Exchange factors for ARF GTPases (ARF-GEFs) regulate vesicle trafficking in a variety of organisms. The Arabidopsis protein GNOM is a brefeldin A (BFA) sensitive ARF-GEF that is required for the proper polar localization of PIN1, a candidate transporter of the plant hormone auxin. Mutations in GNOM lead to developmental defects that resemble those caused by interfering with auxin transport. Both PIN1 localization and auxin transport are also sensitive to BFA. In this paper, we show that GNOM localizes to endosomes and is required for their structural integrity. We engineered a BFA-resistant version of GNOM. In plants harboring this fully functional GNOM variant, PIN1 localization and auxin transport are no longer sensitive to BFA, while trafficking of other proteins is still affected by the drug. Our results demonstrate that GNOM is required for the recycling of auxin transport components and suggest that ARF-GEFs regulate specific endosomal trafficking pathways.
Plants employ a specialized transport system composed of separate influx and efflux carriers to mobilize the plant hormone auxin between its site(s) of synthesis and action. Mutations within the permease-like AUX1 protein significantly reduce the rate of carrier-mediated auxin uptake within Arabidopsis roots, conferring an agravitropic phenotype. We are able to bypass the defect within auxin uptake and restore the gravitropic root phenotype of aux1 by growing mutant seedlings in the presence of the membrane-permeable synthetic auxin, 1-naphthaleneacetic acid. We illustrate that AUX1 expression overlaps that previously described for the auxin efflux carrier, AtPIN2, using transgenic lines expressing an AUX1 promoter::uidA (GUS) gene. Finally, we demonstrate that AUX1 regulates gravitropic curvature by acting in unison with the auxin efflux carrier to co-ordinate the localized redistribution of auxin within the Arabidopsis root apex. Our results provide the first example of a developmental role for the auxin influx carrier within higher plants and supply new insight into the molecular basis of gravitropic signalling.
Accumulation of radiolabelled naphthalene-1-acetic acid (1-NAA), 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D), and indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) has been measured in suspension-cultured tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) cells. In this paper is presented a simple methodology allowing activities of the auxin influx and efflux carriers to be monitored independently by measuring the cellular accumulation of [H]NAA and [C]2,4-D. We have shown that 1-NAA enters cells by passive diffusion and has its accumulation level controlled by the efflux carrier. By contrast, 2,4-D uptake is mostly ensured by the influx carrier and this auxin is not secreted by the efflux carrier. Both auxin carriers contribute to IAA accumulation. The kinetic parameters and specificity of each carrier have been determined and new information concerning interactions with naphthylphthalamic acid, pyrenoylbenzoic acid, and naphthalene-2-acetic acid are provided. The relative contributions of diffusion and carrier-mediated influx and efflux to the membrane transport of 2,4-D, 1-NAA, and IAA have been quantified, and the data indicate that plant cells are able to modulate over a large range their auxin content by modifying the activity of each carrier.
AUXIN BINDING PROTEIN1 (ABP1) has long been characterized as a potentially important mediator of auxin action in plants. Analysis of the functional requirement for ABP1 during development was hampered because of embryo lethality of the null mutant in Arabidopsis thaliana. Here, we used conditional repression of ABP1 to investigate its function during vegetative shoot development. Using an inducible cellular immunization approach and an inducible antisense construct, we showed that decreased ABP1 activity leads to a severe retardation of leaf growth involving an alteration in cell division frequency, an altered pattern of endocycle induction, a decrease in cell expansion, and a change in expression of early auxin responsive genes. In addition, local repression of ABP1 activity in the shoot apical meristem revealed an additional role for ABP1 in cell plate formation and cell shape. Moreover, cells at the site of presumptive leaf initiation were more sensitive to ABP1 repression than other regions of the meristem. This spatial context-dependent response of the meristem to ABP1 inactivation and the other data presented here are consistent with a model in which ABP1 acts as a coordinator of cell division and expansion, with local auxin levels influencing ABP1 effectiveness.
BackgroundIn plants, the phytohormone auxin is a crucial regulator sustaining growth and development. At the cellular level, auxin is interpreted differentially in a tissue- and dose-dependent manner. Mechanisms of auxin signalling are partially unknown and the contribution of the AUXIN BINDING PROTEIN 1 (ABP1) as an auxin receptor is still a matter of debate.Methodology/Principal FindingsHere we took advantage of the present knowledge of the root biological system to demonstrate that ABP1 is required for auxin response. The use of conditional ABP1 defective plants reveals that the protein is essential for maintenance of the root meristem and acts at least on the D-type CYCLIN/RETINOBLASTOMA pathway to control entry into the cell cycle. ABP1 affects PLETHORA gradients and confers auxin sensitivity to root cells thus defining the competence of the cells to be maintained within the meristem or to elongate. ABP1 is also implicated in the regulation of gene expression in response to auxin.Conclusions/SignificanceOur data support that ABP1 is a key regulator for root growth and is required for auxin-mediated responses. Differential effects of ABP1 on various auxin responses support a model in which ABP1 is the major regulator for auxin action on the cell cycle and regulates auxin-mediated gene expression and cell elongation in addition to the already well known TIR1-mediated ubiquitination pathway.
Auxin is transported across the plasma membrane of plant cells by diffusion and by two carriers operating in opposite directions, the influx and efflux carriers. Both carriers most likely play an important role in controlling auxin concentration and distribution in plants but little is known regarding their regulation. We describe the influence of modifications of the transmembrane pH gradient and the effect of agents interfering with protein synthesis, protein traffic, and protein phosphorylation on the activity of the auxin carriers in suspension-cultured tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) cells. Carrier-mediated influx and efflux were monitored independently by measuring the accumulation of [ 14 C]2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid and [ 3 H]naphthylacetic acid, respectively. The activity of the influx carrier decreased on increasing external pH and on decreasing internal pH, whereas that of the efflux carrier was only impaired on internal acidification. The efflux carrier activity was inhibited by cycloheximide, brefeldin A, and the protein kinase inhibitors staurosporine and K252a, as shown by the increased capability of treated cells to accumulate [ 3 H]naphthylacetic acid. Kinetics and reversibility of the effect of brefeldin A were consistent with one or several components of the efflux system being turned over at the plasma membrane with a half-time of less than 10 min. Inhibition of efflux by protein kinase inhibitors suggested that protein phosphorylation was essential to sustain the activity of the efflux carrier. On the contrary, the pharmacological agents used in this study failed to inhibit [ 14 C]2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid accumulation, suggesting that rapidly turnedover proteins or proteins activated by phosphorylation are not essential to carrier-mediated auxin influx. Our data support the idea that the efflux carrier in plants constitutes a complex system regulated at multiple levels, in marked contrast with the influx carrier. Physiological implications of the kinetic features of this regulation are discussed.
Cell expansion is an increase in cell size and thus plays an essential role in plant growth and development. Phytohormones and the primary plant cell wall play major roles in the complex process of cell expansion. In shoot tissues, cell expansion requires the auxin receptor AUXIN BINDING PROTEIN1 (ABP1), but the mechanism by which ABP1 affects expansion remains unknown. We analyzed the effect of functional inactivation of ABP1 on transcriptomic changes in dark-grown hypocotyls and investigated the consequences of gene expression on cell wall composition and cell expansion. Molecular and genetic evidence indicates that ABP1 affects the expression of a broad range of cell wall-related genes, especially cell wall remodeling genes, mainly via an SCF TIR/AFB -dependent pathway. ABP1 also functions in the modulation of hemicellulose xyloglucan structure. Furthermore, fucosidase-mediated defucosylation of xyloglucan, but not biosynthesis of nonfucosylated xyloglucan, rescued dark-grown hypocotyl lengthening of ABP1 knockdown seedlings. In muro remodeling of xyloglucan side chains via an ABP1-dependent pathway appears to be of critical importance for temporal and spatial control of cell expansion. INTRODUCTIONThe essential protein AUXIN BINDING PROTEIN1 (ABP1) functions in the control of growth and development throughout plant life. Initially identified by its capacity to bind the phytohormone auxin, ABP1 was first shown to affect plasma membrane hyperpolarization via the modulation of ion fluxes across the membrane (Thiel et al., 1993;Barbier-Brygoo et al., 1996;Leblanc et al., 1999aLeblanc et al., , 1999b. These rapid ionic changes indicate a possible involvement of ABP1 in the control of cell expansion, at least in shoot tissues, thus providing preliminary molecular evidence supporting the acid growth theory. This theory states that auxin promotes the excretion of protons at the apoplast resulting in cell wall loosening and increased growth rate (Rayle and Cleland, 1992). Binding of auxin to ABP1 and increased amount of ABP1 at the plasma membrane promote protoplast swelling and enhance expansion of leaf cells (Jones et al., 1998;Steffens et al., 2001;Christian et al., 2006). Conversely, the functional inactivation of ABP1 severely impairs cell expansion in shoot tissues irrespective of their DNA content (Braun et al., 2008;Xu et al., 2010) but does not affect root cell elongation (Tromas et al., 2009). The effect of ABP1 on cell expansion varies in a cell-or tissue-dependent manner. Recent data indicate that ABP1 acts both constitutively and in response to auxin (Robert et al., 2010;Tromas et al., 2013). The mechanism by which ABP1 controls cell expansion remains poorly understood. In shoot tissues, it remains unclear whether the contribution of ABP1 to cell expansion relies solely on nongenomic responses or acts also via the regulation of gene expression. ABP1 was reported to affect expression of various genes in response to auxin, but little is known on the broader effects of ABP1 on gene expression (Braun et al.,...
Active auxin transport in plant cells is catalyzed by two carriers working in opposite directions at the plasma membrane, the influx and efflux carriers. A role for the efflux carrier in polar auxin transport (PAT) in plants has been shown from studies using phytotropins. Phytotropins have been invaluable in demonstrating that PAT is essential to ensure polarized and coordinated growth and to provide plants with the capacity to respond to environmental stimuli. However, the function of the influx carrier at the whole-plant level is unknown. Our work aims to identify new auxin-transport inhibitors which could be employed to investigate its function. Thirty-five aryl and aryloxyalkylcarboxylic acids were assayed for their ability to perturb the accumulation of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) and naphthalene-1-acetic acid (1-NAA) in suspension-cultured tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) cells. As 2,4-D and 1-NAA are preferentially transported by the influx and efflux carriers, respectively, accumulation experiments utilizing synthetic auxins provide independant information on the activities of both carriers. The majority (60%) of compounds half-inhibited the carrier-mediated influx of [14C]2,4-D at concentrations of less than 10 microM. Most failed to interfere with [3H]NAA efflux, at least in the short term. Even though they increasingly perturbed auxin efflux when given a prolonged treatment, several compounds were much better at discriminating between influx and efflux carrier activities than naphthalene-2-acetic acid which is commonly employed to investigate influx-carrier properties. Structure-activity relationships and factors influencing ligand specificity with regard to auxin carriers are discussed.
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