Institut für Biologie III, Universität Freiburg, Schänzlestraße 1, D-79104 Freiburg, Germany
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: laux{at}biologie.uni-freiburg.de)
Accepted 3 April 2003
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: Stem cells, Shoot meristem, Arabidopsis thaliana, CLV3, Ligand sequestration
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INTRODUCTION |
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Stem cell identity appears to be specified by signalling from an underlying
cell group, the organizing centre (OC), which expresses the putative
homeodomain transcription factor WUSCHEL (WUS)
(Mayer et al., 1998). Loss of
WUS function leads to differentiation of stem cells and meristem
termination (Laux et al.,
1996
). By contrast, ectopic WUS expression in vegetative
organ primordia is sufficient to induce ectopic stem cell identity
(Schoof et al., 2000
),
indicating that WUS expression has to be tightly controlled for the
SAM to maintain just the right number of stem cells.
The stem cells in turn signal back via the CLAVATA (CLV)
signalling pathway to restrict the WUS expression domain.
clv mutants develop an enlarged SAM due to the accumulation of stem
cells (Clark et al., 1993;
Clark et al., 1995
;
Fletcher et al., 1999
;
Jeong et al., 1999
) and this
phenotype is caused by an expansion of the WUS expression domain into
more apical and peripheral cells (Schoof
et al., 2000
). CLV1 encodes a putative leucine-rich
repeat transmembrane receptor with an intracellular kinase domain that is
expressed in the SAM centre in a region encompassing the OC
(Clark et al., 1997
). CLV1
appears to associate with CLV2, a similar protein lacking the kinase domain,
to form the putative receptor complex for the ligand CLV3
(Jeong et al., 1999
;
Trotochaud et al., 1999
).
CLV3 codes for a small secreted polypeptide and its expression domain
overlaps with the presumed stem cell region
(Fletcher et al., 1999
;
Rojo et al., 2002
).
The observations that WUS is sufficient to induce expression of
CLV3 as a component of stem cell identity and that CLV3 acts
as a negative regulator of WUS expression have led to the proposal
that the size of the stem cell population in the SAM is maintained constant by
a negative regulatory feedback loop involving the stem cells and the OC
(Schoof et al., 2000;
Brand et al., 2000
).
Although elegant clonal studies using an unstable mutant allele of
clv3 have indicated that CLV3 activity in the L2 is
dispensable for SAM regulation, consistent with a non cell-autonomous function
(Fletcher et al., 1999), and
Rojo et al. have shown that secretion of CLV3 protein is required for
phenotypic activity in overexpression experiments using the constitutive
Cauliflower Mosaic Virus 35S promoter
(Rojo et al., 2002
), direct
evidence for intercellular movement of CLV3 in the SAM has been lacking to
date. In addition, it is not clear where its action is required for stem cell
homeostasis. In fact, two observations suggest that CLV3 does not move far
away from the stem cells, but acts immediately where it is secreted. Firstly,
in clv mutants WUS expression shifts upwards into those
cells that in wild type coexpress CLV3 and CLV1, suggesting
that CLV3 acts at least in part on the cells secreting it
(Schoof et al., 2000
).
Secondly, ectopic CLV3 expression using the 35S or the
UNUSUAL FLORAL ORGANS promoters, both of which have expression
domains that most likely encompass the OC
(Long and Barton, 1998
),
causes a wus like phenotype with meristem termination
(Brand et al., 2000
),
indicating that in wild-type meristems movement of CLV3 protein to the
underlying OC cells does not take place.
In this study we address whether CLV3 moves within the SAM, where in the SAM it acts and how it is prevented from repressing WUS expression in the OC. We provide novel evidence that CLV3 protein spreads laterally from the producing stem cells, that this spread is functionally relevant, and that its range of movement can be limited by its receptor CLV1.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Transgene construction and plant transformation
For all ectopic expression experiments, except for the
CLV3::CLV3-GFP and the CLV3::mGFP5-ER lines, we used the
pOpL two-component system (Moore
et al., 1998). For simplicity, we refer to plants e.g. of the
genotype CLV1::LhG4; pOp::CLV3-pOp::GUS as CLV1::CLV3;
CLV1::GUS.
Generation of the CLV1::LhG4 and pOp::WUS-pOp::GUS lines
has been described previously (Schoof et
al., 2000).
For the pOp::CLV3 construct, the CLV3 cDNA was amplified
from reverse-transcribed total RNA of wild-type inflorescences using primers
CLV3XHO5 (5'-CTC TCG AGC AGT CAC TTT CTC TC-3') and CLV3BAM3
(5'-ACA AGG GAT CCG GTC AAG GG-3'), digested with XhoI
and BamHI and inserted into MT153
(Lenhard et al., 2002) to
yield MT187.
For the pOp::CLV3-pOp::GUS construct, a pOp::GUS fragment was inserted into the unique EcoRI site of MT187 to yield MT204.
For the pOp::CLV3w/oSP-pOp::GUS construct, the CLV3 coding sequence lacking the signal peptide was amplified using primers CLV3OHNESP (5'-CTA CTC GAG TGC TTC TTG TTC AAA ATG GAT GC-3') and CLV3BAM3, digested with XhoI and BamHI and inserted into MT204.
For the pOp::CLV3hetSP-pOp::GUS construct, the CLV3 coding sequence lacking its own signal peptide was amplified using primers CLV3-PAP1 (5'-GGA GGG TTC GAT GCT TCT GAT CTC AC-3') and CLV3BAM3 and the sequence encoding the signal peptide of Purple acid phosphatase1 (GenBank acc.no. U48448) was amplified from genomic DNA using primers PAP1XHO5 (5-AAC TCG AGA AAC TAA TCT TGA AGA TGA G-3') and PAP1-CLV3 (5'-GAG ATC AGA AGC ATC GAA CCC TCC ATA GCA AAA CTC-3'). The two PCR products were mixed, allowed to anneal and the fusion gene was amplified using primers PAP1XHO5 and CLV3BAM3. After digestion with XhoI and BamHI it was inserted into MT204.
For the pOp::CLV1 construct, the CLV1 cDNA was amplified from reverse-transcribed total RNA of wild-type inflorescences using primers CLV1SAL5 (5'-TTG TCG ACC GCT CTT TCT CAC TGA GAG C-3') and CLV1BAM3 (5'-TCG GAT CCT ATT TTC ATA TTT ATC TTG C-3'), digested with SalI and BamHI and inserted into the XhoI and BamHI sites of MT187 to give MT264.
The pOp::clv1-4 construct was generated by amplifying the region surrounding the clv1-4 mutation from genomic DNA of homozygous mutants using primers clv1-4_P1 (5'-ATT GGA GAT GAA GAG TCT AAC TTC TCT C-3') and clv1-4_P2R (5'-TTC CGA GAT TGA TGA AGC TTT GAG-3'), digesting with BpmI and HpaI, inserting this fragment into the CLV1 cDNA, and the modified cDNA then into MT264.
A CLV3-mGFP4 translational fusion was generated by inserting an
oligonucleotide encoding five repeats of the dipeptide glycine-alanine
(5'-GAT CCG GTG CAG GAG CTG GCG CCG GCG CAG GTG CGA TC-3') into
the BamHI site 5' of the mGFP4 coding sequence in
pUC19 (Haseloff et al., 1997)
to give ML360. The CLV3 coding sequence was amplified using primers
CLV3BAM5 (5'-GAC GGA TCC CTT TCT CTC TAA AAA ATG G-3') and
CLV3BGL3 (5'-ATT AGA TCT AGG GAG CTG AAA GTT GTT TC-3'), digested
with BamHI and BglII, and inserted into ML360 (ML361). From
there, the CLV3-mGFP4 coding sequence was excised as a
BamHI-SacI fragment and inserted into the
BamHI-SacI sites of the CLV3 promoter present in
MT194 (Gross-Hardt et al.,
2002
).
All fragments amplified by PCR were sequenced to exclude amplification errors.
For the CLV3::mGFP5-ER construct, the mGFP5-ER coding sequence was excised as a BamHI-SacI fragment from pBINPLUS:mGFP5 (kindly provided by J. Haseloff) and inserted into the CLV3 promoter as above.
The pOp::CLV3-mGFP4 construct was generated by excising the CLV3-mGFP4 coding sequence as a BamHI-SacI fragment from ML361, blunt-ending by T4 DNA polymerase and inserting this into the blunt-ended XhoI-BamHI sites of MT204.
For the pOp::(CLV3)2 construct, the pOp::CLV3 cassette was first ligated into the SacI and HindIII sites of pBluescript II SK, from which it was excised using SacI and KpnI, blunt-ended by T4-DNA polymerase and inserted into MT187, which had been digested with HindIII and blunt-ended by T4-DNA polymerase. The resulting plasmid MT274 carries a tandem repeat of the pOp::CLV3 cassette followed by a unique HindIII site. This procedure was repeated until five tandem repeats of the pOp::CLV3 cassette were assembled.
The CLV3::LhG4 construct was generated by inserting the
LhG4 coding region as a BamHI-SacI fragment into
the CLV3 promoter present in MT194
(Gross-Hardt et al., 2002),
replacing the NLSGUS coding region.
Constructs were electroporated into Agrobacterium strain
GV3101(pMP90) (Koncz and Schell,
1986) and Ler wild-type plants were transformed by floral
dip (Clough and Bent, 1998
),
unless stated otherwise.
In the progeny of crosses, the presence of the relevant transgenes was monitored either by PCR or by staining for the activity of linked GUS reporters, unless stated otherwise.
For the CLV3::CLV3-GFP; clv3-1/clv3-1 plants, we only analyzed plants heterozygous for the transgene, since, for unknown reasons, homozygosity for the transgene appeared to induce efficient cosuppression: 25% (44 out of 177 plants) of the selfed progeny of four independent primary transformants that were all PCR-positive for the transgene showed a very strong clv3 mutant phenotype and no GFP fluorescence.
In situ hybridization
In situ hybridization using WUS and CLV3 antisense
riboprobes has been described previously
(Mayer et al., 1998;
Schoof et al., 2000
). For the
LhG4 antisense and sense riboprobes, the coding region was inserted
into pBluescript, the resulting plasmid linearized and transcribed using T7
and T3 RNA polymerases (Promega), respectively, and digoxigenin RNA labelling
mix (Roche Diagnostics). For the GR antisense and sense riboprobes,
plasmid pRS020 (kindly provided by R. Sablowski) was used. For the
CLV1 antisense and sense riboprobes, the entire cDNA lacking the
highly conserved kinase domain encoded within a XhoI-MunI
fragment was used. BLAST analysis of this sequence against the complete
Arabidopsis genome did not reveal any sequences with significant
homology (not shown).
GFP imaging
For imaging of GFP fluorescence, inflorescence meristems of transgenic
plants were dissected, mounted in 80% glycerol and viewed under a Leica TCS 4D
confocal microscope. Images were processed using Adobe Photoshop, version
6.0.
Scanning electron microscopy and SAM size measurement
For measuring the sizes of inflorescence meristems, plants of the genotypes
to be compared were grown in alternate pots within a single tray to ensure
equal growth conditions. After the plants had bolted and produced 4-6
siliques, meristems were dissected, fixed and processed for scanning electron
microscopy as previously described (Laux
et al., 1996). Meristems were photographed from directly above the
meristem centre. Sizes were determined on prints of the images by measuring
the distance from the centre of the youngest recognisable floral primordium to
the centre of the furrow separating the fifth flower primordium from the
meristem. This line runs across the centre of the meristem, providing a
measure for the meristem diameter. Measurements were taken without knowledge
of the genotype of the individual plants to avoid any bias. Statistical
analysis was performed using Microsoft Excel, and size distributions were
compared by pairwise Student's t-test.
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RESULTS |
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We assessed the functionality of the CLV3-GFP fusion protein by
transforming the construct into homozygous clv3-1 mutants and testing
for phenotypic rescue. clv3-1 mutant plants expressing one copy of
the transgene had an inflorescence meristem that was only slightly larger than
that of the wild type and formed flowers with an average of 3.1 carpels
(Fig. 1A,B;
Table 1; see Materials and
Methods), as compared to a much more enlarged meristem and flowers with 5.4
carpels on average in parallel-grown non-transgenic clv3-1 mutants
(Fig. 1C;
Table 1). This degree of rescue
provided by the CLV3::CLV3-GFP construct was the same as observed in
clv3-1 mutants heterozygous for CLV3::LhG4 and
pOp::CLV3-pOp::GUS transgenes that were strongly expressed as judged
by staining for the activity of the GUS reporter (3.7 carpels on average;
Table 1 and data not shown).
This indicates that even though, for unknown reasons, the transgenes appeared
to be less effective at restricting meristem size than the endogenous
CLV3 gene of which one copy is sufficient for stem cell homeostasis
(Clark et al., 1995), the
CLV3-GFP fusion protein had retained CLV3 activity and can therefore be used
to monitor functionally relevant protein movement. Importantly, in strong
support of this conclusion, the WUS expression domain in
CLV3::CLV3-GFP; clv3-1 plants closely resembled that in wild type in
contrast to the strongly enlarged domain in non-transgenic clv3-1
mutants (Fig. 1D-F)
(Schoof et al., 2000
).
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Thus, even though the CLV3-GFP fusion appears to be somewhat less mobile than the unmodified CLV3 protein (see below), its ability to rescue the mutant phenotype to the same extent as a CLV3::CLV3 transgene (Fig. 1A-F; Table 1) suggests that the presence of CLV3-GFP protein in cells outside the mRNA expression domain reflects a similar, albeit potentially farther spread of endogenous CLV3 protein.
CLV3 can act over a distance of several cell diameters
The above experiment suggests that CLV3 protein can move within the SAM,
either by diffusion or by active transport. However, an alternative mechanism
to explain the observed distribution of CLV3-GFP would be inheritance of a
stable protein by peripheral stem cell daughters, which themselves no longer
express the gene. To distinguish between these possibilities, i.e. protein
movement from a stationary source versus clonal inheritance of the protein, we
asked whether CLV3 protein could move to and act on cells not clonally related
to the producing cells. To test this, we expressed CLV3 specifically
in the epidermis of clv3-1 mutants using an ATML1::LhG4
activator (Lu et al., 1996;
Sessions et al., 1999
) and
analyzed whether this would be sufficient to repress WUS in
subjacent, clonally unrelated cell layers, thus rescuing the clv3-1
mutant defect. Epidermis-specific expression and transcriptional activation of
the ATML1 activator was confirmed by RNA in situ hybridization with
LhG4 and GR antisense riboprobes to sections of plants that
expressed WUS-GR as an inert reporter mRNA under the control of this
activator (Fig. 2A,B).
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Thus, as the epidermal cells are the only source of functional CLV3 protein in ATML1::CLV3; clv3-1 plants, their wus-like phenotype indicates that CLV3 protein produced by epidermal cells is able to act not only in L2 and outer L3 cells, but also in the organizing centre underneath. Although we cannot entirely rule out a relay mechanism in which CLV3 would activate a downstream pathway in L1 cells that would in turn repress WUS in the OC, we consider this unlikely, because the effect of epidermal CLV3 expression shows the same requirements for CLV1 function and for secretion as does its function in stem cell homeostasis. Therefore, the most likely explanation is that CLV3 can move away from the producing cells through clonally unrelated tissue. This in turn suggests that the observed spread of CLV3-GFP fluorescence outside the transgene expression domain in CLV3::CLV3-GFP-expressing plants is largely due to protein movement, and not to inheritance of a stable protein by stem cell daughters.
CLV signalling in stem cell neighbours is essential for
meristem homeostasis
We next asked whether this apparent movement of CLV3 and its action on
non-expressing cells is necessary for normal SAM regulation, or whether
autocrine action of CLV3 only on the secreting cells is sufficient for stem
cell homeostasis. To study this, we generated plants in which only the
CLV3-expressing stem cells have a functional CLV1 receptor by
crossing a CLV3::CLV1 transgene, which did not have any phenotypic
effects in wild type (Table 2
and data not shown), into a clv1-4 mutant background. In situ
hybridization to sections of CLV3::CLV1 transgenic clv1-4
mutants using a CLV1 antisense probe produced an ectopic signal in
the epidermis in addition to the endogenous expression in subepidermal cells,
suggesting that the transgene was expressed
(Fig. 3A,B).
CLV3::CLV1 expression produced only a partial rescue of the
clv1-4 mutant phenotype: 20 out of 36 CLV3::CLV1-expressing
clv1-4 mutants showed an unmodified clv1-4 mutant phenotype
with a strongly enlarged SAM and supernumerary carpels, whereas the remaining
16 plants exhibited a phenotype intermediate between wild-type and
non-transgenic clv1-4 mutants, with regard to the size of the
inflorescence meristem and carpel numbers
(Fig. 3C-F;
Table 2).
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Thus, the partial rescue in almost half of the CLV3::CLV1-expressing clv1-4 mutants suggests that CLV3 protein exerts an autocrine effect on the stem cells themselves. However, as the rescue is not complete, it appears that in addition CLV3 action is required in stem cell neighbours for proper SAM regulation.
The range of CLV3 action can be restricted by the CLV1 receptor
The above results raised a paradox: ectopically expressed CLV3 from the
epidermis could non cell-autonomously repress WUS in the OC. However,
in the wild-type SAM WUS expression in the OC is not affected by
CLV3 expression in the stem cells immediately above
(Fig. 2C,D). A conceivable
mechanism, consistent with the localization of the CLV3-GFP protein (see
above), could be that in the wild type most CLV3 protein is bound by the
putative CLV1 receptor of cells in the L3 and possibly also the L2 layers
(Clark et al., 1997) and thus
cannot spread into underlying OC cells. By contrast, in
ATML1::CLV3-expressing plants this hypothetical block to CLV3
movement would then be predicted to be ineffective, because an excess of CLV3
protein is secreted by the epidermal cells that cannot fully be bound by CLV1,
allowing CLV3 protein to reach the OC. To test whether such a mechanism of
ligand sequestration is functional in the SAM, we compared the effects of
expressing CLV3 alone to those of coexpressing CLV3 and
CLV1 under the control of the ATML1 promoter in a wild-type
background. If CLV1 protein was able to keep CLV3 from moving away from the
producing cells, this would be predicted to suppress the meristem termination
caused by ATML1::CLV3 expression.
First, as expected 100% (n=182) of ATML1::CLV3-expressing plants phenocopied the wus mutant, indicating that the ATML1::CLV3 effect is fully penetrant. By contrast, ATML1::CLV1 expression on its own did not have any obvious morphological effects (data not shown).
We crossed homozygous ATML1::LhG4 plants to plants that were heterozygous for both a pOp::CLV3-pOp::GUS and an unlinked pOp::CLV1 transgene and analyzed the F1 progeny for meristem defects. In contrast to the 50% of wus phenocopies expected if CLV1 coexpression had no effect, only 27.8% (88 out of 317) of the seedlings showed a wus-like phenotype, while 72.2% (229) were indistinguishable from wild type with a functional, self-maintaining meristem.
Doubly transgenic plants coexpressing CLV1 and CLV3 were identified by PCR (data not shown) and were indeed indistinguishable from wild type at the seedling stage (Fig. 2L). After bolting, they exhibited indeterminate growth of the inflorescence meristem and formed complete flowers like those of the wild type (Fig. 2N). The phenotypic rescue was not complete, however, as they occasionally failed to form meristems in the axils of cauline leaves (data not shown). The integrity of the CLV3 transgene in these rescued ATML1::CLV3; ATML1::CLV1 plants was confirmed by analyzing their progeny, which again segregated for wus-like phenotypes (20 out of 88 seedlings analyzed). In addition, staining for the activity of the GUS reporter that is linked to the CLV3 transgene (Fig. 2P,Q) demonstrated that the suppression of the ATML1::CLV3 phenotype by coexpression of CLV1 was not due to downregulation of the ATML1 promoter. This suggests that coexpression of CLV1 suppresses the long-range effects of CLV3 over several cell diameters.
To test whether this activity of CLV1 correlated with its ability to bind
CLV3, we asked whether clv1-4, a mutant form of CLV1 that forms a less stable
receptor complex and is therefore predicted to bind less CLV3 protein
(Trotochaud et al., 1999)
would be impaired in suppressing its long-range action. We found that
ATML1::CLV3; ATML1::clv1-4 coexpressing plants were indistinguishable
from wus mutants at the seedling stage
(Fig. 2M), indicating that
clv1-4 protein was less effective than wild-type CLV1 in restricting the range
of CLV3. After the floral transition ATML1::CLV3; ATML1::clv1-4
coexpressing plants formed a flowering shoot with a self-maintaining
inflorescence meristem, yet no axillary meristems were present in the axils of
cauline leaves, and several flowers lacked a gynoecium
(Fig. 2O).
Thus, in contrast to wild-type CLV1, the clv1-4 protein could only partially suppress the long-range action of CLV3. This suggests that CLV1 represses non cell-autonomous effects of CLV3 by ligand sequestration and therefore that the protein distribution of CLV3 was altered by coexpressed CLV1. To demonstrate this directly, we expressed either CLV3-GFP alone or in combination with CLV1 in the epidermis.
The distribution of GFP fluorescence in the meristems of ATML1::CLV3-GFP- and ATML1::CLV3-GFP; ATML1::CLV1-expressing plants was compared by confocal microscopy. In plants expressing only CLV3-GFP, 76% (16 out of 21) of the inflorescence meristems analyzed showed an even gradient of fluorescence extending from the epidermis into deeper regions of the SAM (Fig. 2R), whereas the remaining 24% of SAM preparations had GFP fluorescence mainly in the epidermis. By contrast, consistent with the previous functional data, 78% (18 out of 23) of the meristems from plants coexpressing CLV3-GFP and CLV1 in the epidermis had strong GFP fluorescence restricted to the epidermis and much weaker fluorescence in the underlying cells (Fig. 2S), whereas the remaining meristems showed a more even distribution extending into deeper regions of the SAM. Although the reason for this failure of CLV1 to prevent movement of CLV3-GFP in all cases is unclear, a Chi-square test indicated that the difference between ATML1::CLV3-GFP and ATML1::CLV3-GFP; ATML1::CLV1-expressing plants was statistically highly significant (P<0.01). These results demonstrate that coexpressed CLV1 can restrict the movement of the CLV3-GFP protein.
In summary, these results show that coexpression of CLV1 is able to suppress non cell-autonomous effects of CLV3 presumably by preventing CLV3 movement away from producing cells. In addition, they also support the interpretation that the wus phenocopy produced by ATML1::CLV3 expression is due to CLV3 protein movement to the OC and not to a relay mechanism, as the latter would be expected to work more, and not less effectively when the CLV1 receptor is coexpressed.
We note that while the CLV3-GFP fusion protein rescued the clv3-1 mutant defect to the same extent as unmodified CLV3, its expression in the epidermis did not cause meristem termination as observed in ATML1::CLV3 plants (data not shown). This discrepancy can be explained by assuming that for stem cell regulation only a relatively small amount of CLV3 is required to reach the neighbouring cells, which can apparently still be achieved even by a less mobile CLV3-GFP fusion. By contrast, in order for CLV3 protein, secreted from the L1, to repress WUS in the more distant OC, a more extensive CLV3 protein movement seems to be required than can be achieved by CLV3-GFP.
Increasing the CLV3 dosage reduces meristem size
The above ectopic expression experiments suggested that the range of CLV3
action is sensitive to the ratio of CLV1 to CLV3 doses. To test whether the
relative levels of CLV3 and CLV1 expression affect stem cell homeostasis, we
asked whether overproduction of CLV3 from the stem cells could influence the
OC and reduce meristem size or even cause meristem termination, or whether the
feedback system between stem cells and OC is buffered. To test this, we
analyzed the meristem phenotype of plants that contained up to five additional
copies of CLV3 (see Materials and Methods). In situ hybridization
using a CLV3 antisense riboprobe on sections of
CLV3::(CLV3)5-expressing plants showed strong
staining restricted to the stem cell region in the outermost three cell layers
of the inflorescence meristem, similar to wild type
(Fig. 4A,B), with, however,
weak but clear staining also in the immediate lateral and basal stem cell
daughters.
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The reduction of meristem size in this experiment could either be due to the expansion of the CLV3 mRNA expression domain to lateral and basal stem cell daughters (see above) or to more CLV3 protein moving from the secreting cells to their neighbours. We sought to distinguish between these possibilities by coexpression of CLV1 under the control of the CLV3 promoter: if more CLV3 protein moving from the stem cells to their neighbours caused the smaller meristems, coexpression of CLV3::CLV1 should be able to suppress the effect by binding more CLV3 protein in or on the secreting cells, and thus blocking its movement.
We measured the meristem sizes of CLV3::(CLV3)5; CLV3::CLV1-expressing plants in the same experiment as above. Their meristems were approximately 20% larger than those of CLV3::(CLV3)5-expressing plants (51.3 µm versus 42.5 µm; P<0.001; Table 3), yet still slightly smaller than those of CLV3::GUS controls (P<0.01). In situ hybridization using a CLV1 antisense riboprobe suggested that the increase in SAM size compared to CLV3::(CLV3)5-expressing plants was not due to cosuppression of CLV1 and therefore reduced sensitivity to CLV3 (data not shown). As the number of pOp promoters was kept constant between the two genotypes (CLV3::LhG4; (pOp::CLV3)5; pOp::GUS versus CLV3::LhG4; (pOp::CLV3)5; pOp::CLV1), the effect was not due to weaker expression of the CLV3 transgenes because of competition by the pOp promoters for the LhG4 transcription factor; it was more probably due to CLV3 binding to CLV1 in or on the stem cells. This in turn suggests that most of the reduction in meristem size by CLV3 overproduction was due to more CLV3 protein moving away from the stem cells.
In summary, the size of the SAM can be reduced by overproduction of CLV3 in the stem cells, with the magnitude of the effect depending on the amount of CLV3 protein that is free to move away from the stem cells. However, the WUS-CLV3 feedback system appears to be sufficiently buffered to prevent meristem termination even with five extra copies of CLV3 present.
The CLV signalling pathway represses transcription from the
WUS promoter
In a last experiment, we asked what the consequences of perceiving the CLV3
signal are in the target cells. Signalling by CLV3 through the CLV1 receptor
is thought to activate an intracellular phosphorylation pathway
(Trotochaud et al., 1999)
which represses WUS expression
(Brand et al., 2000
;
Schoof et al., 2000
). Previous
work had not addressed the question of whether it does so by repressing
WUS transcription or whether it acts at a posttranscriptional level,
e.g. by influencing mRNA stability. To distinguish between these
possibilities, we expressed either CLV3 alone or both CLV3
and the WUS cDNA (containing the 5' UTR except for the first
six nucleotides and the entire 3' UTR, but lacking the two introns),
under the control of the CLV1 promoter. If the CLV pathway
mainly represses transcription from the WUS promoter, coexpression of
WUS from the heterologous CLV1 promoter would be predicted
to be dominant over the effect of ectopic CLV3 expression. By
contrast, if CLV signalling affects WUS activity at some
posttranscriptional level, it should still do so when the WUS mRNA is
expressed from a heterologous promoter.
In the progeny of a control cross of homozygous CLV1::LhG4 plants to heterozygous pOp::CLV3 plants, 32 out of 65 seedlings (49.2%) were indistinguishable from wus mutants: they lacked a functional seedling meristem and repeatedly formed adventitious meristems, which terminated prematurely, and later flowers lacking the central gynoecium (Fig. 5A-D). This suggests that CLV1::CLV3 expression produced a fully penetrant phenocopy of the wus mutant.
By contrast, CLV1::CLV3; CLV1::WUS coexpressing seedlings
(n=28), in which the presence of the CLV3 transgene was
confirmed by PCR (data not shown), were indistinguishable from seedlings
expressing only CLV1::WUS (Schoof
et al., 2000), with a strongly enlarged shoot meristem
(Fig. 5E,F). This indicates
that the WUS cDNA expressed from the heterologous CLV1
promoter in this experiment is not affected by ectopic CLV3
expression.
Thus, CLV signalling probably acts by repressing transcription from the WUS promoter.
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DISCUSSION |
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Previous work had demonstrated that CLV3 encodes a secreted polypeptide
which acts in the extracellular space
(Rojo et al., 2002). It was
not known, however, whether CLV3 moves within the SAM, which cells it acts on,
and how its spread is limited to prevent repression of WUS expression
in the OC. Here we have addressed these questions about how CLV3 protein acts
in the communication between stem cells and their neighbours.
A model for communication between the stem cells and their
neighbours
Our results provide direct evidence that CLV3 protein can spread from the
producing cells to their neighbours and repress WUS expression there,
and that this action on neighbouring cells is necessary for stem cell
homeostasis. Non cell-autonomous effects of CLV3 can be abolished by
coexpression of CLV1, which appears to bind CLV3 on the producing cells,
limiting its movement.
Our results suggest the following model for how the stem cells interact with their neighbours to maintain a constant stem cell population (Fig. 6). The stem cells secrete CLV3 protein, some of which moves to neighbouring cells. CLV3 acts both on the stem cells themselves and on their neighbours to repress transcription from the WUS promoter. By restricting the stem cell inducing signal from the OC in this manner, the stem cells exert an indirect lateral inhibition on their daughters, allowing these to initiate differentiation. Which cells CLV3 can reach is determined by the expression of its receptor CLV1, as CLV1 sequesters the ligand and prevents further movement. The strong CLV1 expression in the meristem centre restricts movement of CLV3 from the stem cells downwards, while lateral movement can occur in the outer layers in which there is little or no CLV1 protein. Thus, CLV1 protects the OC from CLV3 entering it and allows WUS expression there, ensuring continued stem cell and meristem activity.
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The presence of CLV3 mainly in the stem cells and their lateral neighbours is also supported by functional data concerning its primary site of action: CLV signalling exclusively in the stem cells themselves could only partially rescue the clv mutant phenotype, indicating that CLV3 acts on the producing stem cells themselves, but must also be perceived in stem cell neighbours for proper SAM regulation.
Taken together, these data suggest that CLV3 spreads laterally from the stem cells and acts both in these lateral neighbours and in the L2 and L3 stem cells themselves to repress WUS transcription (Fig. 6).
Maintaining a stable OC
Ectopic expression of CLV3 throughout the SAM causes termination of stem
cell maintenance by repressing WUS expression in the OC. As a
consequence, the stem cells would threaten their own existence, if the range
of CLV3 action were not restricted to keep CLV3 out of the OC. Based on our
results, this restriction of CLV3 movement can be achieved by binding of CLV3
to its putative receptor CLV1 in outermost L3 and possibly also L2 cells.
According to this view, CLV1 would fulfil a dual function: it relays the
CLV3-dependent signal into the receiving cells and ultimately causes
repression of WUS transcription in apical cell layers. By
sequestering the ligand, at the same time it also protects the underlying
cells of the OC from CLV3 and thus allows WUS expression there.
In support of this interpretation, CLV1 expression from the ATML1 or CLV3 promoters could clearly suppress non cell-autonomous effects of the respective transgenic CLV3 expression. However, it had no phenotypic effects in wild type. A possible explanation for this discrepancy could be that even in the presence of additional CLV1 protein in wild-type background sufficient CLV3 ligand can still move to lateral neighbours to ensure stem cell homeostasis. By contrast, because of the strong endogenous CLV1 expression in the L3, even in CLV3::(CLV3)5-expressing plants only small amounts of CLV3 protein may reach the OC, causing the reduction in SAM size, and this appears to be effectively inhibited by additional CLV1 expression in the CLV3-secreting cells. Clearly, a rigorous test for the importance of the proposed mechanism of ligand sequestration in wild-type meristem regulation has to await further experiments.
Regulation of meristem size and shape
The SAM represents a stem cell system that functions over a long period of
time with varying degrees of activity, e.g. dormancy in winter and
reactivation in the subsequent spring. Thus, continuous SAM function likely
requires that meristem organization be buffered against external fluctuations
and disturbances. An important mechanism to achieve this seems to be provided
by the autoregulatory interaction between the stem cells and the OC, mediated
by the WUS and CLV3 genes
(Schoof et al., 2000). The
robust homeostatic potential of this interaction to keep the size of the stem
cell population constant is highlighted by the striking difference in the
effects of CLV3 transgenes, depending on the promoter used: one copy
of an ATML1::CLV3 transgene was sufficient to cause SAM termination,
whereas up to five additional copies of CLV3 could be tolerated and
merely caused a reduction in size of the meristem, when expressed under the
control of the CLV3 promoter. As the ATML1 promoter is
independent of WUS activity (cf.
Fig. 2P), the amount of CLV3
secreted from the epidermis can apparently overcome the supposed block to CLV3
movement into the OC imposed by the CLV1 receptor and repress WUS
transcription there. By contrast, as the CLV3 promoter depends on
WUS activity (Brand et al.,
2002
; Lenhard et al.,
2002
), downregulation of WUS expression in
CLV3::(CLV3)5-expressing plants also causes a
reduction in expression levels of the transgene, allowing a new balance
between WUS and CLV3 activities to be struck and thus the
stable maintenance of a smaller meristem. Thus, changing the activity of one
of the interactors in the WUS-CLV3 feedback loop does not
result in gross defects, but rather only shifts the point of equilibrium with
respect to stem cell number.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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