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Molecular Consequences of Ds Insertion Into and Excision From the Helix-Loop-Helix Domain of the Maize R Gene
Yanhong Liu1,a, Liangjiang Wanga, Jerry L. Kermiclec, and Susan R. Wesslera,ba Department of Botany, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602
b Department of Genetics, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602
c Laboratory of Genetics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Corresponding author: Susan R. Wessler, Department of Genetics, Life Sciences Bldg., University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602., sue{at}dogwood.botany.uga.edu (E-mail).
Communicating editor: K. J. NEWTON
| ABSTRACT |
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The R and B proteins of maize are required to activate the transcription of several genes in the anthocyanin biosynthetic pathway. To determine the structural requirements for R function in vivo, we are exploiting its sensitive mutant phenotype to identify transposon (Ds) insertions that disrupt critical domains. Here we report that the ability of the r-m1 allele to activate transcription of at least three structural genes is reduced to only 2% of wild-type activity because of a 396-bp Ds element in helix 2 of the basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) motif. Residual activity likely results from the synthesis of a mutant protein that contains seven additional amino acids in helix 2. This protein is encoded by a transcript where most of the Ds sequence has been spliced from pre-mRNA. Two phenotypic classes of stable derivative alleles, very pale and extremely pale, condition <1% of wild-type activity as a result of the presence of two- and three-amino-acid insertions, respectively, at the site of Ds excision. Localization of these mutant proteins to the nucleus indicates a requirement for an intact bHLH domain after nuclear import. The fact that deletion of the entire bHLH domain has only a minor effect on R protein activity while these small insertions virtually abolish activity suggests that deletion of the bHLH domain may bypass a requirement for bHLH-mediated protein-protein interactions in the activation of the structural genes in the anthocyanin biosynthetic pathway.
THE anthocyanin biosynthetic pathway is proving to be an ideal system for the study of gene regulation in higher plants. The presence or absence of pigment is a sensitive, nonlethal phenotype that has been exploited in the identification of >10 loci required for expression of the wild-type purple color (![]()
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R and B proteins are functionally homologous. Lc, the first member of the R gene family to be sequenced (![]()
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Consistent with their role as regulatory proteins, R/B proteins contain the basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) domain (![]()
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R/B proteins act in concert with the C1 protein, which contains a myb-domain, to activate transcription of at least four structural genes in the anthocyanin pathway (![]()
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As an alternative approach, we have been using a collection of 43 Ds-induced alleles of the R-sc gene (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plant stocks:
All strains used in this study were in the W22 background and homozygous for the designated allele. The r-m1 allele was isolated as described previously (![]()
D1D5 were obtained by pollinating homozygous r-m1; P-vv (red striped pericarp, Ac allele) with R-g:8 pale (stable pale seed color); wx in a detasseling plot isolated from other maize. Single R-sc kernels were selected. R-g:8 pale and wx, which served as pollen contamination markers, were segregated in the progeny to confirm male parentage. D6D12 were isolated as follows: the r-m1, P-vv stock was crossed to R-g:8 pale; P-wr, spotted kernels were selected and pollinated with r-r. Of the 228 plants tested, 21 displayed no spotted kernels. The colorless (D6D9) and pale (D10D12) kernels were chosen for this study.
Anthocyanin extraction and quantification:
Anthocyanins were extracted from 10 mg of dissected aleurones, as described previously (![]()
DNA extraction and PCR amplification:
Maize genomic DNA was isolated as described previously from 2-wk-old seedlings (![]()
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RNA isolation and blot analysis:
Total RNA was extracted from immature kernels 25 days after pollination (DAP) as described (![]()
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-32P]dCTP and [
-32P]dATP (![]()
3' RACE and PCR amplification of cDNA:
3' RACE system (GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD) was used as described (![]()
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Protein extraction and blot analysis:
Protein extracts were isolated from aleurone tissue (25 DAP) as described (![]()
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As a positive control, R transcripts were synthesized from the Lc cDNA in the pGEM-7Z(+) expression vector and translated in rabbit reticulocyte lysates using the protocol provided by the manufacturer (Promega).
Immunolocalization:
Immunocytochemistry was performed as described (![]()
Plasmids:
Construction of the following plasmids has been described previously: wild-type Lc expression vector (pPHI443, ![]()
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Lc-D12 was constructed by mutating the wild-type Lc cDNA in pPHI443 with the mutagenic oligonucleotide 5'-GCACCCTTCTCTGAAGCTCCTTGAGGTAGGGCTGGTAGGCTATCGTTTCGGCGAG-3'. Site-directed mutagenesis was carried out using PCR. In the same way, B-D12 and B-D6 were derived from the wild-type B expression vector using the mutagenic oligonucleotides 5'-GTACCCTTCGTTGAAGCTCCTTTAGGTAGGGCTGATAGGCTATCGTTTCGGCGAG-3' and 5'-CGTTGAAGCTCCTTTAGATAGGGCAGGCTATCGTTTCGGCGAG-3', respectively.
Particle bombardment:
Maize suspension cells used for bombardment were prepared as described previously (![]()
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Enzyme assays:
Bombarded maize cells were ground in 350 µl of 100 mM KPO4 (pH 7.80) and 1 mM DTT at 4°. After centrifugation, 25 and 10 µl of the supernatant were assayed for CAT and luciferase activities, respectively. CAT activity was expressed as the ethyl acetate-soluble CPM count (![]()
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| RESULTS |
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Phenotypes of r-m1 and its derivatives (D1D12):
The progenitor R-sc allele conditions deep purple pigmentation in the aleurone of the mature seed (Figure 1). The r-m1 allele was derived from R-sc after insertion of a Ds element. In the absence of the autonomous Ac element, r-m1 displays pale aleurone pigmentation that is restricted to the crown of the kernel (Figure 1). In the presence of Ac, a few darkly pigmented spots can be seen on this pale background (data not shown). D1D12 are 12 germinal derivatives of r-m1 that are both somatically and germinally stable when Ac is also in the genome. Of these, D1D5 display a deep purple revertant phenotype, D6D9 display a null colorless phenotype, and D10D12 display pale aleurone pigmentation that is restricted to the crown (Figure 1, arrowheads). The pigmentation conditioned by D12 is reproducibly paler than that of D10 and D11.
To compare the expression of these alleles, anthocyanins were extracted from the aleurones of R-sc, r-m1, and the 12 derivative strains and quantified (Table 1). Kernels with a revertant phenotype (D1D5) contained wild-type amounts of anthocyanin, while r-m1 and its derivatives had 50- to 100-fold lower levels. Consistent with the visible phenotype, D12 was found to have less anthocyanin than D10 and D11. No anthocyanin was detected in the colorless D6D9 kernels.
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r-m1 contains a Ds1 element:
From a previous study, it was known that r-m1 had an insertion near the bHLH domain (![]()
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r-m1-encoded transcripts and proteins:
If transcribed and translated, the r-m1 allele would encode a truncated protein as a result of the introduction of a premature stop codon 29 nt downstream from the 5' terminus of the Ds1 element. Although such a mutant protein could account for the residual activity of this allele, we considered the possibility that r-m1 might encode an additional transcript because of the splicing of most of the Ds1 sequences from pre-mRNA. Although the splicing of Ds1 sequences has been shown to occur for the Ds1-induced alleles adh1-Fm335 (![]()
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Mutant transcripts were further characterized using the 3' RACE protocol with a poly(A) primer and an R-specific primer from upstream of the site of Ds1 insertion. Two products were obtained: one of approximately wild-type size and the other shorter by ~700 bp. Sequencing of the longer 3' RACE product revealed that this transcript differed from the wild-type transcript by the addition of 21 nt: 14 nt from the 5' terminus of the Ds1 element and 7 nt from the direct repeat downstream of the 3' terminus of Ds1 (Figure 2D). The new intron would be 383 nt long and flanked by the canonical GT and AG dinucleotides at the donor and acceptor splice sites, respectively. The sequence of the shorter 3' RACE product reveals a new polyadenylation site in Ds1 sequences, 116 nt downstream from the 5' terminus of the element (Figure 2E).
Western blot analysis of aleurone extracts probed with R antibody identifies two proteins that could be the products of the two r-m1 transcripts. The truncated transcript is predicted to encode a protein with 152 amino acids missing from the C terminus and 9 amino acids added from Ds1 sequences. A smaller protein is, in fact, detected (see Figure 5). The larger r-m1 transcript contains an in-frame insertion of 21 nt and could potentially encode a mutant protein with 7 additional amino acids in the bHLH domain. A protein of wild-type size is also detected in r-m1 aleurones.
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The Ds1 insertion site in D1D12:
DNA sequences at the Ds insertion site of the stable derivative alleles D1D12 were determined after PCR amplification of this region with R-specific primers (see Figure 2A for the position of primers). D1D5 were indistinguishable from wild type in this region, indicating either wild-type contamination or excision of all the Ds1 element and one copy of the 8-bp repeat. The possibility of contamination was ruled out because all the derivative lines contained additional markers present in the r-m1 progenitor (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). D6D9 are phenotypically null and were found to contain frameshifting insertions of 5, 7, 7, and 8 bp, respectively (Figure 4). The pale derivatives D10 and D11 contained identical insertions of 6 bp, whereas the very pale D12 harbored a 9-bp insertion (Figure 4).
The derivative alleles encode stable mRNA and protein:
D1D12 encode transcripts of wild-type size. When the intensity of the hybridization signal in each sample was normalized to the actin control, it was found that RNA levels did not differ significantly in any sample (Figure 3 and data not shown). In contrast, no R mRNA is detected in the aleurone tissue of a strain harboring the null r-g allele (Figure 3). This suggests that the reduced activity of D6D12 is not caused by mRNA instability.
To address the related issue of mutant protein stability, relative levels of R protein in D6D12 were determined by protein blot analysis. As expected, the revertants D1D5 produced wild-type R proteins (Figure 5; data not shown). For each of the null alleles (D6D9), an R-specific antibody recognizes truncated proteins (Figure 5). Finally, the pale and very pale derivatives, D10 and D12, respectively, each produced wild-type levels of wild-type-sized proteins (Figure 5).
Transcript levels of structural genes in mutant R backgrounds:
The presence of wild-type levels of mutant R proteins in r-m1 and D6D12 suggests that these proteins are defective in their ability to activate the structural genes in the anthocyanin pathway. To address this question directly, the steady-state levels of transcripts encoded by two of the structural genes, a1 and c2, were examined by RNA blots in strains harboring the r-m1 allele and its derivatives (Figure 6). The results of this analysis clearly show that a1 mRNA is virtually undetectable in the R mutant strains, while the level of c2 is reduced to the levels seen in the null r-g background. The presence of some c2 mRNA in the mutant and r-g backgrounds is probably caused by the expression of the second c2 gene in the maize genome that is not induced by the R protein (![]()
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Subcellular localization of R proteins:
On the basis of the data presented thus far, two scenarios could explain the failure of the mutant R proteins to activate the structural genes in the anthocyanin pathway. The amino acid additions to the bHLH domain may prevent a protein-protein interaction that is required to localize the R protein to the nucleus. Alternatively, the R proteins may be localized to the nucleus efficiently, but transactivation is impaired because the bHLH insertions interfere with protein-protein interactions. To test these two possibilities, immunolocalization experiments were performed. As shown in Figure 7, the wild-type R protein was localized to the nuclei of aleurone cells of 25 DAP R-sc kernels, as were the R proteins encoded by the D10 and D12 derivatives. In contrast, the proteins encoded by r-m1 and D6D9 were localized to both the nucleus and the cytoplasm (Figure 7 and data not shown). A control section from the null r-g allele showed no specific staining, nor did a R-sc section stained with preimmune sera.
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Activity of the mutant R protein in transient transformation assays:
The data presented thus far suggest that an intact bHLH domain is required for R protein to function as a transcriptional activator. This conclusion differs from the conclusions of two previous studies, which showed that deletion of the entire bHLH domain of the R homologue B still gives rise to about half of the wild-type activity in transient transformation assays (![]()
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To distinguish between these three possibilities, the D12 mutation was first incorporated into wild-type R (Lc) cDNA and assayed after bombardment into maize suspension cells (Figure 8). In this assay, the luciferase reporter gene fused to the Bz1 promoter (Bz1Luc) was cobombarded so that luciferase levels provided a sensitive measure of R activity (Figure 8A). As shown in Figure 8B, the D12 mutation led to a 10-fold reduction in the ability of the R protein to activate transcription of the Bz1 promoter. This result indicates that the D12 lesion dramatically reduces R activity both in vivo and in this transient assay system, and that overexpression of D12 protein does not significantly increase its activity.
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To determine whether the nucleotide insertions characterized in this study had the same effect on the function of the B protein, the D12 and D6 lesions were incorporated into wild-type B cDNA in the constructs B-D12 and B-D6. Recall that the D6 mutant is phenotypically null because of a frameshifting insertion that leads to the synthesis of a truncated protein (Figure 1 and Figure 5). Both mutant constructs encoded <5% of wild-type B activity (Figure 8C). In contrast, deletion of the entire bHLH domain in b-HLHdel resulted in ~50% of wild-type activity (Figure 8C), in agreement with previously published results (![]()
| DISCUSSION |
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The r-m1 allele of maize contains a 396-bp Ds1 element in helix 2 of the bHLH domain of the R protein. Twelve stable derivative alleles, representing four phenotypic classesnull, extremely pale, very pale, and revertantwere found to result from different Ds excision events. The molecular characterization of r-m1 and its derivatives provides several lines of evidence that the bHLH region is required for R to function as a transcriptional activator in vivo. These reasons are discussed in detail below. However, our conclusions differ dramatically from those obtained using transient transformation assays of constructs deleted for the bHLH domain (![]()
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Our study provides several lines of evidence that the bHLH domain and NLS-C are required for R function in vivo. First, all five revertant derivatives of r-m1 contain the wild-type bHLH sequence, indicating that only perfect excision of Ds and all of the 8-bp direct repeat are compatible with full expression. We are confident that these are bona fide revertants and not wild-type contaminants because of the presence of additional genetic markers that were included to guard against such a possibility (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). Restoration of the wild-type sequence upon Ds excision is usually a rare event; however, it occurs more frequently with the Ds1 class of element found in the r-m1 allele (![]()
The strongest evidence for the importance of the bHLH domain comes from the analysis of alleles with small insertions. Despite producing almost wild-type levels of mutant R protein, the activities of the D10/11 and D12 proteins are reduced from 50- to 100-fold, as measured by anthocyanin content and the steady-state level of structural gene transcripts. Furthermore, the small but reproducible differences in the activities encoded by these alleles, where r-m1>D10/11>D12, correlate with the extent of the helix 2 disruption; i.e., D12, with its three-amino-acid insertion, is less active than D10, with its two-amino-acid insertion. That both of the insertions in these derivatives contain a proline residue may explain why D10 and D12 are less active than the full-length r-m1 protein, which does not contain a proline among its seven extra amino acids. Interestingly, insertion of a proline residue into helix 2 of the bHLH domain of the mouse homologue of the Twist protein prevented bHLH-mediated dimerization with E proteins (![]()
These data imply that bHLH-mediated protein-protein interactions are required for activation of the anthocyanin pathway. This conclusion is supported by the fact that the bHLH domain is highly conserved in functional R homologues isolated from the distantly related grass, rice (Oryza sativa; ![]()
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The presence of the D10 and D12 proteins in the nucleus of aleurone cells indicates a requirement for bHLH-mediated protein-protein interactions in the transcriptional activation of at least three of the structural genes (a1, a2, and c2) in the anthocyanin pathway. R proteins might form homodimers or they might interact with an as yet unidentified HLH-containing coregulator. The product of the duplicate maize genes C1/Pl has long been known to encode a coregulator of the anthocyanin pathway. However, the C1 protein contains a myb domain, not a bHLH domain (![]()
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In a previous study (![]()
As discussed above, the results of transient transformation assays indicate that a B protein deleted for the bHLH domain was still capable of significant (50%) activation of the bz1 promoter (![]()
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Although it is not known at this time why these lesions should have such different consequences on R/B function, we believe that the previously held view that the bHLH domain is dispensable is in error. The strict conservation of the bHLH in distantly related flowering plants, coupled with our analysis of r-m1 and its derivatives, provides strong evidence that an intact domain is required for transcriptional activation in vivo. Perhaps deletion of the bHLH domain, but not small insertions in helix 2, bypasses a requirement for bHLH-mediated protein-protein interactions in transcriptional activation. This could be accomplished, for example, by changing the conformation in such a way that the deleted protein no longer requires dimeric interactions to function as a coregulator with the C1 protein.
Regulatory gene evolution is believed to play a significant role in organismal diversification (![]()
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Current address: Waksman Institute, Rutgers University, P.O. Box 759, Piscataway, NJ 08855. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Mark Farmer and Lee Pratt for their technical advice, Vicki Chandler for the B deletion construct and suspension cells, Stephen Dellaporta for the Sn antibody, Udo Wienand for the a1 and c2 clones, Rich Meagher for the maize actin clone, and Lane Arthur and Kelly Dawe for critical reading of the manuscript. We also thank Sylvestre Marillonnet for helpful discussions. This study was supported by grants from the Department of Energy to S.R.W. and J.L.K.
Manuscript received September 29, 1997; Accepted for publication August 26, 1998.
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