), the Herman Frasch Foundation (447-HF97), and the National Science Foundation (IBN-9986391).
Manuscript received May 17, 2000; Accepted for publication July 14, 2000.
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C. S. Johnson, B. Kolevski, and D. R. Smyth TRANSPARENT TESTA GLABRA2, a Trichome and Seed Coat Development Gene of Arabidopsis, Encodes a WRKY Transcription Factor PLANT CELL, June 1, 2002; 14(6): 1359 - 1375. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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T. Wada, T. Kurata, R. Tominaga, Y. Koshino-Kimura, T. Tachibana, K. Goto, M. D. Marks, Y. Shimura, and K. Okada Role of a positive regulator of root hair development, CAPRICE, in Arabidopsis root epidermal cell differentiation Development, January 12, 2002; 129(23): 5409 - 5419. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. Penfield, R. C. Meissner, D. A. Shoue, N. C. Carpita, and M. W. Bevan MYB61 Is Required for Mucilage Deposition and Extrusion in the Arabidopsis Seed Coat PLANT CELL, December 1, 2001; 13(12): 2777 - 2791. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. Nesi, C. Jond, I. Debeaujon, M. Caboche, and L. Lepiniec The Arabidopsis TT2 Gene Encodes an R2R3 MYB Domain Protein That Acts as a Key Determinant for Proanthocyanidin Accumulation in Developing Seed PLANT CELL, September 1, 2001; 13(9): 2099 - 2114. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M.-T. Hauser, B. Harr, and C. Schlotterer Trichome Distribution in Arabidopsis thaliana and its Close Relative Arabidopsis lyrata: Molecular Analysis of the Candidate Gene GLABROUS1 Mol. Biol. Evol., September 1, 2001; 18(9): 1754 - 1763. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Lee and J Schiefelbein Developmentally distinct MYB genes encode functionally equivalent proteins in Arabidopsis Development, January 5, 2001; 128(9): 1539 - 1546. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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