Open-access Eucalyptus ESTs involved in the production of 9-cis epoxycarotenoid dioxygenase, a regulatory enzyme of abscisic acid production

Abstract

Abscisic acid (ABA) regulates stress responses in plants, and genomic tools can help us to understand the mechanisms involved in that process. FAPESP, a Brazilian research foundation, in association with four private forestry companies, has established the FORESTs database (<A HREF="https://forests.esalq.usp.br">https://forests.esalq.usp.br</A>). A search was carried out in the Eucalyptus expressed sequence tag database to find ESTs involved with 9-cis epoxycarotenoid dioxygenase (NCED), the regulatory enzyme for ABA biosynthesis, using the basic local BLAST alignment tool. We found four clusters (EGEZLV2206B11.g, EGJMWD2252H08.g, EGBFRT3107F10.g, and EGEQFB1200H10.g), which represent similar sequences of the gene that produces NCED. Data showed that the EGBFRT3107F10.g cluster was similar to the maize (Zea mays) NCED enzyme, while EGEZLV2206B11.g and EGJMWD2252H08.g clusters were similar to the avocado (Persea americana) NCED enzyme. All Eucalyptus clusters were expressed in several tissues, especially in flower buds, where ABA has a special participation during the floral development process.

Eucalyptus EST; abscisic acid; water deficit; drought resistance; NCED


SHORT COMMUNICATION

Eucalyptus ESTs involved in the production of 9-cis epoxycarotenoid dioxygenase, a regulatory enzyme of abscisic acid production

Iraê A. GuerriniI,#; Rodrigo M. TrigueiroI; Regina M. LeiteI; Carlos F. WilckenII; Edivaldo D. VeliniII; Edson S. MoriII; Edson L. FurtadoII; Celso L. MarinoIII; Ivan G. MaiaIII

IUniversidade Estadual Paulista "Júlio de Mesquita Filho", Faculdade de Ciências Agronômicas, Departamento de Recursos Naturais, Botucatu, SP, Brazil

IIUniversidade Estadual Paulista "Júlio de Mesquita Filho", Faculdade de Ciências Agronômicas, Departamento de Produção Vegetal, Botucatu, SP, Brazil

IIIUniversidade Estadual Paulista "Júlio de Mesquita Filho", Instituto de Biociências, Departamento de Genética, Botucatu, SP, Brazil

Send correspondence to Send correspondence to Iraê A. Guerrini Universidade Estadual Paulista "Júlio de Mesquita Filho" Faculdade de Ciências Agronômicas Departamento de Recursos Naturais/Ciência do Solo Fazenda Experimental Lageado s/n Caixa Postal 237 18603-970 Botucatu, SP, Brazil E-mail: iguerrini@fca.unesp.br

ABSTRACT

Abscisic acid (ABA) regulates stress responses in plants, and genomic tools can help us to understand the mechanisms involved in that process. FAPESP, a Brazilian research foundation, in association with four private forestry companies, has established the FORESTs database (https://forests.esalq.usp.br). A search was carried out in the Eucalyptus expressed sequence tag database to find ESTs involved with 9-cis epoxycarotenoid dioxygenase (NCED), the regulatory enzyme for ABA biosynthesis, using the basic local BLAST alignment tool. We found four clusters (EGEZLV2206B11.g, EGJMWD2252H08.g, EGBFRT3107F10.g, and EGEQFB1200H10.g), which represent similar sequences of the gene that produces NCED. Data showed that the EGBFRT3107F10.g cluster was similar to the maize (Zea mays) NCED enzyme, while EGEZLV2206B11.g and EGJMWD2252H08.g clusters were similar to the avocado (Persea americana) NCED enzyme. All Eucalyptus clusters were expressed in several tissues, especially in flower buds, where ABA has a special participation during the floral development process.

Key words:Eucalyptus EST, abscisic acid, water deficit, drought resistance, NCED.

Plant tolerance to drought involves several biochemical processes, whose understanding of is essential for the development of individuals with greater water stress withstanding capacity, thus enabling agricultural frontiers to be expanded into regions where water availability is a limiting factor.

The mechanisms of resistance to water deficit act separately or in combination. In general, these mechanisms involve physiological and morphological alterations that have a molecular/genetic basis. For this reason, genotypes differing in water deficit tolerance must present qualitative and quantitative differences in genic expression. A specific physiological response to water deficit represents, in reality, the combination of previous molecular events, which were activated by the perception of a stress signal. Understanding how these events are activated/inactivated and how they interact among themselves is essential for the development of new varieties tolerant to drought periods (Nepomuceno et al., 2001).

One of the best-known mechanisms of tolerance to environmental stress is the production of Abscisic Acid (ABA). In higher plants, ABA plays important roles in embryo development and seed dormancy, in addition to being involved in plant adaptation to several stresses (drought, salinity, cold). When ABA is applied to plants, it causes the stomata to close quickly, thus reducing water loss by transpiration. In addition, water stress promotes a rapid increase in ABA content in the plants (Qin and Zeevaart, 1999). Evidence indicates that this increase in ABA is attributed to de novo synthesis (Zeevaart and Creelman, 1988).

Since the discovery of ABA in the beginning of the 60s, a great deal of effort has been dedicated to understanding its biosynthesis. By means of genetic and biochemical studies, the biosynthesis pathway of ABA in higher plants is now understood in detail. Recently, all major genes that code for enzymes in the ABA biosynthesis pathway were identified (Schwartz et al., 2003). The new challenge is now to understand how these biosynthesis genes and the biosynthesis pathway are regulated as a whole (Xiong and Zhu, 2003).

In order to determine which step in ABA biosynthesis is stimulated by water stress, it is essential to first establish its biosynthesis pathway. ABA is a sesquiterpenoid (C15), and two routes have been proposed for its biosynthesis. The first is the straight pathway from isopentenylpyrophosphate (C5), via farnesyl pyrophosphate (C15), into ABA. Current evidence indicates that this pathway operates in fungi (Zeevaart, 1999). And the second is the indirect pathway in which ABA is a product of carotenoid cleavage (C40). This "indirect route" step remained unknown for many years due to the difficulty in promoting these reactions in vitro. With the identification and characterization of the ABA-deficient mutant gene, this problem was eventually solved.

Evidence indicates that this pathway works in green plants and was obtained with carotenoid-deficient mutants in research using marked 18O2, where it was observed that in roots under water stress and in etiolated plant parts there was a 1:1 stoichiometric ratio between the disappearance of violaxanthin and neoxanthin and the formation of ABA and its catabolites, phaseic and dihydrophaseic acid (Zeevaart, 1999).

The direct proof of the pathway where ABA biosynthesis occurs by carotenoid cleavage came from the VP14 ABA-deficient corn mutant and its corresponding cloned VP14 gene (Tan et al., 1997). In enzyme assays, the recombinant VP14 protein cleaves 9-cis-epoxycarotenoid producing 2-cis,4-trans-xanthoxin and C25-apocarotenoid (Schwartz et al., 1997a). Due to the fact that no isomerization reaction occurs at the C15 precursor level, the precursor carotenoids must be in the 9-cis configuration, and converted into ABA, which is, by definition, 2-cis,4-trans (Qin and Zeevaart, 1999). Evidence indicates that the conversion of xanthoxin into ABA is not a limiting factor in ABA biosynthesis, and this last step in the pathway is not regulated by water deficit, since the carotenoid substrate is abundantly available in photosynthetic tissues (Parry et al.,1990). By elimination, 9-cis-epoxycarotenoid cleavage is the limiting step in the ABA biosynthesis pathway.

Qin and Zeevaart (1999) obtained a bean gene, PvNCED1, through cloning, which codes for the 9-cis-epoxycarotenoid cleavage enzyme, and analyzed its enzymatic activity and location. Its water stress response was characterized in the form of mRNA and protein levels in leaves and roots. The results demonstrated that the cleavage reaction is the key step in abscisic acid biosynthesis regulation, and was induced by water stress.

The ABA-deficient mutants served as tools to reveal the ABA biosynthesis pathway. Because of early seed germination and the appearance of plant wilting, these faulty mutants were isolated from a number of plant species, including Zea mays, Lycopersicon esculentum, Nicotiana tabacum, Solanum tuberosum, Hordeum vulgare and Arabidopsis thaliana. Before the molecular identities of the affected genes were known, a principal ABA biosynthesis route was revealed by modeling ABA biosynthetic intermediate products in combination with nutritional assays involving those mutants. These studies suggested that ABA in higher plants is synthesized through an indirect pathway by cleavage of a C40 precursor carotenoid, followed by a two-step conversion of intermediate xanthoxin into ABA via ABA-aldehyde (Taylor et al., 2000; Finkelstein and Rock, 2002; Seo and Koshiba, 2002; Schwartz et al., 2003). So far, the main genes and enzymes from ABA-deficient mutants have been characterized in Arabidopsis (Schwartz et al., 2003). The Arabidopsis information can be applied to other plant species since the pathway and its respective genes are highly conserved in angiosperms (Xiong and Zhu, 2003).

The first specific step in the ABA biosynthesis pathway is the epoxidation of zeaxanthin and antheraxanthin into violaxanthin, which takes place within the plastids. This step is catalyzed by the enzyme zeaxanthin epoxidase (ZEP), which had its molecular identity first revealed in tobacco (Marin et al., 1996). After a series of structural modifications, violaxanthin is converted into 9-cis-epoxycarotenoid. The oxidative cleavage of the main 9-cis-neoxanthin epoxycarotenoid by 9-cis epoxycarotenoid dioxygenase (NCED) generates an intermediate C15 xanthoxin (Schwartz et al., 1997b). This was considered the first step in the ABA biosynthesis pathway. The xanthoxin product is then exported to the cytosol, where it is converted into ABA by a two-step reaction via ABA-aldehyde. A short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) alcohol, coded by the AtABA2 gene (Rook et al., 2001; Cheng et al., 2002; González-Guzman et al., 2002), catalyzes the first step of this reaction and generates ABA-aldehyde. The ABA-aldehyde oxidase enzyme (AAO) then catalyzes the last step in the biosynthesis pathway (Xiong and Zhu, 2003), as presented in Figure 1.


According to the research results obtained for ABA biosynthesis, it can be seen that the identification and isolation of genes involved in its production is extremely important, especially with respect to the gene that codes for the NCED enzyme, which is a step of the pathway whose efficiency could determine a higher or lower degree of plant resistance to environmental stresses. Based on this information, this work was aimed at identifying, in the FORESTs database, sequences that are homologous to the gene under consideration, already identified in other species.

Sequences representative of the NCED genes (involved in the production of abscisic acid) were selected from the NCBI (National Center for Biotechnology Information) or geneBank database. These peptide sequences were used in a search within the database generated by FORESTs (https:forest.esalq.usp.br), using the BLAST tool (Altschud et al., 1990), where the probability value (e-value) was used to validate the sequences. The FORESTs database was formed consisting of 123,889 reads obtained from expressed sequence tags (ESTs) acquired from cDNA libraries of tissues from different organs of E. grandis, E. globulus, E. saligna, E. urophylla and E. camaldulensis. The libraries consisted of woods (WD), bark (BK), flower buds (FB), leaves (LV), seedlings (SL), stem (ST), root (RT), and callus (CL).

Four Eucalyptus clusters (EGEZLV2206B11.g, EGJ MWD2252H08.g, EGBFRT3107F10.g, EGEQFB1200H 10.g) found in the FORESTs database (Table 1) represent similar sequences to the sequence that codes for the gene responsible for producing the 9-cis epoxycarotenoid dioxygenase enzyme (NCED). This gene is extremely important in controlling the production of abscisic acid.

According to the dendrogram in Figure 2, generated from the amino acid sequences for the NCED enzyme of different organisms and Eucalyptus clusters, it can be seen that the Eucalyptus cluster EGBFRT3107F10.g showed more similarity to the corn (Zea mays) NCED enzyme, while EGEZLV2206B11.g and EGJMWD2252H08.g clusters were similar to the avocado (Persea americana) NCED. Chernys and Zeevaart (2000) found that ABA biosynthesis in avocado is regulated at the level of carotenoid cleavage, which is catalyzed by NCED.


The abscisic acid biosynthesis occurs in fruits, seeds, roots, leaves and branches, even though its synthesis is widely distributed throughout the plant. The highest production of that hormone, as a response to drought, occurs in leaves, followed by a small production in branches and roots, while fruits do not change their ABA contents as a drought response (Coll et al., 1992). This situation can be observed in the sources of reads that made up the clusters under consideration. The EGEZLV2206B11.g cluster is from only two types of tissues, leaves (LV) and stem (ST), and the highest number of reads came from stem tissues. The EGJMWD2252H08.g and EGBFRT3107F10.g clusters are from only one type of tissue, wood (WD) and root (RT), respectively. The EGEQFB1200H10.g cluster presents cDNAs from different tissues of plants, but showed a higher number of reads from flower bud tissues (FB) and leaves (LV3). The NCED gene expression in flower buds is expected due to special participation of ABA during the floral development process, as observed by Tan et al. (2003) in studies with AtNCED genes in Arabidopsis thaliana. These studies indicate that the developmental control of ABA synthesis involves localized patterns of AtNCED gene expression.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Ripasa S.A. Celulose e Papel, Duratex S.A., Votorantim Celulose e Papel and Cia. Suzano/Bahia Sul de Papel e Celulose. This work was supported by FAPESP (Fundação de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo).

Eucalyptus Genome Sequencing Project Consortium (FORESTs): https://forests.esalq.usp.br.

Received: May 31, 2004; Accepted: July 11, 2005.

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  • Send correspondence to
    Iraê A. Guerrini
    Universidade Estadual Paulista "Júlio de Mesquita Filho"
    Faculdade de Ciências Agronômicas
    Departamento de Recursos Naturais/Ciência do Solo
    Fazenda Experimental Lageado s/n
    Caixa Postal 237
    18603-970 Botucatu, SP, Brazil
    E-mail:
  • #
    Supported by CNPq.
    Associate Editor: Helaine Carrer
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      04 Jan 2006
    • Date of issue
      2005

    History

    • Received
      31 May 2004
    • Accepted
      11 July 2005
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